The thing that attracts an insect to a flower is the nectar inside the flower.
the pollen an the nectar
The two things that attract an insect to a flower are the smell and the color.
The thing that attracts an insect to a flower is the nectar inside the flower.
to do the process of pollination
They attract an insect that will carry the pollen to another flower [wich is cross pollenation.] Comru
colourful petal
nectar :- for to attract insect petals :- same flowers germinate and give fruits
bright flowers get pollinated because the insect attract them because of the color of the flower
The smell it produces to attract its pollinating insect (flies). It smells like rotten meat.
The flower is the reproductive organ of the plant. Without flowers, plants would not be able to reproduce sexually. The colour and smell of the flower attract insect and animals to cross pollinate the plant
angiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilization
Yes because insects are attracted to the pollen in flowers.
Many of the different species of orchids have unique adaptations of their flower structure and mechanisms of pollination. One of these pollination mechanisms is called pseudocopulatory pollination, which is where part of the flower actually looks like a female insect. What it does is release a scent into the air to smell like the pheromones of a female bee, fly, wasp or whatever species of insect the orchid needs to attract. When the male insect lands on it and "mates" with what really is the flower, the pollen attaches to the insect and stays with it until it reaches the next flower.