the answer your looking is bees. They go to flower to flower picking up and dropping polyn. Almost every plant need to be pollinated example of a flower that does not to be pollinated is peas
A bee, they pollinate flowers so we have plants and air
Bats keep insect numbers down and help pollinate flowers.
Because these colours attract insects and the flowers need the insects to pollinate them. Hope this helps!
you can self pollinate them by taking the pollen from one flowers anther and sticking it to the tip of the stamen of a different flower.
Yes, monarch butterflies can indirectly help pollinate flowers as they visit them for nectar. While they are not as efficient as bees or other insects, their movements between flowers can help transfer pollen and facilitate pollination.
Yes, insects are needed to pollinate some flowers but no, they are not needed to pollinate all flowers. Insects count -- along with bats, birds, and some mammals and reptiles -- among nature's pollinators.
Flowers don't pollinate.Bees pollinate the flower.
To effectively pollinate zucchini blossoms, gently shake the plant or use a small brush to transfer pollen from the male flowers to the female flowers. This helps ensure successful fertilization and fruit development.
In short, they do. Greenhouses are not usually sealed, and insects can get in and out, and they will pollinate the flowers.
The ecological niche of a bee is the earth or sex
Yes, African honeybees pollinate flowers. The insects in question (Apis mellifera scutellata) sip upon nectar and take away pollen, just like other bees. They therefore will have to be considered, despite their invasive aggressiveness, among the world's beneficial insects and insect pollinators.
Aye-ayes help keep wood-burrowing insect populations in check. They can also pollinate large flowers for palm trees.