The male reproductive tract carries sperm. Sperm are produced in the testes and are transported through the reproductive ducts. These ducts include the epididymis, vas deferens, ejaculatory duct and urethra. The reproductive glands produce secretions that become part of semen, the fluid that is ejaculated from the urethra.
During pollination, the sperm of the male gametophyte are not flagellated because they generally do not move. They rely on the growth of a pollen tube to deliver them to the egg cell.
Flowering plants have gametes, which are the haploid sex cells. The sperm (male gamete) are found in the pollen on top of the anther. The eggs (female gamete) are located deep in a ovule usually in the center of the flower. Some flowers "self-pollinate" and others must have help from pollinators, such as bees, to get the sperm to the egg for the production of seeds.
The egg cell is located inside the ovary of the flower. The sperm nucleus is located inside the pollentube of the flower
The phylum for common marigolds is angiosperms. Angiosperms are the flowering plants.
Cells containing sieve plates are called sieve tube members, a component of the phloem, which carries sugars produced in the leaves to various parts of the plant. They are characteristic of angiosperms (flowering plants) while gymnosperms (cone-bearing plants) have only sieve cells. Sieve cells and sieve tube members are collectively referred to as sieve elements.
The sperm (pollen) is carried by wind or insects most of the time.
gymno sperm
There is no such thing as "flowering sperms." Sperm are male sex cells that are involved in the process of fertilization in flowering plants. Flowering plants reproduce through the union of male and female sex cells contained within their flowers.
Angiosperms, or flowering plants, are the group of plants that practice double fertilization. In this process, one sperm fertilizes the egg to form the embryo, while the other sperm fuses with the central cell to form the endosperm, which provides nutrients to the developing embryo.
In flowering plants, after pollination, a pollen grain germinates on the stigma, forming a pollen tube. This tube grows down through the style toward the ovule, guided by chemical signals. As the pollen tube extends, it transports sperm cells from the pollen grain to the ovule, where fertilization occurs, leading to the development of seeds. The successful delivery of sperm to the ovule is crucial for reproduction in flowering plants.
It is called gamete. In animals the male gamete is always a sperm. In most flowering plants the male gamete is also called sperm.
You get both flowering plants and non-flowering plants; non-flowering are things like mosses, ferns and liverworts which produce spore, flowering plants produce seeds
There are two types of flowering plants. These two types of flowering plants are the perennials and the annual flowering plants.
Flowering plants require pollinatio non-flowering plants do not.
flowering plants and non-flowering plants
male semen carries the sperm
Double fertilization occurs in flowering plants, where one sperm fertilizes the egg to form a zygote, while the other sperm fertilizes the polar nuclei to form the endosperm. The endosperm provides nutrients to the developing embryo.