Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The flower can vary in color from yellowish green to cream to white. Flowers appear soon after the vine emerges. The flowers are monoecious, that is, individual flowers are either male or female, but both sexes can be found on the same plant. Male flowers appear in open spikes while females flowers, distinguished by a swollen base, usually ...
Male flowers appear in open clusters while females flowers, distinguished by a swollen base, usually appear individually. The plant is self-fertile, i.e. pollen from the male flowers can fertilise the female flowers on the same plant; pollination is by insects. Fruit Marah macrocarpa fruit
They may have a pollenizer cultivar interplanted, and the number of beehives per unit area is increased, but temperature changes induce male flowers even on these plants, which may be sufficient for pollination to occur. [10] In 2009, an international team of researchers announced they had sequenced the cucumber genome. [11]
Androdioecious: having male flowers on some plants, bisexual ones on others. [6] Androecious: having only male flowers (the male of a dioecious population); producing pollen but no seed. [16] Androgynous: see bisexual. [6] Androgynomonoecious: having male, female, and bisexual flowers on the same plant, also called trimonoecious. [16]
Monoecy often co-occurs with anemophily, [2] because it prevents self-pollination of individual flowers and reduces the probability of self-pollination between male and female flowers on the same plant. [4]: 32 Monoecy in angiosperms has been of interest for evolutionary biologists since Charles Darwin. [5]
Seedless cucumbers are an example of vegetative parthenocarpy, seedless watermelon is an example of stenospermocarpy as they are immature seeds (aborted ones). Plants that moved from one area of the world to another may not always be accompanied by their pollinating partner, and the lack of pollinators has spurred human cultivation of ...
In dimorphic sexual systems, individual plants within a species only produce one sort of flower, either hermaphrodite or male, or female. Dimorphic sexual systems include dioecy, gynodioecy, androdioecy, and trioecy. [7] Male (a.k.a. staminate) flowers have a stamen but no pistil and produce only male gametes. Female (a.k.a. pistillate) flowers ...
For example, male inflorescence in plants often produce more flowers than females . Furthermore, pollen export and ultimately paternity, often increases with flower number, even for plants with hermaphroditic flowers. Retention of older flowers with no pollinator rewards can lead to increased pollinator visitation rate and increased pollen removal.