No, pollen grain does not contain the egg of the plant. It contains the male gamete of the plant.Egg of the plant is present in the ovaries.
The enterior of pollen grain contains gametophyte, it is only sporopollenin of the exine that is of sporophytic origin.
Yes
Flowering plants do not have a sporophyte. They have antheridium and archegonium to produce their gametes. Sporophyte is found in ferns, mosses, club mosses, lycophytes, etc but not in flowering plants. Flowering plants produces pollen while a sporophyte produces spores
Pollen are male sex cells. So they contain sperms.
Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
pollen
the Sporophyte generation
Flowering plants do not have a sporophyte. They have antheridium and archegonium to produce their gametes. Sporophyte is found in ferns, mosses, club mosses, lycophytes, etc but not in flowering plants. Flowering plants produces pollen while a sporophyte produces spores
pollen contain on stigma
Flowering plants do not have a sporophyte. They have antheridium and archegonium to produce their gametes. Sporophyte is found in ferns, mosses, club mosses, lycophytes, etc but not in flowering plants. Flowering plants produces pollen while a sporophyte produces spores
It has pollen cell
Pollen are male sex cells. So they contain sperms.
A pine tree is generally a Sporophyte - a multicellular, diploid, spore-producing organism. However, the created spores are haploid, and thus begin the gametophyte phase, in which the microspores (pollen) and megaspores (female receptors), will combine back into a gamete, and begin the sporophyte stage again.
No, it does not
nectar and pollen
The anther.
No, pollen grain does not contain the egg of the plant. It contains the male gamete of the plant.Egg of the plant is present in the ovaries.
no it contains pollen
Gymnosperms are heterosporous, producing microspores that develop into pollen grains and megaspores that are retained in an ovule. After fertilization (joining of the micro- and megaspore), the resulting embryo, along with other cells comprising the ovule, develops into a seed. The seed is a sporophyte resting stage.