* petals with either bright colors or colors able to be seen by an insect's eye.
* male and female parts on separate flowers.
Bees and butterflies
All of them except the prickley ones
colourful flower
adaptation
The flowers are insect pollinated. Resource: http://www.gardenorganic.org.uk/organicweeds/weed_information/weed.php?id=115
A bee and a flower. The bee gets food from the flower and the flower gets pollinated by the bee.
None of then who ever told you that don't listen to them
You can easily know whether flowers are wind pollinated by just looking at their structure. These flowers have very small petal and they do not have any scent or nectar to attract insects. The pollen is also produced in large quantities since most of it never gets to the other flowers.
what kind of insect that is a beetle with a red shell and tiny black spots?
Is the nasturtium flower wind or insect pollinated since it is also used to repell insects .
bright flowers get pollinated because the insect attract them because of the color of the flower
Hibiscus is actually pollinated by hummingbirds! Red flowers always most likely are because birds can see red better than insects (they're better at the blue and purple part of the spectrum). Also, the pollen is far away from the nectar. If a hummingbird puts its tongue into the flower, the pollen will be deposited on its back. An insect would never touch the pollen when crawling into the flower to the nectar. ^^
Any flower that is pollinated by an animal (not insect); pollinators include birds, bats, small mammals etc.
the answer your looking is bees. They go to flower to flower picking up and dropping polyn. Almost every plant need to be pollinated example of a flower that does not to be pollinated is peas
All plants except the imperfect flower that has no pistil
------> Pollen from a flower can get blow off and land in another flower<------- Double check answer if u wish..... I just used common sense. :)
------> Pollen from a flower can get blow off and land in another flower<------- Double check answer if u wish..... I just used common sense. :)
insect pollinated
That is a matter of taste. Grasses (the prime example) can be very attractive. It is the flower not the plants being attractive in case of insect pollinated and not so attractive in case of wind pollinated.
Yes because insects are attracted to the pollen in flowers.
Insect pollinated. Wind pollinated stigmas are generally feathery.