bees
Plants produce brightly colored flowers to attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and birds for reproduction. The sweet-smelling fragrance is used to further entice these pollinators to visit the flower and spread pollen for fertilization.
Patterns
Nutbread
Flowers are not colored for us, but for the insects or birds that pollinate them. What appears plain to people are often multicolored in spectrums outside our own range of perception (i.e. viewed in the ultra-violet).
Insect-pollinated flowers are often brightly colored, have nectar guides or fragrances to attract insects, and have sticky pollen grains that adhere to insects for transfer. Water-pollinated flowers are often dull in color, lack nectar or fragrance, and produce large quantities of light, buoyant pollen grains that can be carried through water currents for dispersal. Additionally, water-pollinated flowers tend to have feathery stigmas that can easily capture pollen carried by water.
Brightly colored hibiscus flowers are often a result of healthy growth conditions, such as ample sunlight, appropriate watering, and well-draining soil with sufficient nutrients. The specific pigment compounds present in the petals, such as anthocyanins and carotenoids, also play a significant role in creating vibrant colors.
A brightly colored insect resting on a leaf is likely to be a species that uses its colors as a warning signal to predators. This warning coloration, known as aposematism, is often seen in insects that are toxic or distasteful to predators in order to deter them from attacking. Some examples of brightly colored insects that use aposematism include ladybugs and milkweed bugs.
It is one of the often brightly colored parts of a flower immediately surrounding the reproductive organs; a division of the corolla.
The correct spelling is "anemone." Anemones are a group of flowering plants that are known for their brightly colored flowers and often grow in marine environments. The word is derived from the Greek word "anémōnē," meaning "daughter of the wind."
The Lily Magnolia has peach or red colored flowers. This type of magnolia tree is most often found in warm climates. The Loebner also has peach or wine colored flowers.
Flowers that smell like rotting meat rely on carrion flies for pollination. They pollinate as it normally does but instead of pollinators or insects to help it pollinate, other resources like wind, help the pollen get around easily due to is light weight
Sea fan coral are sometimes brightly colored and are most often red, purple or yellow.