Sunday, April 12, 2009

Does a flower have reproductive organs?

Yes, the stamen and pistil.





Stamen: The male reproductive structure made up of an anther and a filament.





Pistil: A single female reproductive %26quot;unit.%26quot; The pistil typically has three recognizable regions: the stigma, the style, and the ovary.





A %26quot;perfect%26quot; flower has both; an %26quot;imperfect%26quot; flower lacks one or the other.
Does a flower have reproductive organs?
Of course. Flowers are the reproductive organs of plants.
Reply:of course.
Reply:ya
Reply:Yes, as others have said, the whole flower is the reproductive organ.





Perhaps it is a none too subtle hint when the boyfriend gives a bunch of reproductive organs to his girlfriend!
Reply:Yes--the stamen is the penis, and the pistil is the vagina.
Reply:check out the flower called %26#039;clitoria%26#039; on google image search-you might want to think twice about giving those to your gilfriend! (btw clitoria is latin for %26#039;butterfly%26#039;:) )
Reply:do u go to school ? ask ya teachers! but not to be mean , yes . especially angiosperms. they are abundant today
Reply:most plants have repoductive organs.
Reply:yes it does if u pay attention in school then maybe u will learn that they really do have reproductive organs.
Reply:A flower IS a reproductive organ; that is to say, flowers are the sexual reproductive organs of flowering plants, also called the Angiosperms (keep in mind that not all plants are flowering plants. Ferns, for instance, are in a different group, as are conifers and cycads). Flowers are typically composed of petals on the outside, which are usually, but not always, the flashy colorful part and usually subtended by sepals (typically not as flashy); a whorl of stamens interior to the petals, which are the male part of the flower and contain pollen, which itself contains the plant equivalent of sperm, collectively, the stamens are called the androecium; interior to the stamens are the gynoecium, or the collective female parts of a flower, which include the ovary, ovules (which develope into seeds), and one or more pistils; the tip of a pistil usually has a style, which is where the receptive part of the pistil is located, and this is where pollen lands or is delivered by a pollinator (e.g., bee, hummingbird, bat, butterfly, moth, etc.), and where conception is initiated.computer

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