The Baltimore Checkerspot Butterfly larvae eat the white turtlehead when the hatch from their eggs.
Edith's Checkerspot (Euphydryas editha) feed on flower nectar as adults. The caterpillars feed on the flowers and leaves of their host plant and surrounding plants. The larvae are known to eat the entire host plant.
A red flower looks red because it absorbs all colors of light in the visible spectrum except red, which it reflects. When white light, which contains all colors, hits the flower, the red part of the light spectrum is reflected off the flower and that is what we see as the color red.
No it would not. It would depend on the type of plant, but let's say say a white flower has two recessive genes and a red plant had two dominant genes, a pink flower would have a dominant and recessive gene. This would be an example of incomplete dominance because the red gene does not completely overshadow the white gene
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The stigma of a flower can be a variety of colors, including white, yellow, pink, red, or purple, depending on the species of the flower. It often contrasts with the color of the flower petals to attract pollinators.
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It eats the White Turtlehead Plant. Milkweed, wild roses are also popular. Hope i helped!
white tailed deer also the Baltimore Checkerspot Butterfly but there getting extinct (the checkerspot) because the deer are eating them all
are turtlehead flowers vascular
Turtlehead flowers look a bit like turtles. They are good for wet places in the garden and look pretty in bouquets.
It eats a number of roses, milkweed, hairy beardtougne, false foxgloves, and a bunch of other plants.
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white turtlehead
The turtlehead flower is vascular. Vascular plants have specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing them to grow larger and more complex than nonvascular plants.
the white turtlehead
The BaltimoreCheckerspot predators are Baltimore Orioles.
A monkey eats the Passion Flower