In This picture, there is a full flower before any changes or experiments were done to it. You can see
the petals, stem and stigma.
This picture shows the stigma surrounded by anthers after the petals are removed.
All on the same flower, just lacking some parts. The male reproductive part of a flower is called the stamen. It is composed of a long tube, called a filament, and has a pollen-producing structure on the end. The oval part is called the anther. The job of an anther is to create male sex cells for the plant.
This is a (sorry not very good quality) picture of the stamen of the flower. The stamen is the male part of the flower. It produces pollen usually with a slender filament supporting the anther. It is tucked inside the flower, behind the petals.
This a view of where the carpel is. It is the female part of the plant. One or more carpels make up the pistil. There is and end in which has a sticky part called the stigma, that lets the pollen stick to it.
This is a picture in where almost everything has been taken off the plant. All there is left is the ovary, the green tube. It was cut open so you can see the immature or unfertilized seeds.


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