No, pine pollen and rose pollen are from different plant species and cannot combine to create a new flower. In general, pollen from one plant species cannot fertilize the ovules of a different plant species.
Yes, it is a producer because it produces pine seeds. In fact, pine seeds pretty much make up the whole pine cone.
The space above the nucellus in a pine ovule is called the pollen chamber. This is where pollen grains land and germinate before fertilizing the egg cell within the nucellus.
Pine cones are structures that house the reproductive organs of pine trees for sexual reproduction. Male cones produce pollen containing the sperm, while female cones contain the eggs that are fertilized by the pollen to produce seeds.
The group that produces fruits and vegetables are angiosperms. Gymnosperms produce conifers like cedar and softwoods like pine and fir.
The wings of a pine pollen grain help with dispersal by catching wind currents and enabling the pollen to travel further distances. This increases the chances of successful pollination by reaching other pine trees for fertilization.
Pine pollen is primarily disseminated by wind. The lightweight nature of pine pollen allows it to be easily carried by the wind over long distances to reach female pine cones for fertilization.
Pine tree pollen is a "Necessaleb Brotusk", (a recessive type of pollen.) it comes from the bructus (the buds.) The bructus bossoms, creating a flowering bud.
Yes, all pine trees reproduce through seeds. Pine tree seeds are produced in the female pine cone, which is much, much larger and far more robust than the small, catkin-like male cone, which only produces pollen.
The pine cones that you are familiar with are probably female pine cones. You probably have never noticed male pine cones because they are much smaller and don't look much like the female pine cones. Male pine cones are much smaller and produce pollen grains. Female pine cones contain the egg. The pollen is carried from the male pine cones to the female pine cones by the wind.
No, pine pollen and rose pollen are from different plant species and cannot combine to create a new flower. In general, pollen from one plant species cannot fertilize the ovules of a different plant species.
Yes, it is a producer because it produces pine seeds. In fact, pine seeds pretty much make up the whole pine cone.
The pollen for each kind of tree or flower is distinctive to that species, so there is no definite description for what pollen in general looks like - the grains aren't even all round; the size also varies: for instance, a grain of pollen from an elm tree (which is round) is about 20 micrometers in diameter, whereas a pollen grain from a Scots pine tree is kinda kidney shaped, & measures about 40 x 60 micrometers
Pine tree pollen is a "Necessaleb Brotusk", (a recessive type of pollen.) it comes from the bructus (the buds.) The bructus bossoms, creating a flowering bud.
The pollen for each kind of tree or flower is distinctive to that species, so there is no definite description for what pollen in general looks like - the grains aren't even all round; the size also varies: for instance, a grain of pollen from an elm tree (which is round) is about 20 micrometers in diameter, whereas a pollen grain from a Scots pine tree is kinda kidney shaped, & measures about 40 x 60 micrometers
no they produce pollen
The cone.