no i am researching these things at an age of 13
They do not need to attract insects for pollination.
Chrysanthemums have two types of flowers on the flower head: disk and ray flowers. The amount of petals vary by cultivar.
they help by attracting the pollinators
photosynthesis The coloration in petals is due the presence of chromoplasts in the cells of the petals. In different flowers chromoplasts differ in the nature of their coloration. Therefore, different colors are seen in the petals of different flowers.
sepals
The Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta), found throughout North America. The flower's domed center, which is dark purplish brown in color is (often, but not always) encircled by thirteen petals.
Grass flowers lack petals .
Grass flowers lack petals .
Not all Australian flowers have petals because some plants just do not produce them. Flowering perennials are examples of plants that develop colors but lack full petals.
They aren't. If they dont have a pistil, a stamen, and petals, it's not a flower,
Yes. Sometimes you can see holes or the edges eaten into petals and grass, just like leaves.
insectivorous
Okay there are no flowers just petals but here are the one's I know, rose petals, daisy petals, buttercup petals, and lily petals. But those are just the one's I remember.
Well, perhaps flowers of sulfur or frost flowers. But the presence of petals is part of the usual definition of a flower. There may be flowers without petals, but I can't think of any.Glumiflorae flower has no petals. This family which includes grasses, sedges, rushes and cattails have very small, almost unnoticeable petals or no petals at all. The corn, rice, wheat, barley, and sugar-cane are included in this class of plants.
Maize, or corn, is a grass. Grasses are monocots that have relatively small flowers that are difficult to notice, but they're there. The scientific name is Zea mays and it is in the grass family, Poaceae.
poinsettia
Chrysanthemums have two types of flowers on the flower head: disk and ray flowers. The amount of petals vary by cultivar.
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