The seeds won't be bunched up together
self-pollination cross-pollination wind-pollination
Wind pollination is when pollen is carried in the wind
Conifers typically rely on wind pollination, where pollen is carried from male cones to female cones by the wind. This type of pollination is common in plants that do not have showy flowers or rely on animals for pollination.
Plants would have evolved to take more advantage of insects and the wind to carry out pollination and seed dispersal.
Maize is primarily wind-pollinated, as the male flowers (tassels) release pollen that is carried by the wind to the female flowers (silks) for fertilization. Insects can also play a role in maize pollination, but wind is the dominant method.
Cross pollination is when the wind or a insect carries pollen from one flower to another. Self pollination is when a flower produces pollen and uses it in asexual reproduction.
Pollination can be by wind, by insect, by bird, by hand.
It could be done by animal pollination , wind pollination or even self pollination.
Pollination can occur through wind, animals (such as bees, butterflies, and birds), and self-pollination (where pollen is transferred from the anther to the stigma of the same flower or a different flower on the same plant).
Most pollination takes place with the help of insects and wind. The purpose of pollination is to transmit the pollen from one plant to the stigma of another plant.
they get heavy
wind pollination