Think about the phrase, "pistol packing mama." Carpels fuse together to form the pistol which contains the style, ovary and stigma. They get pollen from the anther which is on the stamen. Bees or other pollinators move the pollen to the pistol and it travels down into the ovules and becomes seeds.
The correct order of pollination is when pollen is transferred from the anther (male part) of a flower to the stigma (female part) of the same flower or a different flower of the same species. This process can occur through self-pollination (within the same flower) or cross-pollination (between different flowers).
The petals of a flower are brightly coloured to attract insects for pollination.
Before pollination, the pollen grains are stored in the anthers (male part) of the plant. During pollination, an insect (such as a bee) flies to the flower for nectar and some pollen from the anthers rubs off on it. When the bee travels to another flower, the pollen sticks to the stigma (female part). After pollination, fertilization can begin. Hope this helps.
Self-pollination occurs when pollen from the male part of a flower fertilizes the female part of the same flower or another flower on the same plant, while cross-pollination involves the transfer of pollen from the male part of one flower to the female part of a different flower, typically from a different plant. Both processes result in fertilization and can lead to the production of seeds. They are alike in that both are essential for plant reproduction and can contribute to genetic diversity, although self-pollination generally leads to less genetic variation compared to cross-pollination.
the pollination grow into
In order for pollination to occur, what must happen to the pollen grains is that they have to be transferred to the stigma in a flower of the same species. The stigma is the female part of the flower.
The process of pollination from same flower is called self-pollination. the process of pollination from another flower of same breed is called cross-pollination.
The petals of a flower are brightly coloured to attract insects for pollination.
The stigma is the part of the flower where the pollen grains stick during pollination
Pollen lands on the stigma, which is the sticky female reproductive part of the flower, during pollination. This interaction allows for fertilization and the formation of seeds.
self -pollination occurs within the same flower or same plant
The two main types of pollination are self (or autogamous) pollination and cross (or heterogamous) pollination. Self pollination - is when pollination is tansfer from the anther to the stigma of the same flower. Cross pollintion - is when pollination is transfer from the anther to the stigma of another flower