The honeybee stores pollen in specialized structures on its hind legs called pollen baskets or corbiculae. These structures are concave areas surrounded by long hairs that help contain and carry the pollen back to the hive.
The flower part that produces and stores pollen grains is called the anther. It is the swollen tip of the stamen, which is the male reproductive organ of a flower. The anther contains pollen sacs where pollen grains are developed and stored until they are released for pollination.
The organ that produces and stores pollen is the anther, which is part of the male reproductive structure of a flower called the stamen. The anther is responsible for producing and releasing pollen grains, which contain the male gametes necessary for fertilization.
Pollen is protected and stored by the anthers, which are part of the stamen in flowering plants. The anthers contain pollen sacs, or microsporangia, where pollen grains develop and are ultimately released when mature. Additionally, pollen grains themselves have tough outer walls made of sporopollenin, which provides protection against environmental factors. This combination ensures that pollen remains viable for fertilization when it reaches a compatible stigma.
Flowering plants, including some trees. Pollen is the plant kingdom's strategy for spreading information (specifically genetic instructions). There are two broad types: that spread by the breeze and that spread by animals.
Bees brush the pollen from their bodies down into special parts of their hind legs called corbiculae. These are dished areas which are surrounded by hairs to hold the pollen. When they get back to the hive they put the pollen into honeycomb cells for storage. thank you
anther
A honey bee carries pollen on its hind legs in a 'honey basket' on what would be knees on a human.
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.
The flower part that produces and stores pollen grains is called the anther. It is the swollen tip of the stamen, which is the male reproductive organ of a flower. The anther contains pollen sacs where pollen grains are developed and stored until they are released for pollination.
Behind its rear legs. The equivalent in a human would be behind the knees.
The organ that produces and stores pollen is the anther, which is part of the male reproductive structure of a flower called the stamen. The anther is responsible for producing and releasing pollen grains, which contain the male gametes necessary for fertilization.
Another way of saying bee pollen is bee bread. Bee pollen is full of nutrients and many health food stores carry it in capsule form so it is easy for people to get the benefits of bee pollen.
The pollen baskets on a honey bee are specifically for pollen. The bee collects nectar with its tongue and stores it in a sac within its body to transport it back to the hive.
Bees feed on nectar and pollen collected from flowers. They also make honey from nectar, which they store; and they also store pollen in the honeycomb. These stores are for when there is no fresh nectar and pollen available.
Bee pollen comes from a bee's body after he has visited many flowers. Health food stores often sell bottled bee pollen as purported remedy for a number of different things. Bee pollen as a treatment has not been backed by science, and really just takes valuable pollen away from the bee.
Pollen is protected and stored by the anthers, which are part of the stamen in flowering plants. The anthers contain pollen sacs, or microsporangia, where pollen grains develop and are ultimately released when mature. Additionally, pollen grains themselves have tough outer walls made of sporopollenin, which provides protection against environmental factors. This combination ensures that pollen remains viable for fertilization when it reaches a compatible stigma.
It means something along the lines of "very good, excellent, great, amazing" and coined circa 1920 as a flapper idiom. Back then they used this expression because a bee's baskets for pollen are located near its knees, so when the bee's baskets are full of pollen, they are filled with "the good stuff" of that oh-so sweet taste of honey that most of us love.