About Plants Part 4
Flowers are the reproductive organ only of burgeoning shops (Angiosperms Angiosperms). The petals of a flower are hourly brightly colored and scented to attract insects and other pollinators. The stamen is the mannish part of the shop. It's composed of the hair (a a stalk) that holds the anther, which produces the pollen. Pollen is required for shops to produce seeds. The carpel is the womanlike part of the flower. The top part of the carpel contains the smudge. The style is the neck of the carpel. The ovary is the tumescent area at the bottom of the carpel. The ovary produces the seeds. The sepal is a splinter that protects a flower as a sprat.
The process by which pollen gets transferred from one flower to another flower is called pollination. This transfer can do in different ways. Insects like as megrims are attracted to bright, scented flowers. When megrims go into the flower to gather brew, the spiky pollen sticks to their reverse legs. The sticky slur on another flower catches the pollen when the kink lands or arbors in it.
Some flowers use the wind to carry pollen. Their pendent stamens produce lots of pollen that's light enough to be carried by the wind. Their flowers are normally small and not considerably coloured. The slurs of these flowers are lightweight and hang outside the flower to catch the pollen as it falls.
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