Bees are attracted to flowers primarily for their nectar and pollen, which serve as food sources. The flower consists of several parts: the petals attract pollinators with their color and scent, the sepals protect the flower bud, the stamens produce pollen (male part), and the pistil houses the ovary (female part) where fertilization occurs. As bees collect nectar and pollen, they inadvertently transfer pollen from the anthers of one flower to the stigma of another, facilitating cross-pollination, which is crucial for plant reproduction. This symbiotic relationship benefits both bees, which obtain food, and flowers, which can reproduce more effectively.
As bees go from flower to flower, they take along with them the pollen from each as it sticks to their legs. Some of it rubs off and pollinates the other flowers.Bees collect the nectar from plants, which they use to create honey to feed on for themselves and for their larvae. In turn, the plants are able to be pollinated also.Bees pollinate the flowers.yes they do bees pollinate flowers and flowers give the bees food
Petals are the colorful and often fragrant parts of a flower that are typically found in the outermost part of the flower. They are modified leaves that are used to attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies, and birds for the purpose of reproduction.
Petals are modified leaves on a flower that play a role in attracting pollinators like bees and butterflies. They do not produce any specific substance themselves, but they provide protection for the reproductive parts of the flower.
Bees mostly.
The nectar attracts bees (or other insects) who collect it and bring it back to the hive. Pollen rubs on the bees boddy, and it effectivly carries it to another flower where the pollen will fertilise it.
Pollinators of the ageratum flower happens to be bees and butterflies.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
This process is called pollination. Bees transfer pollen from the male parts of one flower to the female parts of another flower, which is essential for fertilization and seed production in many plants.
No. Bees go from flower to flower randomly.
No, bees don't eat anything on a flower while standing on it, they gather its pollen on their legs and fly back to the hive where the pollen is used to make honey by eating it then vomiting it, the honey (product of the pollen) is fed to the pupas. That is the only eating of flower parts that is done by bees.
Bees pollinate the flowers.
Seed production is the way that flower benefits from being pollinated by bees. The male parts, known as stamens, of flowering plants produce grains called pollen. Seed production requires the pollen to be deposited in the female parts known as pistils, and bees will effectuate that transfer by carrying off and dropping grains as they sip nectar.
the sweet smell of the flowers attract the bees which causes the bees to collect the nectar from a flower
As bees go from flower to flower, they take along with them the pollen from each as it sticks to their legs. Some of it rubs off and pollinates the other flowers.Bees collect the nectar from plants, which they use to create honey to feed on for themselves and for their larvae. In turn, the plants are able to be pollinated also.Bees pollinate the flowers.yes they do bees pollinate flowers and flowers give the bees food
Bees that collect a flower's honey give to that flower pollen deposits from another flower.
Petals are the colorful and often fragrant parts of a flower that are typically found in the outermost part of the flower. They are modified leaves that are used to attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies, and birds for the purpose of reproduction.
As the bees (and other flying insects) move from flower to flower, they drink the nectar and carry pollen on their bodies from flower to flower. It is this cross-pollination that fertilises each flower and the flower can then produce seed for next season flowers.