Yes, they can- and are...
In America's Southwestern desert climes, bats (primarily the lesser long-nosed bat) are the main pollinator of the night-blooming, tree-sized Saguaro.
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You can plant whatever time of day or night it is, as long as it gets the required amount of water and sun.
The flowers that are not brightly colored either have smell to attract the insects for pollination during night or these are pollinated by wind.
Night-flowering, other-pollinated, and wind-pollinated flowers are those which do not need to be pollinated by bees. For example, night-flowering plants may be pollinated by bats, beetles or flies whereas the wind takes responsibility for less bright-colored, less sweet-scented herbaceous flora.
Flowers that bloom at night are trying to attract night flying insects and animals to pollinate them. Such flowers are usually pollinated by moths and (strangely enough) by bats.
Flowers that bloom at night are trying to attract night flying insects and animals to pollinate them. Such flowers are usually pollinated by moths and (strangely enough) by bats.
By pollinators like bats and moths guided by smell of the flowers.
As they are pollinated by moths this allows them to be seen.
Because plants that flower at night are usually pollinated by night flying insects like moths.
uhh, flowers
They are not better they are different.
wind pollinated
They are most likely pollinated by wind or pollinators, such as bees.
i think their pollinated by the plant growers