Yes, but only if the flower contains the male anthers. Some plants have separate male and female flowers.
After a flower dies, it often forms a seed pod or fruit that contains seeds. These seeds can then disperse and grow into new plants through processes like germination or pollination. This allows the plant to reproduce and continue its life cycle.
The annual plant known as the Century Plant (Agave americana) typically dies after flowering. This plant, native to Mexico and the southern United States, can take many years to bloom and produces a tall flower spike before dying.
You might want to know, why do bees, butterflies, and wasps go to flowers? Is it the color? The smell? Or is it something else? Well all of these are partly right! Insects like flowers for these reasons... 1. Bees and Wasps and Butterflies drink the sweet juice there. Does anyone know what it is called? That is right! It is called nectar! The nectar is very sweet. Do you know what else eats nectar? Hummingbirds! The hummingbirds love the nectar. The bees also use the nectar to make honey. Do you like honey? It comes from bees and flowers. a. But, why do insects go to flowers? How many of you have seen all kinds of flowers! Can you tell me something about them? That is right they are colorful! Flowers come in many different shapes and sizes. The bright colors attract the insects to the flowers. If a bee likes one color better, then there are plenty of flowers for him to got to. While if Mr. Bee 2 likes a different color, he has plenty for him to go to. b. The other reason that insects go to flowers, besides for food and the color and shape is... That is right! The smell. Flowers smell so good! Have you ever smelled a rose? Some people dry flowers and put them in places so that they can smell them. Most flowers smell good. Well some of them anyway. Have you ever heard of the Corps flower? It stinks so bad! It smells like a dead animal! When the insects come, do they help the flower? Yes! The insects do help, by picking up pollen. Pollen is the yellow or orange powder that make us sneeze in the spring. Bees travel from flower to flower, collecting nectar (which is later converted to honey), and in the process they pick up pollen grains. The bee collects the pollen by rubbing against the anther. The pollen is collected on the hind legs, in dense hairs referred to as a pollen basket. As the bee flies from flower to flower, the pollen grains are transferred onto the stigma.This helps the flowers make seeds, and fruit trees make fruit.
When a pollen grain lands on the stigma of a flower, whether deposited there by an insect or the wind or by any other means, fertilization of the flower may follow. The pollen develops a tube which grows down through the stigma and style, enters the ovary and in to the ovule. The male sex cell which is carried in the tip of the tube fuses with the female sex cell in the ovule and fertilization is complete.There is a slight complication: there are two male nuclei in the pollen tube and the second one fuses with another nucleus in the ovule, called the primary endosperm nucleus, and this develops into a food store, called the endosperm, which nourishes the developing embryo plant. An example of endosperm tissue in a seed is the large, starchy part of a grain of wheat, the embryo plant develops from the wheatgerm.
A mosquito typically bites multiple times before it dies, as it needs to feed on blood to survive and reproduce. The exact number of bites can vary depending on factors such as the mosquito species, its age, and environmental conditions.
umm a flower dies and it comes back to life and the ploen was never alive so it cant die but it will get blown around
After a flower dies, it often forms a seed pod or fruit that contains seeds. These seeds can then disperse and grow into new plants through processes like germination or pollination. This allows the plant to reproduce and continue its life cycle.
The answer is that the male part of a flower ( the stamen ) has a part called the anthers, these have the pollen on it, when the pollen touches the stigma ( a part of the female part of a flower) it travels down the style and into the ovary which contains the ovules or baby seeds these seeds are fertilized and after a little time the flower dies and the seeds start a new plant, starting the process all over again.
The answer is that the male part of a flower ( the stamen ) has a part called the anthers, these have the pollen on it, when the pollen touches the stigma ( a part of the female part of a flower) it travels down the style and into the ovary which contains the ovules or baby seeds these seeds are fertilized and after a little time the flower dies and the seeds start a new plant, starting the process all over again.
The answer is that the male part of a flower ( the stamen ) has a part called the anthers, these have the pollen on it, when the pollen touches the stigma ( a part of the female part of a flower) it travels down the style and into the ovary which contains the ovules or baby seeds these seeds are fertilized and after a little time the flower dies and the seeds start a new plant, starting the process all over again.
When ageing proccess can be delayed in an orchid flower for a week, why can't we delay our ageing proccess for many more years.
it dies
it dies
They flower and then the flower dies off to be replaced by the fruit (the tomato).
First, the dandelion flower blooms, producing pollen for reproduction. Once the flower is pollinated, it forms seeds within the flower head. When the seeds mature, the familiar fluffy tuft emerges, carrying the seeds away in the wind for dispersal.
Most grasses, including sugar cane, are pollinated primarily by wind. The plants produce large amounts of pollen which wind and gravity carry onto the pistils. In addition, Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) pollenate sugar cane as they fly among the canes in pursuit of insects.
The part of the flower that protects it before it opens is preferably called a sepal.