Some flowers depend on wind, others depend on insects, others depend on larger animals to transport pollen. Flowers that include both male and female parts could potentially pollinate without assistance, if opposite parts happened to touch, but even these flowers usually depend on outside forces for pollination.
It sticks to them.
Self pollination.
The anther (the male gametes) contains the pollen grains.
When an insect like bee's lands on a flower, pollen sticks to it's legs. So when an insect moves to another flower pollen gets on that flower and so on and so on as the insect moves from one plant to another.
i dont know hi santa eminem
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
During self pollination, pollen grains move from the stamen of a flower to its pistil. Cross pollination involves flowers from different plants.
The anther is the part of a flower that produces pollen.Bees are crucial in the reproduction of many plants, as they move the pollen from the anther to another flower.
about 1 fourth the size of the actual flower itself hope it helped =]
The structure that allows sperm cells to move through the style of a flower is the pollen tube. Pollen tubes carry the sperm cells from the pollen grains on the stigma, through the style, and into the ovary where fertilization can occur. This process is crucial for sexual reproduction in plants.
they cause the spread of pollen to other plants, because it gets stuck in their fur and so transfered. the pollen sticks to the stigma of other plants when the animal brushes past, and fertilises the ova in other flowers of the same species.
I think it's where a flower pollinates itself- usually a male flower has to give pollen to a female flower, but sometimes flowers have both parts, for example, the lily.