Different ORCHID flowers are designed to attract particular insects, so I think the answer is ORCHIDS.
Cilantro is a self-fertile plant, which means it has the ability to self-pollinate. However, it is primarily wind-pollinated, so cross-pollination can also occur with the help of insects.
The wind carries pollen from plant to plant, and insects such as bees and hummingbirds collect and transfer it while feeding on the nectar.
Poppy plants are primarily pollinated by insects, especially bees. When bees visit the poppy flowers in search of nectar, they inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another, leading to cross-pollination and seed formation in the poppy plant.
No, stigma is not an insect pollinated plant. The stigma is actually a part of the flower's female reproductive system that receives pollen during pollination. Insect-pollinated plants rely on insects to transfer pollen between flowers for fertilization.
Dandelion plants are primarily pollinated by insects, such as bees and flies, that visit the flowers to collect nectar and pollen. Wind can also play a role in transferring pollen between dandelion plants.
To attract the insects by color and smell
No, shrubs are not wind pollinated therefore not a flowering plant. Most flowering plants are pollinated by insects, :D
Yes it would be because zoophilous means pollinated by animals.
No. Rafflesia is pollinated by insects. They are attracted to the plant by its odour of rotting meat.
Yams are a flowering plant. They can be pollinated by insects but camel hair brushes used by humans is more efficient.
A plant with a sticky stigma is more likely to be insect-pollinated. The stickiness of the stigma helps to capture pollen grains brought by insects. Wind-pollinated plants typically have feathery stigmas to catch pollen grains carried by the wind.
Cow parsley is primarily pollinated by insects, such as bees and butterflies. As these insects feed on the nectar of the flowers, they inadvertently transfer pollen between them, facilitating the reproductive process of the plant.
Nectar is produced by flowers to attract insects, bats or birds that will help to carry its pollen to other plants (and bring fresh pollen to it). If a plant is pollinated in the wind, then it doesn't need to spend the energy to make nectar.
Cilantro is a self-fertile plant, which means it has the ability to self-pollinate. However, it is primarily wind-pollinated, so cross-pollination can also occur with the help of insects.
The wind carries pollen from plant to plant, and insects such as bees and hummingbirds collect and transfer it while feeding on the nectar.
Poppy plants are primarily pollinated by insects, especially bees. When bees visit the poppy flowers in search of nectar, they inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another, leading to cross-pollination and seed formation in the poppy plant.
When any tree is pollinated the resultant seed will be at least slightly different from the parent plants, even if the two parent trees are clones of each other. To get fruit trees that are exactly the same as the parent plant, cuttings are taken. For varieties that require a different variety to pollinate successfully, the genetics of the seed produced does not matter as it is the fruit that is used.