most insects have small hairs on their legs and when they are around pollen, when they fly or walk on flowers it gets stuck.
its legs because there hairy which helps the pollen stick to them
When an insect like bee's lands on a flower, pollen sticks to it's legs. So when an insect moves to another flower pollen gets on that flower and so on and so on as the insect moves from one plant to another.
a stick insect has 3 body parts. The head, the abdaman and the legs. But it has to have more than 3 legs to be a insect.
yes so long as it has 6 legs and two anteneea it is an insect
it will not use them and the legs will just drag
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
The two types of pollen are wind-dispersed pollen and insect-dispersed pollen. Wind-dispersed pollen is typically small, light, and produced in large quantities, while insect-dispersed pollen is often larger, heavier, and designed to stick to insect bodies for transport.
The clue is in the name, it is an insect. Also, it has 6 legs like all insects.
no! the stick insect is not the largest insect living but the longest insect living today.....
stick insects r thinner & have legs.
Insect-pollinated flowers usually have sticky pollen to increase the chances of pollen transfer. The stickiness helps the pollen grains adhere to the bodies of insects as they move between flowers, promoting effective pollination. This helps ensure successful reproduction for the plant.
Stick Insects are insects, so like every other insect species, they have six legs.