I do have to point out that the male plant doesn't produce seeds. It pollinates, which is what ultimately makes the female plant produce seeds. you would need a female plant to get any seeds at all.
A female cannabis plant can produce seeds if it is pollinated by a male plant. However, when grown without male plants present, female cannabis plants will not produce seeds and will instead focus on producing cannabinoid-rich flowers.
Flowers can carry both male and female reproductive parts. The male part is called the stamen, which produces pollen containing sperm cells, while the female part is called the pistil, which contains the ovary where seeds develop after pollination.
Neither, or both depending on how you view the answer. Seeds are the combination of the male and female gametes and are basically a new (hybrid) individual. To possibly confuse it more, a plant (once grown from the seed) can bear both sex organs at the same time in the form of a flower with both male and female parts; or a plant can be single sexed and produce only male flowers or female flowers.
No, a female plant requires pollen from a male plant in order to produce seeds through pollination. The male plant produces pollen which is transferred to the female plant's reproductive organs to initiate seed production.
If pollen is transferred from the male plant or a male part of a plant to a female plant or female plant part, then it is possible for fertilization to occur. In plants that have both male and female plants, they can actually self-pollinate. In nature, other mechanism for cross-pollination include transport via wind, on the fur of animals, and on insects.
You smoke the female. Male's produce seeds.
A female cannabis plant can produce seeds if it is pollinated by a male plant. However, when grown without male plants present, female cannabis plants will not produce seeds and will instead focus on producing cannabinoid-rich flowers.
Fruit don't exactly make seeds. I mean they do, but then they don't. It's in the matter of reproduction with a male plant and a female plant. A male plant has pollen that goes into a female plant, but a female plant already has seeds. They actually grow it. So you can say that they DO make SEEDS! :) -hope that helps!
no. all seeds mean is that the female plant was exposed to the pollen of a male plant at some point. if the grower dosent separate male and female plants, any type of weed could contain seeds.
Flowers can carry both male and female reproductive parts. The male part is called the stamen, which produces pollen containing sperm cells, while the female part is called the pistil, which contains the ovary where seeds develop after pollination.
No. All fruit are enlarged ovaries of the plant. the seeds are usually surrounded by the sweet flesh of the fruit. All cantaloupe are therefore a female part. flowering plants that produce fruits do have flowers with male and female parts, though.
the male is the ones with seeds, not female. if anything it would have to be the other way around. or you can cross pollinate different plants:like oranges
No, you just need a fertile seed. There are no male or female seeds. Some plants have male and female flowers, but the seeds are seeds.
Neither, or both depending on how you view the answer. Seeds are the combination of the male and female gametes and are basically a new (hybrid) individual. To possibly confuse it more, a plant (once grown from the seed) can bear both sex organs at the same time in the form of a flower with both male and female parts; or a plant can be single sexed and produce only male flowers or female flowers.
Yes there is male and female plants. Female plants produce the bud and male plants produce pollen sacs when the pollen germinates with the female plant it produces seeds.
It is possible to intentionally stress a female plant through environmental conditions to make the female grow male flowers containing female pollen, meaning all seeds produced from this pollen will be female seeds.
Dioecious refers to a plant species that produces separate male and female flowers on different individual plants. This means that male and female reproductive organs are located on separate plants. A dioecious plant requires both male and female plants to produce seeds.