Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
Its called 'interdependence.' The flowers need the bees to pollinate them to survive, but the bees need the flowers so they can make honey, and the female bees pollinate flowers and keep pollen on there legs to feed there larve.
One way is that bees would take pollen from nearby flowers, then drop it over other flowers.
An example of symbiosis is the relationship between bees and flowers. Bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers for food, while inadvertently pollinating the flowers in the process. This benefits both the bees by providing food and the flowers by aiding in reproduction.
Pampas grass flowers are wind-pollinated, meaning that they rely on the wind to carry their pollen from one plant to another for fertilization. The flowers have feathery plumes that help to disperse the pollen easily in the air, allowing for cross-pollination between different plants.
Bees are the most common pollinators for angiosperms. They are attracted to flowers by their colors and scents, and as they collect nectar and pollen, they inadvertently transfer pollen between flowers, facilitating the process of pollination.
No. Bees tap flowers for nectar and inadvertantly carry pollen between flowers and therefore cross pollinate the flowers.
Bees carry pollen from the stigma and the stamen, and also nectar.
They carry pollen from flower to flower the pollen from one flower fertilizes other flowers and so on.
they suck the pollen out of them
They bring the pollen to other flowers.
No. Plants and animals cannot reproduce together. Bees can, however, carry pollen from one flower to another to fertilize them.
Bees collect pollen on their hairy bodies as they move from flower to flower. The pollen sticks to their bodies and is then carried back to the hive in special pollen baskets on their hind legs. This pollen is used as food for the bees and to help pollinate other flowers.
Yes, clematis flowers do attract bees with their nectar and pollen.
Pollen.
no, they do not do
Bees eat the nectar and pollen which is produced by flowers.
the bees that get the pollen produce it all back but not all they take and thats how flowers die