lotion
flowers
i think it is not because it does not produce cones
No, angiosperm seeds are not protected by cones. Angiosperms produce seeds enclosed within a fruit, which develops from the ovary of a flower. Conifers, which are gymnosperms, produce seeds that are typically protected by cones.
All gymnosperms have cones as reproductive structures.
Gymnosperms reproduce using cones as reproductive structures. Male cones produce pollen, which is carried to female cones by wind or insects for fertilization. The ovules within the female cones then develop into seeds.
The flower is the reproductive structure of the angiosperm.
flowers
The anther is where all of the little reproductive parts are held. Then there's the embryo, style, ovary, and ovule.
i think it is not because it does not produce cones
..
No, angiosperm seeds are not protected by cones. Angiosperms produce seeds enclosed within a fruit, which develops from the ovary of a flower. Conifers, which are gymnosperms, produce seeds that are typically protected by cones.
The cone of a gymnosperm is the equivalent of the ovary of angiosperms. The seeds in the cone are naked, and receive pollen by wind action from the male equivalent of the stamen. In season, you'll often find dustings of sulphur-yellow pine pollen on the surface of water puddles.The gymno part comes from the Greek and means naked, hence similar words such as gymnast.
All gymnosperms have cones as reproductive structures.
In conifers, male reproductive structures called male cones produce pollen, while female reproductive structures called female cones contain ovules. Pollen is transferred from male cones to female cones through wind or insects for fertilization to occur.
The maple tree flowers as it's reproductive method, so it is an angiosperm.
In the flower
sperm