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What do pollinated plants produce?

Updated: 8/9/2023
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flowers, fruit, seed pods......whatever that specific plant makes, it will only make if its BEEn pollinated

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Step 1 of Mendel's garden pea experiments allowing each variety of garden pea to self pollinate for several generations produced which generation?

Mendel found that every fourth plant had white flowers when he allowed the first generation to self-pollinate. Gregor Mendel was a scientist who lived from 1822 to 1884.hyuyt6yt8


How grasses are pollinated?

It depends on the plant. Many plants simply release their pollen to the wind, like grasses and conifer trees. Some plants have flowers to attract various animals that carry pollen from flower to flower and pollinate them that way.


Can some plants use their own pollen to produce seeds?

YES!BECAUSE: Some plants are self-pollinated. That is, the stigma receives the pollen produced within its own flower. In some cases plants receive pollen from other plants; this process is called cross-pollination.


How is a holly bush pollinated?

Holly is pollinated by bees and other insects. The only unusual thing is that the male and female parts are on different plants.


How is wind pollinating a flower similar to an insect pollinating a flower?

They both produce pollen, therefore they must have anthers and since they both produce seeds they must have stigmasThe end results of wind pollination and insect pollination are the same, the plants are pollinated.Wind pollinated plants, which include the grasses and some trees, have either no flowers or very insignificant flowers because they have no need to attract insects. The anthers produce very large amounts of very small pollen grains which are then blown by the wind in the hope of hitting a stigma of the same variety of plant. This is the type of pollen which is the major cause of hay fever.Insect pollinated plants will have flowers, usually with nectar, to attract the insects and reward them with food. A bee's body is covered with fine hairs which become charged with static electricity as the insect flies so when it lands on the flower the pollen grains are actually attracted to the bee's body. When the bee goes to the next flower, some of this pollen is transferred to the flower's stigma. Pollen grains of insect-pollinated plants are much larger than those of wind-pollinated plants.

Related questions

When mendels plants self pollinated what did they produce?

Seeds to raise F1 generation


What result did mendel get when he allowed the first-generation plants to self-pollinate?

Gregor Mendel developed the model of heredity that now bears his name by experiments on various charactersitics of pea plants: height (tall vs. Short); seed color (yellow vs. Green); seat coat (smooth vs. wrinkled), etc. The following explanation uses the tall/short trait. The other traits Mendel studied can be substituted for tall and short.Mendel started out with plants that "bred true". That is, when tall plants were self-pollinated (or cross-pollinated with others like them), plants in following generations were all tall; when the short plants were self-pollinated (or cross- pollinated with others like them) the plants in following generations were all short.Mendel found that if true breeding Tall [T] plants are crossed (bred) with true breeding short [t] plants, all the next generation of plants, called F1, are all tall.Next, he showed that self-pollinated F1 plants (or cross- pollinated with other F1 plants) produce an F2 generation with 3/4 of the plants tall and 1/4 short.A. 1/4 of the F2 generation are short plants, which produce only short plants in the F3 generation, if they are self- pollinated (or crossed with other short F2 plants;) these F2 plants breed true.B, 1/4 of the F2 generation (1/3 of the tall plants) are tall plants that produce only tall plants in the F3 generation, if they are self-pollinated; these tall F2 plants breed true.C. 1/2 of the F2 generation (2/3 of the tall plants) are tall plants that produce 1/4 short plants and 3/4 tall plants in the next [F3] generation, if they are self-pollinated. This is the same proportion of tall to short that F1 plants produce.


How does pollination help or affect flowers?

If the flowers weren't pollinated the plants would not be able to produce fruit or seed.


Is a plant pollinated before it is planted?

No, plants are not usually pollinated before they are planted. They survive transplantation best when they are dormant, not when they are in flower. The purpose of pollination is to produce seeds, and this is not the purpose of transplantations.


Can grass be pollinated by hummingbirds?

No. Grass is wind-pollinated and does not produce nectar, the food for hummingbirds.


Why does marijuana have so many seeds?

It must of somehow been pollinated during flowering... and or was a male plant. Female plants produce no seeds.


Do plants begin to bloom when after they get pollinated?

no


Are shrubs flowering plants?

No, shrubs are not wind pollinated therefore not a flowering plant. Most flowering plants are pollinated by insects, :D


What plants are pollinated by insects?

daisys and roses are pollunated by bees but also high pollen plants like lillys are pollunated too.


What results did mendel get when he allowed the first- generation plants to self- pollinate?

Gregor Mendel developed the model of heredity that now bears his name by experiments on various charactersitics of pea plants: height (tall vs. Short); seed color (yellow vs. Green); seat coat (smooth vs. wrinkled), etc. The following explanation uses the tall/short trait. The other traits Mendel studied can be substituted for tall and short.Mendel started out with plants that "bred true". That is, when tall plants were self-pollinated (or cross-pollinated with others like them), plants in following generations were all tall; when the short plants were self-pollinated (or cross- pollinated with others like them) the plants in following generations were all short.Mendel found that if true breeding Tall [T] plants are crossed (bred) with true breeding short [t] plants, all the next generation of plants, called F1, are all tall.Next, he showed that self-pollinated F1 plants (or cross- pollinated with other F1 plants) produce an F2 generation with 3/4 of the plants tall and 1/4 short.A. 1/4 of the F2 generation are short plants, which produce only short plants in the F3 generation, if they are self- pollinated (or crossed with other short F2 plants;) these F2 plants breed true.B, 1/4 of the F2 generation (1/3 of the tall plants) are tall plants that produce only tall plants in the F3 generation, if they are self-pollinated; these tall F2 plants breed true.C. 1/2 of the F2 generation (2/3 of the tall plants) are tall plants that produce 1/4 short plants and 3/4 tall plants in the next [F3] generation, if they are self-pollinated. This is the same proportion of tall to short that F1 plants produce.


Do cactis have seeds?

Yes, cacti do have seeds. They produce incredibly beautiful flowers which are pollinated just like other plants, by cross pollination or animals.


Step 1 of Mendel's garden pea experiments allowing each variety of garden pea to self pollinate for several generations produced which generation?

Mendel found that every fourth plant had white flowers when he allowed the first generation to self-pollinate. Gregor Mendel was a scientist who lived from 1822 to 1884.hyuyt6yt8