The anther is the male sex organ. The stigma is where the pollen travels to the ovary. The combination of the stigma, style and ovary is the pistol. (Think pistol packing mama.)
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.
stamen and pistil
The reproductive structures of a plant, such as flowers, are used in sexual reproduction. These structures contain the male and female reproductive cells necessary for fertilization and seed production.
The radicle is actually the embryonic root of a plant, not a part of a flower. It is the first structure to emerge from a seed during germination and develops into the main root system of the plant. Flowers do not have radicles; they are reproductive structures involved in the plant's sexual reproduction.
Stamens are the pollen-producers of typical flowers and are part of a plant's sexual reproduction system.
Sexual reproduction in plants involves the transfer of pollen from the male part of one plant to the female part of another plant. This process leads to the formation of seeds, which can grow into new plants. Bees, butterflies, and wind are common ways that pollen can be transferred between plants.
Because these are responsible for sexual reproduction and seed formation. Apart from this flowers have great aesthetic value.
no it is a fungus
Fertilization is part of sexual reproduction.
The term "asexual reproduction" means that new plants are created without the need for gametes. Self-pollination is not asexual reproduction -- the same plant merely provides both of the gametes used.The two main forms of asexual reproduction (apomixis) arevegetative (budding, rhizomes, aerial stems, or bulb division) andnon-vegetative, which includes parthenogenic or androgenetic seeds (agamospermy).
parenchyma
stigma