Pollination, predation and production are the happenings whose unfurlment is jumpstarted by a bee getting nectar from a flower. The nectar is consumed by the bee for immediate nourishment and for regurgitated nourishment of bees in the hive or nest, and pollen is taken back to the hive or nest in leg baskets or on bristles. The flower immediately produces more nectar and receives help in seed production through the bee's movement of pollen on one plant or among more than one.
The bee takes the nectar back to its home and turns it into honey to feed itself during the winter.
it causes some pollen grains to fall on the stigma
They take it back to the colony and turn it into honey.
A bee is attracted to a flower from color, sweet nectar, etc... As the bee sucks up the nectar, pollen from the anther(s) gets stuck on the bee's body fur. When the bee moves on to the next flower, some pollen that was stuck to the bee from previous flowers falls off onto the stigma of the new flower.
its two speacies that benifit each other like a whale and barnacleThe bee and a flowerthe bee gets food from the flower and the flower grows.
The whole purpose of a flower producing nectar is to attract bees to it - for the purpose of having the bees help spread the flowers pollen to other flowers of its type. The nectar therefore must be in such a location as to have the bee dusted with pollen and have the dusted bee come in contact with the stigma of the flower. Nectar on the outside would not accomplish these vital actions.
no it is not because people on this that look it up have no idea what they are talking about. so stop reading this and getting answers cause they make you wrong there is no need for this page or website if it was me i would delete it.
Let us consider the bee, which is the most famous, and the most useful pollinating organism. The bee comes to a flower in order to drink the nectar and eat the pollen, but the bee is also covered with hair (the bee hair consists of extrusions of chitin, it is not the same as mamallian hair) and lots of pollen sticks to it. When the bee then visits other flowers, it brings with it the pollen that it picked up at an earlier flower. If some of that pollen gets into the right place on the new flower (the right place being the pistil) then it will pollinate the flower.
It gets Nectar from the flower then turns it into honey.
No, the nectar is there to bee suck, and then, the bee takes the pollen to other flowers.
As bees take nectar from a flower, pollen gets transferred from the stamen on to the bee's body. When the bee goes to the next flower some of this pollen is transferred to the stigma, fertilizing the flower. Once a bee starts collecting nectar from a particular type of flower it will keep going to the same type of flower as long as it can, keeping the pollen to the same type of flower.
They gather a flowers nectar, but while they do that, the flowers pollen gets on the bee and when he goes to the next flower he drops some of it and more sticks to him, that how flowers pollenate.
A bee and a flower. The bee gets food from the flower and the flower gets pollinated by the bee.
Yes. Mutualism is any long-term relationship that helps both animals. In this case, the bee gets access to nectar, and the flower gets pollinated.
Pollen and nectar.
It collects the nectar and pollen (pollinating the flower).
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.
A bee is attracted to a flower from color, sweet nectar, etc... As the bee sucks up the nectar, pollen from the anther(s) gets stuck on the bee's body fur. When the bee moves on to the next flower, some pollen that was stuck to the bee from previous flowers falls off onto the stigma of the new flower.
As bees take nectar from a flower, pollen gets transferred from the stamen on to the bee's body. When the bee goes to the next flower some of this pollen is transferred to the stigma, fertilizing the flower. Once a bee starts collecting nectar from a particular type of flower it will keep going to the same type of flower as long as it can, keeping the pollen to the same type of flower.
It's tongue.