Both types of pollination have advantages. Self pollination allows a plant to reproduce even if there are no other plants of the same type nearby. Cross pollination can serve to prevent the extinction of a species due to a lack of genetic variation.
No, a flower plant typically has one specific type of pollination method. The method can be either self-pollination or cross-pollination, but a flower is not capable of having multiple types of pollination simultaneously.
self i think
The type of organism produced by cross pollination that has different characteristics is called "Gamete". Gamete is a kind of cell that is produced when a cell fuses with another cell during the fertilization process.
Conifers typically rely on wind pollination, where pollen is carried from male cones to female cones by the wind. This type of pollination is common in plants that do not have showy flowers or rely on animals for pollination.
I hope this helps! One type is budding . Another type is Binary fission.And since you didn't ask for a method...If you want some others (just in case this is a question on you homework!) you know like if your book has nothing about Binary fission then here are others:Vegetative, (I may be wrong, but I'm 78% sure I'm right!! :D) Runners, and the last thing I know, is Parthenogenesis.~Emely A.
No, a flower plant typically has one specific type of pollination method. The method can be either self-pollination or cross-pollination, but a flower is not capable of having multiple types of pollination simultaneously.
Hibiscus plants can be both self-pollinating and cross-pollinating. They are primarily pollinated by bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, who transfer pollen between flowers as they feed on nectar. Hibiscus flowers can self-pollinate when the pollen from the anther is transferred to the stigma within the same flower.
self i think
The type of organism produced by cross pollination that has different characteristics is called "Gamete". Gamete is a kind of cell that is produced when a cell fuses with another cell during the fertilization process.
gamete
Pea flowers are self-pollinating. About two days before the flower even opens, the anthers at the top of the stamen, which are the male part, burst and release the pollen. This sticks onto the stigma and fertilizes the ovary - these are the female parts. In many flowering plants, the stigma will not accept pollen from the same plant and fertilization must occur through other means, such as insect pollination after the flower opens. For gardeners, self-pollination is an advantage as it means more than one type of pea can be grown close together, as cross-pollination will not occur.
cross pollination
genetic variability is a readily appreciated condition. Harmfull (resessive) gentic traits are masked, harmful (dominate) traits are quickly culled. Hybred plants feel the benefit even in the first generation.
Pollination is the process by which pollen is transferred in plants, thereby enabling fertilization and sexual reproduction. Pollen grains, which contain the male gametes (sperm) to where the female gamete(s) are contained within the carpel;[1] in gymnosperms the pollen is directly applied to the ovule itself. The receptive part of the carpel is called a stigma in the flowers of angiosperms. The receptive part of the gymnosperm ovule is called the micropyle. Pollination is a necessary step in the reproduction of flowering plants, resulting in the production of offspring that are genetically diverse.The study of pollination brings together many disciplines, such as botany, horticulture, entomology, and ecology. The pollination process as an interaction between flower and vector was first addressed in the 18th century by Christian Konrad Sprengel. It is important in horticulture and agriculture, because fruiting is dependent on fertilisation, which is the end result of pollination.
A cleistogamous flower is a type of flower that does not open to facilitate cross-pollination. Instead, it self-pollinates within the closed flower, increasing the chances of successful fertilization. This adaptation is common in plants found in shady or unpredictable environments.
Conifers typically rely on wind pollination, where pollen is carried from male cones to female cones by the wind. This type of pollination is common in plants that do not have showy flowers or rely on animals for pollination.
Cross pollination happens when the pollen of one flower is placed upon the stigma of another flower, whether of the same varietyor not.