Biology, asked by pandeyrishabh99, 1 year ago

diffrence between androecium and gynoecium

Answers

Answered by visakhs
4
The androecium is the male reproductive part of the flower. This consists of stamen.They produce pollen grains.The gynoecium is the female reproductive part which is made of carpels; stigma, style and ovary.

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Answered by vyshnavireddy
1
ANDROECIUM

Stamens  are structures that produce pollen in terminal sac like structures  called anthers. The number of stamens comprised by the androecium is sometimes the same as the number of petals, but often the stamens are more numerous or fewer in number than the petals. There are generally two pairs of spore-containing sacs  in a young stamen;  ANDROECIUM

GYNOECIUM


Carpels are the building blocks of a pistil. The gynoecium may have one pistil or more. A pistil may have one carpel or more than one stuck together ("fused"). Carpels and pistils have three parts: a stigma at the top where the pollen lands; a style and an ovary. In the case of a pistil, the stigma, style, and ovary may be made up of those parts of more than one carpel, fused.

Plant ovaries are the parts of the gynoecium which (much like animal ovaries) contain ovules. The style is generally stalklike. It is between the ovary at the bottom and the stigma at the top. In some plants, there are no styles in the pistils. The stigma is the pollen receptor at the top of the carpel.


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