Food
Pollen in flowers is produced on anthers.
The powder produced by flowers is normally pollen
because they get pollen and they are preetty
No, butterflies do not spread pollen with the purpose of creating other flowers. Butterflies may inadvertently transfer pollen between flowers while they feed on nectar, but this is not the primary way that flowers are pollinated. Other pollinators like bees, birds, and wind play a more significant role in pollination.
Butterflies with hairy legs pick up more pollen. This adaptation would help a butterfly pollinate more flowers by carrying more pollen.
Yes they do, they suck it up through a little straw on the front of their body.
Butterflies visit flowers to feed on nectar, which provides them with important nutrients and energy. It also helps with pollination, as butterflies inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another as they feed.
Butterflies do not drink pollen.They drink nectar and plant sugars. They only collect pollen and transport it to another plant for germination. -James Sellers
Tiny granules produced in the anthers of flowers are called pollen.Pollen (this one was so easy!)pollen
These animals visit flowers to obtain food in the form of nectar or pollen. Bees and butterflies feed on nectar for energy, while some mammals may consume parts of the flower or the pollen as a food source. In the process of collecting food, these animals inadvertently help in the pollination of the flowers, aiding in their reproduction.
The dust-like particles produced in the anthers of flowers are called pollen. Pollen contains male gametes that are necessary for plant reproduction when they are transferred to the stigma of a compatible flower.
Flowers that produce much pollen are typically pollinated by insects such as bees, butterflies, and flies. These insects visit the flowers to collect pollen as a food source and inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another, aiding in the pollination process.