yes
Butterflies need the nectar from various flowers to feed themselves. Flowers benefit by the butterflies pollinating them so that the flowers can create seeds.
Plants and butterflies have a symbiotic relationship. The plants benefit from the pollination services provided by the butterflies and the butterflies feed from the nectar of the flowers of the plants.
Butterflies going from one flower to another helps with pollination of flowers. Some flowers are not able to self pollinate and need assistance from insects like butterflies.
Butterflies feed primarily on nectar from flowers
Flowers help butterflies by providing them with food. Butterflies help flowers by spreading their seeds. Butterflies also help aid the flowers with pollination.
They drink from all sorts of flowers. They mostly drink from daises.
butterflies need the stuff in the flowers
Butterflies visit flowers to feed on nectar, which provides them with important nutrients and energy. It also helps with pollination, as butterflies inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another as they feed.
Actually, butterflies don't eat flowers. Caterpillars do. The butterflies use their proboscis to suck the nectar out of the center of the flower.
No because then why would they come outside, that is why butterflies are not allergic to flowers as there are flowers in every house and all around the world. If they were allergic then we would have not have any butterflies around.
When butterflies drink nectar from a flower, they get pollen on themselves which is scattered onto flowers. Pollination is essential to flowers bearing seeds, and flowers are "designed" to distribute pollen through luring insects (bees, butterflies) with their nectar.
Bees, butterflies and some mammals pollinate flowers.