because of the different types of flowers
The structure where pollen grains land and stick is the stigma of a flower. The stigma is the uppermost part of the pistil, and its sticky surface helps to capture and hold pollen grains for fertilization.
An anther is the male reproductive structure of a flower that produces pollen. Pollen grains contain the male gametes of plants and are essential for the process of pollination, where the pollen is transferred to the stigma of a flower for fertilization to occur.
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
No, fishes do not typically eat pollen grains. Fishes are carnivorous or omnivorous and primarily eat other organisms such as small fish, insects, crustaceans, and algae. Pollen grains are a plant reproductive structure and are not a part of a fish's diet.
The sticky or hairy stalk that captures pollen grains is called the stigma. This structure is part of the female reproductive organ of a flower and plays a key role in the pollination process by trapping pollen grains that land on it.
The structure where pollen grains land and stick is the stigma of a flower. The stigma is the uppermost part of the pistil, and its sticky surface helps to capture and hold pollen grains for fertilization.
An anther is the male reproductive structure of a flower that produces pollen. Pollen grains contain the male gametes of plants and are essential for the process of pollination, where the pollen is transferred to the stigma of a flower for fertilization to occur.
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
Pollen grains attach to the stigma of a flower's pistil during pollination. The stigma is the receptive part of the pistil where the pollen lands and germinates to form a pollen tube for fertilization to occur.
The female structure in a flower is the pistil.
Matured pollen grains contained sperm cells. When Pollen grains are sticky, you have pollen. Pollen grains are contained in the pollen sac, with the purpose of helping plants reproduce.
No, pollen grains are not formed within the stigma. Pollen grains are formed in the anthers of a flower's stamen. The stigma is part of the female reproductive structure of a flower, where pollen grains land and germinate to fertilize the ovules.
Pollen grains come in contact with the ovule through the stigma, which is the receptive tip of the female reproductive organ (pistil) in a flower. Pollen grains germinate on the stigma, form a pollen tube, and then grow down to the ovule for fertilization.
The sticky or hairy stalk that captures pollen grains is called the stigma. This structure is part of the female reproductive organ of a flower and plays a key role in the pollination process by trapping pollen grains that land on it.
No, fishes do not typically eat pollen grains. Fishes are carnivorous or omnivorous and primarily eat other organisms such as small fish, insects, crustaceans, and algae. Pollen grains are a plant reproductive structure and are not a part of a fish's diet.
Pollen grains
i don't f*** know