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The stamen is the male organ of a flower. Typical flowers have six stamens inside a perianth (the petals and sepals together), arranged in a whorl around the pistil. But in some species there are many more than six present in a flower. Collectively, the stamens are called androecium (from Greek andros oikia: man's house). They are positioned just below the gynoecium. Each stamen consists of a thin stalk called a filament supporting an anther that contains the microsporangia. Haploid pollen—the male gamete cells of a flowering plant—are produced by the microsporangia. The anthers are bilocular. i.e. they have two locules. Each locule contains a microsporangium. The tissue between the locules and the cells is called the connective. In an immature, unopened bud, the filaments are still short. Their function is then to transport nutrients to the developing pollen. They start to lengthen when the bud opens. The anther can be attached to the filament in two ways :
Stamens can be connate (fused or joined in the same whorl) :
Stamens can also be adnate (fused or joined from more than one whorl)
In the typical flower (that is, the majority of flowering plant species) each flower has both a pistil and stamens. The bisexual plants are called hermaphrodites or perfect flowers. However, in some species the flowers are unisexual with only either male or female parts (monoecious = on the same plant; dioecious = on different plants). A flower with only male reproductive parts is called androecious. A flower with only female reproductive parts is called gynoecious A flower having only functional stamens is called a staminate flower. An abortive or rudimentary stamen is called a staminodium, such as in Scrophularia nodosa. The pistil and the stamens of orchids are fused into a column. The top part of the column is formed by the anther. This is covered by an anther cap
es:Estambre eo:Stameno de:Staubblatt fr:Étamine nl:Meeldraad pt:Androceu |
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