Statement (I): Papaya is a polygamous plant with various sex forms (pistillate, hermaphrodite and staminate).
This statement is true. Papaya (Carica papaya) is well-known for its complex sex expression. It is typically dioecious (separate male and female plants) or gynodioecious (female and hermaphrodite plants). Some varieties can produce pistillate (female), staminate (male), and hermaphrodite (bisexual) flowers, sometimes even on the same plant, fitting the description of polygamous.
Statement (II): Pistillate form is stable and sex reversal is not affected by environmental factors.
This statement is false. While purely pistillate (female) papaya plants are genetically female and generally stable in their sex expression, the sex expression in hermaphrodite and male papaya plants can be influenced by environmental factors such as temperature and soil moisture. High temperatures, for example, can induce "sex reversal" or changes in flower morphology in hermaphrodite plants, leading to an increase in male flowers or sterile flowers (a phenomenon often called "summer sterility"). Purely pistillate (female) forms are indeed genetically stable females, but the blanket statement that "sex reversal is not affected by environmental factors" in all forms, especially in the context of papaya's overall variable sex expression, is incorrect. The instability or changeability of sex forms, particularly in hermaphrodites, due to environment is a known issue.
Since Statement (I) is true and Statement (II) is false, option (3) is the correct answer.
Statement (I) is true but Statement (II) is false.