The flower that is the best one with pollen would be well if you don't care about bees then it would probably be a sunflower. If you hate bees or allergic then the flower with pollen, looks beautiful, and doesn't attract bees would be a rose bush. Also remember you have to water it and take care of it.
all yellow red and blue ones well practually all of them
Yes! In flowering plants the flower is the most important part of a plant for reproduction. Pollen and Ovules are produced in the flower. The purpose of the flower is to attract insects, birds or bats in order to cause pollen to be spread. The flower is the point of fertilisation, when pollen and ovules fuse, which ultimately forms the new individual.
Plants produce sperm cells and egg cells/ova as do animals. The exact structures may differ of course. Remember that plants have a gametophyte and sporophyte life stage. Only the gametophyte produces gametes/sex cells. The sporophyte produces spores. In the case of pollen, that is a type of spore which grows a gametophyte within itself which produces sperm.
The anther produces the sperm. It sits on top of the filament. Together these are called the stamen. To find the anther, look for the oval shaped structures that can move or wobble when touched and they most often have pollen on them.
The nectar attracts bees (or other insects) who collect it and bring it back to the hive. Pollen rubs on the bees boddy, and it effectivly carries it to another flower where the pollen will fertilise 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.
Since most pollen is yellow any plant with a red flower would fit the description
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
If the pollen lands on stigma of the same flower, it is called self-pollination. When the pollen of a flower lands on the stigma of another flower of the same plant, or that of a different plant of the same kind, it is called cross-pollination.
daisies are because they have a lot of pollen
It is a rose and a daisy and your butt sucker
Yes! In flowering plants the flower is the most important part of a plant for reproduction. Pollen and Ovules are produced in the flower. The purpose of the flower is to attract insects, birds or bats in order to cause pollen to be spread. The flower is the point of fertilisation, when pollen and ovules fuse, which ultimately forms the new individual.
I believe it's the wind. High levels of wind can blow the pollen right off the flower.
the function of the pollen sac is to produce pollen (pollen grains). The pollen sac is the microsporangium of a seed plant in which pollen is produced. Most plants except coniferous plants contain four (4) pollen sacs.
Most flowers are beautiful. They appear this way in order to attract bugs. When a bug lands on a flower's petals, the flower's pollen will get stuck on the bug's body. When the bug lands on a different flower, the pollen is transferred to the new flower.
Plants produce sperm cells and egg cells/ova as do animals. The exact structures may differ of course. Remember that plants have a gametophyte and sporophyte life stage. Only the gametophyte produces gametes/sex cells. The sporophyte produces spores. In the case of pollen, that is a type of spore which grows a gametophyte within itself which produces sperm.
The anther produces the sperm. It sits on top of the filament. Together these are called the stamen. To find the anther, look for the oval shaped structures that can move or wobble when touched and they most often have pollen on them.
Pollen. It's part of most flowers' reproductive process, and provides protein in a honeybee's diet. As honeybees collect pollen to return it to their hive, they incidentally spread pollen from flower to flower, accomplishing pollination.