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Keshu

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Flowers, pollination, feralization, fruits (yesterdays post)

Flowers

Flowers are the reproductive organs of flowering plants. Their main role is to make reproduction possible.A typical flower has four main parts:

  • Sepals – protect the flower when it is a bud

  • Petals – usually colorful and scented to attract pollinators

  • Stamens (male part) – produce pollen grains

  • Pistil/Carpel (female part) – contains the ovary with ovules

Inside the ovary are ovules, which can later become seeds. However, seeds cannot form unless pollen reaches the female part of the flower. This leads to the next stage.

Pollination

Pollination is the transfer of pollen grains from the anther (male part) to the stigma (female part) of a flower.

There are two main types:

  • Self-pollination – pollen comes from the same flower or plant

  • Cross-pollination – pollen comes from a different plant of the same species

Pollination can happen through:

  • Wind

  • Water

  • Insects (bees, butterflies)

  • Birds and animals

Pollination is essential because without it, fertilization cannot occur. Once pollen lands on the stigma, it begins the process that leads to fertilization.

Fertilization

After pollination, the pollen grain germinates on the stigma and forms a pollen tube that grows down through the style to the ovary.

Inside the ovule:

  • The male gamete from pollen fuses with the female egg cell

  • This fusion is called fertilization

In flowering plants, double fertilization occurs:

  • One male gamete forms the zygote (future plant embryo)

  • The other forms endosperm, which nourishes the developing seed

After fertilization:

  • The ovule becomes a seed

  • The ovary begins to change, leading to the formation of fruit

This directly connects fertilization to fruit formation.

Fruits

A fruit is the ripened ovary of a flower formed after fertilization.Its main functions are:

  • To protect the seeds

  • To help in seed dispersal

Changes after fertilization:

  • Ovary → fruit

  • Ovule → seed

  • Flower parts usually dry up and fall off

Types of fruits include:

  • Fleshy fruits (mango, apple, tomato)

  • Dry fruits (nuts, grains, legumes)

Fruits often attract animals, which eat them and help spread the seeds to new places, allowing new plants to grow.

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