By looking at the data from various web sites and roughly interpretation their results it appears that a variety of flowers will secrete about 1-2 mgm of sugars per 8 hour day. The amount varies and increases as the flower is stimulated. If nectar contains about 6 - 8 % sugars then a flower will secrete some 40 mgm per 10 hour daylight day. Bees carry back to the hive some 30mgm of nectar each flight and has to visit some 400 flowers each flight hour to pick up a bagful of nectar to carry home.
Maybe someone can actually verify these summations, as it my guesstimates from the data I have seen published and observed and weighed in my bees to and from my hive.
Ted Romer
Nectar has no function for the flower itself, other than to attract pollinators.
The nectar is in the anther which is on the filament. It is in the flower and is usually orange and it sticks out.
the part of a flower that contains nectar is the center of the flower.
Nectar is stored in 'NECTARIES'
.
The part of the flower that contains the ovules is the ovary.
the pollen an the nectar
a perfect flower/ A bisexual flower
It is called a FLOWER :)
carpel contain the ovary of flower
Nectar in the flower attracts the butterflies.
Butterflies are attracted to nectar which are produced in the nectary glands of a flower.
The part of the flower that contains the ovules is the ovary.
it may be the female part......
It's tongue.
the pollen an the nectar
The thing that attracts an insect to a flower is the nectar inside the flower.
Nectar is produced in organs called nectaries. They are usually at or near the base of the petals, but some plants have nectaries in other places such as in leaf axils or on the leaf itself.
a perfect flower/ A bisexual flower
It is called a FLOWER :)
No. But many flowers contain nectar.
carpel contain the ovary of flower