This process is called pollination. Bees transfer pollen from the male parts of one flower to the female parts of another flower, which is essential for fertilization and seed production in many plants.
Bees collect pollen on their hairy bodies as they move from flower to flower. The pollen sticks to their bodies and is then carried back to the hive in special pollen baskets on their hind legs. This pollen is used as food for the bees and to help pollinate other flowers.
As the bees (and other flying insects) move from flower to flower, they drink the nectar and carry pollen on their bodies from flower to flower. It is this cross-pollination that fertilises each flower and the flower can then produce seed for next season flowers.
Bees are fuzzy. How do you think this trait can help bees carry pollen?
they pollinate flowers by going to a flower and getting the nectar the bee wants and there foot falls into a sac that holds the pollen and the and then when the bee leaves the flower and goes to another flower the pollen falls off the bees foot and starts the pollination process
They carry pollen grains from one flower to another.
Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
This process is called pollination. Bees transfer pollen from the male parts of one flower to the female parts of another flower, which is essential for fertilization and seed production in many plants.
They carry pollen from flower to flower the pollen from one flower fertilizes other flowers and so on.
Bees that collect a flower's honey give to that flower pollen deposits from another flower.
No. Plants and animals cannot reproduce together. Bees can, however, carry pollen from one flower to another to fertilize them.
It is transferred by wind or bees.
Bees carry the pollen between flowers, which enables the fruit to grow.
Pollen.
Pollen is not a drug, and it does not show up on drug tests. Also, bees don't make pollen; they pick it up from one flower and carry it to another.
Bees collect pollen on their hairy bodies as they move from flower to flower. The pollen sticks to their bodies and is then carried back to the hive in special pollen baskets on their hind legs. This pollen is used as food for the bees and to help pollinate other flowers.
Bees and wasps carry the male pollen to the female stigma's as they collect nectar from flower to flower. Also, in bigger animales e.g foxes, the pollen sticks to their fur as they pass the flower, and then when they rub against another flower, they transfer the pollen from their fur onto the stigma.