they attract pollinators with sweet nector and/or fruit.
Flowers attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies, birds, and other insects. These pollinators help transfer pollen from one flower to another, allowing for the fertilization of plants and the production of seeds.
Flowers are often modified to attract pollinators. These modifications can include bright colors, sweet scents, nectar production, and unique shapes that appeal to specific pollinators like bees, butterflies, or birds.
A. Brightly colored flowers. In animal-pollinated plants, brightly colored flowers are common as they attract pollinators like bees, birds, and butterflies.
Smells attract pollinators by releasing chemical compounds called volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are specific to certain plants and their flowers. These VOCs can be detected by pollinators like bees, butterflies, or birds from a distance, guiding them towards the source of nectar or pollen, which benefits both the pollinators and the plants in terms of reproduction and food resources.
This is an example of "Natural selection". Those flowers that don't attract pollinators die out, because they rarely get pollinated except by accident. So the only flowers that are left are the ones that exist symbiotically with pollinators.
Petals attract pollinators.
To attract pollinators
The petals attract pollinators with color.
Flower and scent. Pollinators are attracted by either one or both.
To attract the pollinators.
To attract pollinators.
To attract pollinators.
They attract pollinators
the nectar.
Flowers attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies, birds, and other insects. These pollinators help transfer pollen from one flower to another, allowing for the fertilization of plants and the production of seeds.
The bright colors in petals attract pollinators such as bees and butterflies. Certain colors of petals only attract certain types of pollinators.
To attract pollinators visually.