No, the style is part of the pistil. The pistil is the stigma, the style, and the ovary of a flower.
No the stigma is the very tip of the pistil, that catches pollen.
No, an iris does not have a pistil. A pistil is the female reproductive part of a flower, while an iris is a type of flowering plant that produces male and female reproductive organs separately on the same flower.
No, the pistil is the female reproductive organ of a flower, while the carpel is the female reproductive structure that may consist of one or multiple fused pistils. The carpel includes the stigma, style, and ovary, while the pistil only refers to the entire female reproductive structure.
Members of the family Cucurbitaceae like melons and squashes have pistillate (female) and staminate (male) flowers on the same plant separately. On the other hand, in date palm the plants bearing pistillate flowers are separate.
A flower containing both sexes is called a perfect or bisexual flower. These flowers have both male (stamens) and female (pistil) reproductive organs, allowing self-pollination to occur within the same flower.
No the stigma is the very tip of the pistil, that catches pollen.
No, an iris does not have a pistil. A pistil is the female reproductive part of a flower, while an iris is a type of flowering plant that produces male and female reproductive organs separately on the same flower.
No, the pistil is the female reproductive organ of a flower, while the carpel is the female reproductive structure that may consist of one or multiple fused pistils. The carpel includes the stigma, style, and ovary, while the pistil only refers to the entire female reproductive structure.
The pistil is the female part of the flower. When pollen is transfered from the stamen of the same flower or another flower of the same or similar type by wind, insects, or q-tips, a seed forms inside the pistil. Plant breeders actually remove the stamen from selected flowers and place pollen from other flowers ion or in the pistil with q-tips so the plant that grows from the seed will have the desired characteristics.
They are the exact same thing! Pistil is more of a layman term.
Usually insects although other methods such as wind can do it.
Guava is a perfect flower because it contains both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive parts within the same flower.
Honey, flowers don't have sexual orientations. They're too busy being fabulous and blooming for everyone to worry about who they're attracted to. So, no, the sampaguita flower is not bisexual, it's just a flower doing its thing and smelling sweet while at it.
No, daffodils are complete flowers. This means they contain both male (stamen) and female (pistil) reproductive structures within the same flower.
Members of the family Cucurbitaceae like melons and squashes have pistillate (female) and staminate (male) flowers on the same plant separately. On the other hand, in date palm the plants bearing pistillate flowers are separate.
A perfect flower had both "sexes" - both stamens and pistil(s). A monoecious plant has perfect flowers or has both male and female flowers on the same plant.An imperfect flower is lacking either the pistil or stamens. A dioecious plant has imperfect flowers on separate male and female plants.
A flower containing both sexes is called a perfect or bisexual flower. These flowers have both male (stamens) and female (pistil) reproductive organs, allowing self-pollination to occur within the same flower.