yes, because many flowers depend on certain insects to pollinate them. the flowers provide the insects with food in the form of nectar, pollen, or other substances, and the insects help the flowers reproduce.
The relationship between a bee and a flower is that the be pollinates the flower or in other words, it gets the pollen from the flowers and puts it on other flowers to make the grow so they have more pollen to make honey with.
bees helps in the pollination of flowers by transferring the seeds from one place to another.Thus this helps in building biodiversity on earth as the seeds are distributed in different places on earth.This is the reason why we have different plants in different places.
A bee and a flower are an example of mutualism!
A symbiotic relationship is one where both species benefit. In this case, the flower provides the butterfly with food and the butterfly pollenates the flower by spreading nectar.
They have a mutual relationship. Bees go from flower to flower collecting pollen and nectar from them for food, and the flowers get pollinated and reproduce.
Mutualism they are both being benefited.
yes
Mutualism!
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
mutualism
In biology, mutualism is the relationship between two species where each individual benefits. A common example of mutualism is the relationship between a bee and a flower. The flower relies on the bee for pollination, while the bee uses the flower's nectar to make food.
It is called Mutualism, which is itself a type of Symbiosis.
honey
pollen
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
the bee gets pollen from the flower therefore transfering pollen to another flower which creates the flower to pollinate, as the bee is flying from flower to flower, its collecting food to make honey for its food. therefore taking note that the symbiotic relationship is mutualism
Mutualism - both species benefit from their relationship. The bee comes to the flower to collect nectar as food, and brushes against the anthers of the flower, which are covered in pollen. The bee moves to another flower to collect nectar and rubs the pollen off on the second flower's stigma, fertilizing the flower. Thus, the bee receives a source of food from the flowers, and the flowers are pollinated by the bee.
Symbiosis
Pollen and nectar.