Attracting pollinators (insects etc) to the flower.
The thing that attracts an insect to a flower is the nectar inside the flower.
No. But many flowers contain nectar.
in the ovary
In some plants, the flower will keep producing nectar for up to several days before it dies and the seeds begin to form. In others, the flower produces just one batch of nectar. In some plants such as lantana, flowers may stay on the plant long after they have been pollinated and stop producing nectar in order to add to the attractiveness of the plant to pollinators.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
It gets Nectar from the flower then turns it into honey.
...nectar. The color of the flower can indicate the presence of nectar to pollinators, while the nectar serves as a reward for their visit and helps to transfer pollen from one flower to another. This mutualistic relationship benefits both the pollinators and the plants.
they can get nectar
nectar
Don't you mean NECTAR? Nectarine is a type of orange!!! by the way, the NECTAR of a flower is found of the Stigma.
Only a few bats are nectar eating , when they suck nectar from flower to flower they transfer pollen for pollination .
The nectar is provided by the plant in the flower as 'bait'. This bait attracts animals to the flower to feed on the nectar and as thy do so they get coated with pollen and transfer this pollen form flower to flower as they feed depositing the pollen on to stigmas of the flowers the pistils. The nectar is therefore key to the plants sexual reproduction.