Wind-pollinated flowers have many key differences from insect-pollinated ones. Since they don't need to attract insects, wind-pollinated flowers tend to have smaller petals, are odorless, are less colorful, and don't have nectar. Examples are ragweed, corn and wheat.
No, a rose it not wind pollinated. Roses are pollinated by bees. A bee will collect nectar in the "pockets" on *her legs and as she flies some of the pollen may fall out there for creating a new flower
* all worker bees (one that collects pollen and nectar) are female
It can, but it's very unlikely. Insect-pollinated flowers produce far less pollen because there's a greater chance it will be dispersed correctly by insects instead of randomly by wind. Wind-pollinated plants produce far more because so little of it will land in the right spot.
Not all trees are wind pollinated
both
By animals
They will most likely have less because they are not the kind of flower that really sticks out because of certain coloring, so that's also why they can depend on wing more than animals to pollinate.
------> Pollen from a flower can get blow off and land in another flower<------- Double check answer if u wish..... I just used common sense. :)
Dahlias are pollinated by wind, insects or gardeners.
insect pollinated
By animals
Pollen can be transferred by the wind or by insects such as bees. Some flowers are also pollinated by animals such as bats and hummingbirds.
colorful flowers are usally pollinated by the flow of the wind
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.
Wind pollinated flowers have sticky stigma
They will most likely have less because they are not the kind of flower that really sticks out because of certain coloring, so that's also why they can depend on wing more than animals to pollinate.
------> 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. :)
Sticky stigma is generally present in wind pollinated flowers.
Is the nasturtium flower wind or insect pollinated since it is also used to repell insects .
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. ^^
after a flower is pollinated what is the takes place