No, petals of flowers are not soluble in water but by putting these in water some of the contents present in their cells get incorporated in the water. for example if you put rose petals in water a scented substance get incorporated in the water to make rose water.
Nectar usually built up in plant glands, called nectaries, situated at the base of the petals in flowers.
The insects get attracted by the colourful petals and the fragrance.
Flower have widely varying numbers of petals.
The the petals that they produce they do produce flowers ,don't they.
Lotus leaves roll up into spherical shapes when introduced to water.
Yes, bees can get water from flowers. Flowers may hold dew or raindrops among or on their petals.
The rose water contain water and a water soluble extract from rose petals.
Okay there are no flowers just petals but here are the one's I know, rose petals, daisy petals, buttercup petals, and lily petals. But those are just the one's I remember.
Purple water lilies are fragrant and showy flowers that float on the water surface. The purple flowers typically have bright purple petals with yellow centers.
Grass flowers lack petals .
Grass flowers lack petals .
Well, perhaps flowers of sulfur or frost flowers. But the presence of petals is part of the usual definition of a flower. There may be flowers without petals, but I can't think of any.Glumiflorae flower has no petals. This family which includes grasses, sedges, rushes and cattails have very small, almost unnoticeable petals or no petals at all. The corn, rice, wheat, barley, and sugar-cane are included in this class of plants.
poinsettia
Chrysanthemums have two types of flowers on the flower head: disk and ray flowers. The amount of petals vary by cultivar.
In most flowers, the petals contain the majority of fragrance, as evidenced by the use of rose and jasmine petals in the distillation of perfume oils.
5
no