When pollen lands on another plant, it is called pollination. This process is essential for the transfer of pollen from the male reproductive organs (anther) to the female reproductive organs (stigma) of plants, enabling fertilization and seed production.
A butterfly can carry pollen from one plant to another as it feeds on nectar. When it lands on a flower, pollen grains stick to its legs and body, and when it moves to another flower, some of this pollen is transferred, facilitating cross-pollination. This process is crucial for plant reproduction and helps maintain biodiversity in ecosystems.
transfer of pollen from the anther of one plant to the stigma of another plant (of the same species) is called cross-pollination. transfer of pollen from the anther of a plant to the stigma of the same plant is called self-pollination
pollenation
A plant breeder can transfer pollen using a tool like a small brush or an instrument called a pipette to carefully move pollen from one plant to another to create desired hybrid plants.
This process is called pollination. It is an essential step in plant reproduction where pollen grains are transferred from the anther (male part) to the stigma (female part) of a flower, allowing for fertilization and the production of seeds.
fertilsation
It is called 'Pollination'. It's one of the essential stages in the life cycle of a plant.
pollen bags are for collecting pollen from one plant and tranfering to another plant in order to breed.
Self-pollination of a plant is where a plant's pollen (from the anthers) lands on the same plant's stigma, causing it to pollinate itself. This is contrasted with cross-pollination which is where one plant's pollen lands on another plant's stigma. Plants often do specific things to avoid self-pollination if they can.
If the pollen lands on stigma of the same flower, it is called self-pollination. When the pollen of a flower lands on the stigma of another flower of the same plant, or that of a different plant of the same kind, it is called cross-pollination.
A butterfly can carry pollen from one plant to another as it feeds on nectar. When it lands on a flower, pollen grains stick to its legs and body, and when it moves to another flower, some of this pollen is transferred, facilitating cross-pollination. This process is crucial for plant reproduction and helps maintain biodiversity in ecosystems.
This transferring process is called pollination.
transfer of pollen from the anther of one plant to the stigma of another plant (of the same species) is called cross-pollination. transfer of pollen from the anther of a plant to the stigma of the same plant is called self-pollination
cross pollination
Pollen.
The flower of the plant is directly involved in sexual reproduction.More specifically, the anthers produce pollen. The pollen then lands on another plant's stigma and travels down the style, and fertilizes the ovules.
When an insect like bee's lands on a flower, pollen sticks to it's legs. So when an insect moves to another flower pollen gets on that flower and so on and so on as the insect moves from one plant to another.