Pollen |
Plants
make the pollen in the saclike anothers of their flowers. Pollen grains
are so small that they look like tiny specks.
If
you look through a microscope, you can see that pollen has different shapes in
different kinds of plants. Some pollen grains are smooth and other kinds
of pollen are covered with knobs and spines. Before a seed can form, a
flower must be pollinated. This means that a pollen grain must fall on
another part of the flower called stigma.
When
a pollen grain of the same kind of flower catches on the sticky surface of the
stigma, the pollen grains sends out a tiny threadlike tube. The tube
grows down to tiny egg cell inside the seed case. Now the eggs are
fertilized and will become a seed. – Dick Rogers
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