The time it takes for a bee to collect pollen from a flower can vary based on several factors, including the type of flower, the bee species, and environmental conditions. On average, a bee may spend anywhere from a few seconds to a couple of minutes at each flower, collecting nectar and pollen. However, bees are efficient foragers and often move quickly from flower to flower, maximizing their collection efforts during their foraging trips.
The flower that is the best one with pollen would be well if you don't care about bees then it would probably be a sunflower. If you hate bees or allergic then the flower with pollen, looks beautiful, and doesn't attract bees would be a rose bush. Also remember you have to water it and take care of it.
No, not all pollen can fertilize any flower. For successful fertilization to occur, the pollen must be compatible with the flower's stigma in terms of species and genetic makeup. Pollen from the same species or a closely related species is more likely to be successful in fertilizing a flower.
Not all plants need to make seeds. Ferns and mosses for example do not have to produce seeds to spread.
Most flowers are beautiful. They appear this way in order to attract bugs. When a bug lands on a flower's petals, the flower's pollen will get stuck on the bug's body. When the bug lands on a different flower, the pollen is transferred to the new flower.
the bees that get the pollen produce it all back but not all they take and thats how flowers die
By the Wind and the pollen. Because the wind carries the pollen over plants flower and all other things that grow!
No, they are only half of the equation. Pollen comes from the male parts of the flower. It is necessary for the fertilization of the female flower parts then the seed is fertilized and will be a mature seed that can grow. ----------------------------------------------- NO, pollen is the male gamete which joins with an ovule to make a plant seed.
i think that probably the came from the ovule of the flower and the go all the way up to the stigma
It doesn't hurt the bee, if that's what you are wondering. Actually, the bee isn't trying to collect pollen at all. Bees stop on flowers to collect nectar, and the pollen clings to the fluff on their bodies. When the bee stops at another flower, the pollen from another plant is brushed onto the flower. This is one way that flowers reproduce. The nectar collected by the bee then goes on to become honey after it is taken back to the hive. So, when a bee takes pollen from a flower, it is neither good nor bad, but a neutral interaction.
they eat pollen
All plants have both a male part - the stamen - and a female part - the pistil. Therefore, all plants are able to take pollen from the stamen - which contains sperm - and use it to pollinate the eggs which are stored in part of the pistil. When the plant uses its own sperm to pollinate its own eggs, this is known as self pollination. However, suppose a bee or an insect lands on a flower and gets pollen on its feet. Then suppose that it lands on another flower. The pollen from the first flower will pollinate the eggs of the second flower. This is known as cross pollination, which the eggs of one plants are pollinated by pollen from a different plant.
The flower of the plant is directly involved in sexual reproduction.More specifically, the anthers produce pollen. The pollen then lands on another plant's stigma and travels down the style, and fertilizes the ovules.