HI 2 answer is pistil
Pollination in plants refers to the process of transferring pollen from the male reproductive organ (anther) to the female reproductive organ (stigma) of a flower. This transfer of pollen is essential for fertilization and the production of seeds and fruits. Pollination can occur through various methods, including wind, water, insects, birds, and other animals.
Cross pollination happens when an organism transfers pollen to another flower. Or the pollen could transfer by wind. Bees mostly pollinate flowers we know and other by wind, pollen on our car.
There are three common kinds of pollination: self pollination, wind pollination, and insect pollination. •Self pollination is when the pollen in the stamen (male part of the plant) drops into an ovule (egg) in the ovary of the stigma (female part) of the same plant. This is why it is called self pollination. • Wind pollination occurs in plants that are all-male (its flowers only containing stamen) and all-female (its flowers only containing the stigma). The stamen develops millions of pollen grains in the spring, as the chance of the pollen reaching an all-female plant is very little, and releases it in the summer. The few pollen grains that reach an all-female plant will be likely to reach an ovule in the stigma and pollinate the ovule. • Insect pollination is used by a lot of plants. This method of reproduction is when an insect such as a bee, butterfly, moth, or sometimes a bat, reaches a flower and sucks out the nectar in the flower. As they do this, the pollen gets stuck in their legs, and when they suck the nectar from the flower of another plant, the pollen gets onto the flower and into the stigma. If the pollen from a different type of plant is put into a stigma of a plant, pollination won't occur, so God has designed the bees of each hive to suck nectar from one kind of flower each day, so that the chance of pollination will be more.
Pollen grains attach to the stigma of a flower's pistil during pollination. The stigma is the receptive part of the pistil where the pollen lands and germinates to form a pollen tube for fertilization to occur.
Pollination is when the pollen grain lands on the stigma. It then grows a pollen tube and part of it, the actual male gamete, travels down and fuses with the ovule (egg) which is the actual fertilization.
The stigma of a plant is the receptive tip of the carpel. It is the part that receives pollen at pollination.
Pollination and hereafter, fertilization
Pollination is the process by which pollen is transferred from the male reproductive organs of a flower to the female reproductive organs, leading to fertilization and the production of seeds. This transfer can occur through various mechanisms, such as wind, water, insects, or other animals. Pollination is vital for the reproduction of many plants and essential for biodiversity.
stigma
what is vegetable and its reproductive part
The stigma is the part of the flower where the pollen grains stick during pollination
The pollen grain needs to land on the stigma of the plant for successful pollination to occur.
Before pollination, the pollen grains are stored in the anthers (male part) of the plant. During pollination, an insect (such as a bee) flies to the flower for nectar and some pollen from the anthers rubs off on it. When the bee travels to another flower, the pollen sticks to the stigma (female part). After pollination, fertilization can begin. Hope this helps.
Self-pollination occurs when pollen from the male part of a flower fertilizes the female part of the same flower or another flower on the same plant, while cross-pollination involves the transfer of pollen from the male part of one flower to the female part of a different flower, typically from a different plant. Both processes result in fertilization and can lead to the production of seeds. They are alike in that both are essential for plant reproduction and can contribute to genetic diversity, although self-pollination generally leads to less genetic variation compared to cross-pollination.
pollen is the male reproductive part of the flower. i guess you could call it plant sperm.
Pollination in plants refers to the process of transferring pollen from the male reproductive organ (anther) to the female reproductive organ (stigma) of a flower. This transfer of pollen is essential for fertilization and the production of seeds and fruits. Pollination can occur through various methods, including wind, water, insects, birds, and other animals.
during pollination, pollen from the anther (male part) is carried to the sigma (female part). Fertilization happens when a sperm from the pollen moves through the sigma and enters an egg in an ovule. By insects visiting flowers and by wind velocity