Arabian jasmine (Jasminum sambac) typically has bisexual flowers, meaning each flower contains both male (stamens) and female (pistil) reproductive structures. This allows for self-pollination as well as cross-pollination with other plants. While some jasmine species may have unisexual flowers, Arabian jasmine is primarily known for its hermaphroditic flowers.
No, jasmine flowers are not unisexual; they contain both male and female reproductive parts within the same flower. This means that a single jasmine flower can self-pollinate and produce seeds without needing another plant for pollination.
Bisexual flower
it is a bisexual flower
A sunflower is a unisexual flower. Flowers that are unisexual have either stamens and no pistils or pistils with no stamens.
Unisexual
Jasmine plants are typically bisexual, meaning they possess both male and female reproductive structures within the same flower. This allows them to self-pollinate or cross-pollinate with other jasmine plants. However, some species may exhibit variations in reproductive strategies, but the majority are not strictly unisexual.
uni-sexual
unisexual
A rose is not a unisexual flower. The rose is a bisexual flower. This means that reproduction does not require a male and female plant.
no
bisexual
It depends on gender. Males or bisexual, females are unisexual