If a flowering plant is not pollinated, it cannot produce seeds when the time comes. Think of it as plant sex, like humans, without the male and female cells combining, there can be no child.
The plant will die as water can't go through the plant
Butterflies depend on flowering plants for nectar, which provides essential nutrients they need to survive. Additionally, butterflies lay their eggs on specific plant species, as their caterpillars rely on these plants as food sources. Therefore, the relationship between butterflies and flowering plants is mutually beneficial.
Incomplete dominance is where 2 dominant traits are combined, but neither show up in the offspring. This term is easily confused with co-dominance, but there is a difference. An example of incomplete dominance would be where a white flowering plant pollinates a red flowering plant, but their offspring are all pink flowering plants. Since both white and red were dominant, they canceled each other out, and the median color pink shows up in the next generation. Co-dominance is where 2 dominant traits are BOTH expressed. This would be the case if a white flowering plant pollinates a red flowering plant, and their offspring have flowers that are speckled with red and white dots. Both colors still show up, but neither one completely dominates the other.
A plant with red balls that would be suitable for a garden in a sunny location is likely a variety of flowering plant, such as a red hot poker (Kniphofia) or a red yucca (Hesperaloe parviflora). These plants thrive in sunny conditions and produce vibrant red blooms that resemble balls.
A birch tree is a dicot because it belongs to the class Magnoliopsida, which includes dicotyledonous flowering plants. Dicots have two seed leaves, net-like veins in the leaves, and flower parts in multiples of four or five.
The new plant if cross pollinated need to have its pollinators at that place for its success to grow and multiply.
Things and stuff
The plant will die as water can't go through the plant
Butterfly is dependent on flowering plants for nectar
Yes it would be because zoophilous means pollinated by animals.
generally yes, depends on the life cycle of the plant. if it was an annual plant the plant would normally die soon after flowering in anycase; perennial plants simply continue flowering and growing
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.
Your throat will get soar, nothing will happen to the plant.
simply pluck the head off, if the stalk dries up you can remove it as well, for estetical reasons. You must be refering to "Dead Heading". The plant should not be dead, only the daisy flower (or any flowering plant, for that matter). Just simply pull off the spent blossom, and the plant will replace it with a new one. This is the plant's way of making sure it becomes pollinated. -Mageskillz99 well how i would do it is by simply rippnig it off
Flowering almond, alpine currant, serviceberry, azalea, barberry, beautybush, lilac, butterfly bush and bridal veil spiraea are flowering bushes are ones that would grow in Minnesota.
If you have never seen Bee Movie after the bees stopped working or in your case if they became extinct nothing could be pollinated so the flowers and other plant life would not be able to grown, and if the trees can't grow there will be no oxygen for us to breathe
Puffballs are NOT plants, they are mushrooms a type of fungal fruiting body. The puff that comes when the puffball is dried is the spores being dispersed into the air. If puffballs were left alone, they would dry and split. Through the splits, the spores would be released.