A group of flowers sharing a common main stalk is called an inflorescence.
A pistil consists of three main parts: the stigma, style, and ovary. The stigma is the sticky top part that receives pollen, the style is a slender tube that connects the stigma to the ovary, and the ovary contains the ovules where fertilization occurs and seeds are produced.
Clusters of flowers at the top of a stem are called inflorescences. Inflorescences can come in various shapes and forms, such as spikes, umbels, and panicles, depending on the arrangement of the flowers on the stem.
anther and phelement
The pistil consists of three parts: the stigma, where pollen is received; the style, a tube that connects the stigma to the ovary; and the ovary, which contains ovules that develop into seeds after fertilization.
It is called the pistil, which is comprised of the style and the stamen.
The stigma, style, and ovary together are called the pistil. The stigma is the receptive surface for pollen, the style is the slender stalk that supports the stigma, and the ovary is the base that contains the ovules which develop into seeds after fertilization.
The style is a long, slender stalk found within the flower. It links the stigma and the ovary. The stigma is located at the top of the style and it is a sticky platform in which the pollen grains are deposited.
Solitary flowers are either sessile or pedicelled. Sessile flowers are without a supporting stalk; pedicelled flowers are supported by a stalk. A stalk that supports a cluster of flowers is called peduncle, and the individual stalk of a solitary flower or each flower in an inflorescence is called a pedicel.
The stalk of an ovule is called the funiculus. It connects the ovule to the placenta within the ovary of a flower.
A group of flowers sharing a common main stalk is called an inflorescence.
Stamem
iris snapdragon sunflowers
Stalk
You are probably referring to the pistil, an extension of the ovary which consists of a shaft called the "style" with a "stigma" at the far end designed to receive pollen from the male "stamen". Many flowers have both male and female parts.
You are probably referring to the pistil, an extension of the ovary which consists of a shaft called the "style" with a "stigma" at the far end designed to receive pollen from the male "stamen". Many flowers have both male and female parts.
The sporophytes are the moss generation that is made up of slender stalk with capsule at the end. The moss is a non-vascular plant.