it travels through the plant
The stigma which is the female part of the flower produces the pollen sex cells and then that gets transfered to another flower
The stigma which is the female part of the flower produces the pollen sex cells and then that gets transfered to another flower
Flower fertilization is when the pollen gets into the female parts of the flower and the seeds start to form. Each ovule or egg needs some pollen to form a seed.
gets pollen
Once the flower gets pollen, it starts to create seeds. That is the job of the flower. It is part of the cycle of life.
everytime a bee or butterfly gets on a flower it collects pollen so when they fly around the pollen falls off.
Pollination!
Apple trees can be grown anywhere; but after each winter, apples restart on the tree as a flower. The flower allows pollination to take place; the middle peduncle of the flower is the female part that turns the flower into a fruit, and the peduncles that form a circle are the male ones that the pollen comes from. When the female peduncle gets pollinated with the pollen that came from the male peduncles of the flower, the flower starts its process of turning into a fruit
Plants- like any other living thing have to reproduce, but in a plants case they have to make seeds not babies, so the male flower makes pollen which bees catch on their sticky coats and fly over to a female flower where the pollen gets taken down to the plants 'stomach' where the seeds grow and are then projected out of the female flower and then land in a spot where they will grow. the female part is called the pistil a flower can have more than one pistil
Usually the pollinator gets nectar from the flower, also surplus pollen.
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.
Bees (and other insects) fly from flower to flower and are unwittingly transferring pollen from the stamen (male) of one flower to the carpel (female) of another flower thereby fertilizing the plant.