The insects get attracted by the colourful petals and the fragrance.
The part of a plant that attracts pollinators is typically the flower. Flowers are brightly colored and fragrant to attract insects, birds, and other animals to help with pollination.
To attract insects so that the insects can drink their nectar and pick up the pollen o the plant. Te insect will then fly to another plant with the pollen and fertilise it so it can make seeds which make new plants...
To attract insects
The primary function of the petal is to attract pollinators, such as bees and butterflies, to the flower for the purpose of reproduction. Petals are often colorful and fragrant to help attract these pollinators. Additionally, petals also help protect the reproductive structures of the flower.
The specialized cells in the corpse flower produce strong odors to attract insects for pollination. The strong odors mimic the scent of rotting flesh to attract specific pollinators, such as carrion beetles, which help in the reproductive process of the plant.
They attract insects to help pollinate the plant for reproduction
The flower's colourful petals attract insects to the plant. The more the colourul the more pollen and nectar in it.
The flowers are the showy part of a plant. When the flowers are showing the plant is said to be blooming. This bloom is to attract insects for pollination.
Flower and scent.
how do plant atracket insect
they have this to attract insects to the pollen.
Theres 2 parts of the flower that attract insects and that is the bright coloured petals and there scented and also the nectary attracts them too
They attract insects to help pollinate the plant for reproduction
bright petals to attract insects for polonation
so that they can attract insects to pollinate the plant.
To attract the insects by color and smell
All plants attract insects, some more than others. Obviously, a fruiting plant will attract more than a non fruiting plant, but every type of plant has at LEAST one species that will attack it. Remember, plants are the basis of the food chain, the ENTIRE food chain. plant eating insects (herbivorous) will be attracted to a plant that has the most to give them, nutritionally speaking, but any plant may be preyed upon by species adapted to feed specifically on it, like the Boll Weevil, and the Cotton plant, or Cabbages, and the Cabbage moth. Even plants that only have a couple of predator species that can eat them will attract other (insectivorous) bugs, if only to prey on the other insects there (think Ladybugs, and Aphids). So the answer to this is ALL of them attract insects.