Plant Sex
Pisil
Carpels are fused together to form a pistil
Stamen
Consists of an anther (which produces pollen) and a filament... the part that produces pollen
Anther
Male reproductive part of a flower is called the stamen... composed of a long tube called a filament and has a pollen-producing structure on the end; this oval-shaped structure is called the anther... crucial in the reproduction of flowering plants as it produces the male gametophyte known as pollen
Ovule
Also known as eggs, stored in the ovary until they are fertilized
Cloves
Aromatic flower buds of a tree in the family Myrtaceae, Syzygium aromaticum; native to Indonesia, commonly used as a spice
Pollen Grain
Fertilize ovules... the male gametophyte
Saffron
Harvested from the stigmas, or female portion, of the Saffron Crocus flowers; takes hundreds of flowers to produce a commercially useful amount, which makes saffron expensive
Ovary
Part of the pistil which holds the ovule(s); located above or below or at the point of connection with the base of the petals and sepals
Capers
Pickled flower buds
Angiosperms
Plants that produce flowers
Gymnosperms
Plants that produce pinecones
Stigma
Receives the pollen during fertilization
Filament
Stamen of a flower consists of a slender stalk, called a filament and an anther; the filament supports the anther, which is where pollen develops
The Male Reproductive Organs
Stamens are the male reproductive parts of flowers. A stamen consists of an anther (which produces pollen) and a filament; pollen consists of the male reproductive cells as they fertilize ovules.
Crocus
The flower that Saffron is derived from
The Female Reproductive Organs
The pistil is the collective term for the carpel(s). Each carpel includes an ovary (where the ovules are produced; ovules are the female reproductive cells, the eggs), a style (a tube on top of the ovary), and a stigma (which receives the pollen during fertilization)
Style
Tube on top of the ovary