anther

pistil and stamensA lily flower with a central pistil surrounded by stamens. The six orange structures are pollen-laden anthers, each borne at the end of a stalk known as a filament.

anther, in flowering plants, the part of a stamen that produces and contains pollen. Each anther is generally borne at the tip of a long slender stalk known as a filament and consists of two lobes that each house a pair of pollen sacs (microsporangia) that produce pollen for pollination. As the anther matures, the partition between the adjacent microsporangia of a pair breaks down so that there are only two pollen-containing sacs (one in each lobe of the anther) at the time the anther releases the pollen. While the anthers of most angiosperms dehisce, or release, pollen through a rupture along one side of each sac, those belonging to members of the heath family (Ericaceae) characteristically release pollen through small pores at the anther tip.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.