Bees pollinate the flowers.
No. Bees go from flower to flower randomly.
the sweet smell of the flowers attract the bees which causes the bees to collect the nectar from a flower
Bees that collect a flower's honey give to that flower pollen deposits from another flower.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
Bees need food, drinks, and love. ---- Bees need, like any other organism, food, water, and shelter. They also need to reproduce if they want their species to live on. They don't want disturbance while preforming tasks as they do not want to be killed or be hurt (we seem pretty big and threatening to them).
As the bees (and other flying insects) move from flower to flower, they drink the nectar and carry pollen on their bodies from flower to flower. It is this cross-pollination that fertilises each flower and the flower can then produce seed for next season flowers.
As the bees (and other flying insects) move from flower to flower, they drink the nectar and carry pollen on their bodies from flower to flower. It is this cross-pollination that fertilises each flower and the flower can then produce seed for next season flowers.
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
there advantage is atracting bugs and bees to pollinate there flower, and with brighter colors they are often seen more by bees.
When bees travel from flower to flower, pollinationoccurs.
Bees and butterflies.
So that bees can suck nector out of a flower