pollin
nectar
A honey bee uses its tongue to collect nectar from a plant and its mandibles to collect pollen.
adbomen
plants have nectar to reproduce. When the insect or bird lands on the plant nectar gets stuck to it. The animal then goes to another plant and spreads the nectar. Then a new plant ts produced. actually, nectar is a sweet liquid produced to attract pollinators (for this example lets say bees, though there are many). The pollen (flower sperm) gets attached to the bees and when they land on another flower, the pollen goes into the stigma (female part of a flower) to produce a seed.
plants have nectar to reproduce. When the insect or bird lands on the plant nectar gets stuck to it. The animal then goes to another plant and spreads the nectar. Then a new plant ts produced. actually, nectar is a sweet liquid produced to attract pollinators (for this example lets say bees, though there are many). The pollen (flower sperm) gets attached to the bees and when they land on another flower, the pollen goes into the stigma (female part of a flower) to produce a seed.
Its legs for the gathering of pollen, it mouth for the gathering of nectar.
-A glasswing butterfly eats the same thing as a regular butterfly with no name... *All butterfly's eat nectar from a majority of flowers!.
Well there is the pollen, stem, nectar, petals, leaves, I don't know if this helps.
Nectar is produced by specialized structures called nectaries, which are typically found in flowers. Nectaries can be located in various parts of the flower, such as the base of the petals, the floral tube, or the ovary.
Milkweed is eaten by several species of insects, most notably the monarch butterfly larvae, red milkweed beetle, and milkweed tussock caterpillar or tiger moth. In turn, monarchs are eaten by birds, and tiger moths by bats.
body
The pollen baskets on a honey bee are specifically for pollen. The bee collects nectar with its tongue and stores it in a sac within its body to transport it back to the hive.