Male organ (flower)
Male organs, also known as stamens or anthers, are male reproductive organs. All of the male organs found in a flower are suddenly called "andresium" or "androecium". Generally, each of the male organs around the female organ consists of a stem part, known as an acupressure, and a head part where flower dusts are produced. The thread is generally cylindrical or flat. The large varieties of the head and the shape of the head usually come in two parts, called the teka. There are two pollen cuts on each side. There are pollen main cells in the pollen waters that bring pollen to the waters. The number and form of stamens is an important influence in the determination of taxonomic relationships. For sellers, haploid also includes pollen sections formed by spores or pollen grains. The main pollen pollen grains in the pollen cakes bring me to 4 pollen grains each by meiosis. Initially, pollen grains with a single haploid nucleotide bring about two nuclei, one of which is generative and the other of vegetative, by mitosis.