The carple is the female parts of the flower. Some flowers have both male and female parts. Other plants have separate male flowers and female flowerd. On some plants such as pointsettia what looks like petals are really colored leaves.
no
No, different species of flowers can have varying numbers of petals. Some flowers have only a few petals, while others may have many. The number of petals can be a distinctive characteristic of a specific flower species.
Well, perhaps flowers of sulfur or frost flowers. But the presence of petals is part of the usual definition of a flower. There may be flowers without petals, but I can't think of any.Glumiflorae flower has no petals. This family which includes grasses, sedges, rushes and cattails have very small, almost unnoticeable petals or no petals at all. The corn, rice, wheat, barley, and sugar-cane are included in this class of plants.
All flowers lose their petals at some point.
Not all Australian flowers have petals because some plants just do not produce them. Flowering perennials are examples of plants that develop colors but lack full petals.
Having all identical petals.
flowers
Yes, everlasting flowers are complete flowers. Complete flowers contain all four basic parts: sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils. Everlasting flowers usually have all these parts, making them complete.
The sequels to "Flowers in the Attic" by V.C. Andrews are as follows: "Petals on the Wind" "If There Be Thorns" "Seeds of Yesterday" "Garden of Shadows"
A complete flower will have petals, stamens, a pistil, and sepals. Some flowers may be missing any or several parts.
no.Obviously didn't you see flower before,some have only 1 colour petal
Basic Rose Facts:Roses are plants and the type of plant is called a flower.The flowers of rose plants have sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils.The rose flower is termed "complete" because all four structures are present.The rose flower is termed "perfect" because it has both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts.Also:Perfect flowers also termed bisexual whether they have sepals or petals.Bisexual flowers are also said to be hermaphroditic.All complete flowers are therefore perfect and bisexual and hermaphroditic.Naturally evolved roses generally have five sepals, five petals and many spirally arranged stamens.Domestic roses have additional petals that were bred from the stamens and may number over 50.Roses have several to many pistils.A rose is a woody perennial of the genus Rosa, within the family Rosaceae.Rose flowers are actinomorphic (i.e. radially symmetrical) and almost always hermaphroditic.In roses, the bases of the sepals, petals, and stamens are fused together to form a characteristic cup-like structure called hypanthium.