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On maturity of pollen grains , the anther lobes burst open and the pollen grains released in large amonut are carried by wind to several meters away to settle on feathery stigma as in case of plants of grass family.
The pistil is sticky so pollen will stick to it.
Out of hundreds and thousands of pollen grains produced by each flower a few land on the stigma during pollination and others just wither away.
On maturity of pollen grains , the anther lobes burst open and the pollen grains released in large amonut are carried by wind to several meters away to settle on feathery stigma as in case of plants of grass family.
On maturity of pollen grains , the anther lobes burst open and the pollen grains released in large amonut are carried by wind to several meters away to settle on feathery stigma as in case of plants of grass family.
no it's not carried away by moving water
It is carried away by water and wind.
By pollen being washed away down rivers to other plants that may feed from the river water
Loose sediments can be carried by wind, water, or ice.
By its roots
pollen travels through wind, water or through animals from one stamen to another. They get blown away by the wind or get washed away in the water(from the rivers). animals like honeybee or birds also help in this process as all the grass plants have open flowers and pollen grains stay on the top the wind carries them to one flower to another
The anther makes the pollen I think, but you might wanna check though.