It collects the nectar and pollen (pollinating the flower).
A bee lands on a flower in order to eat its pollen. This is the way that the bees survive, and feed off certain flowers.
The pollen of a male male flower is transported by a bumble bee or some other insect. The insect lands in a female flower and leaves the pollen behind.
You go and get it and run away from the old granny whose flower garden it was.
A bee striker is a specialized body part found in some bees, particularly in species used for buzz pollination. It is a small, often spoon-shaped structure located on the forelegs of male bees. When a male bee lands on a flower, it uses the bee striker to vibrate its body against the flower to release pollen.
There are two parts of a flower that produces pollen. The two parts are the stalk and the top of the flower.
yes a flower provide shelter for a bee
a bee takes pollen into and out of the flower ;)
As bees take nectar from a flower, pollen gets transferred from the stamen on to the bee's body. When the bee goes to the next flower some of this pollen is transferred to the stigma, fertilizing the flower. Once a bee starts collecting nectar from a particular type of flower it will keep going to the same type of flower as long as it can, keeping the pollen to the same type of flower.
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
Symbiosis! When both bee and flower benefit.
Mutualism - both species benefit from their relationship. The bee comes to the flower to collect nectar as food, and brushes against the anthers of the flower, which are covered in pollen. The bee moves to another flower to collect nectar and rubs the pollen off on the second flower's stigma, fertilizing the flower. Thus, the bee receives a source of food from the flowers, and the flowers are pollinated by the bee.