Because they don't need animals to polinate. If they make nectar or have bright colours and strong scents, it will be an animal-polinated flower. So they don't need to make nectar or have bright colour
Bees get their nectar from flowers. Flowers produce nectar to attract animals to pollinate them.
Flowers that smell like rotting meat rely on carrion flies for pollination. They pollinate as it normally does but instead of pollinators or insects to help it pollinate, other resources like wind, help the pollen get around easily due to is light weight
It's very unlikely for a mouse to pollinate plants because mice are not nectar feeders.Some bats are nectar feedars, and hummingbirds are, and these would pollinate the flowers they visit.
Bright flowers Nectar Scented flowers
Butterflies going from one flower to another helps with pollination of flowers. Some flowers are not able to self pollinate and need assistance from insects like butterflies.
No. Bees tap flowers for nectar and inadvertantly carry pollen between flowers and therefore cross pollinate the flowers.
The flower's sweet nectar attracts bees to pollinate it. Bees gather nectar and make it into honey.
No. Bees are concerned with gathering nectar from flowers and pollinate those flowers by accident without being aware of it.
While taking nectar juice from the flowers, the pollen grains stick to the body of the butterfly and when the butterfly visits another flower, the pollen grains drop off and pollinate.
By their scent, by the food some flowers offer (pollen and nectar) and by the colours of the flowers.
Yes, cardinal flowers do produce nectar. The bright red flowers attract hummingbirds, which are their main pollinators, by offering nectar as a reward for pollination.
Yes they suck up the nectar from the flower and take it back to the hive and make honey.