Yes they do, they suck it up through a little straw on the front of their body.
pollinate flowers
Butterflies pollinate flowers and plants.
Bees, butterflies and some mammals pollinate flowers.
Butterflies going from one flower to another helps with pollination of flowers. Some flowers are not able to self pollinate and need assistance from insects like butterflies.
Butterflies visit flowers to feed on nectar, which provides them with important nutrients and energy. It also helps with pollination, as butterflies inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another as they feed.
No, cicadas do not function as pollinators. As members of the True Bug order Hemiptera, the Cicada has piercing and sucking mouthparts. They primarially pierce the twigs of bushes and tress and then feed on the sap within. Since they are not attracted to flowers there is no way for them to intentionally or unintentionally pollinate anything.
Butterflies affect the environment by pollinating flowers, fruit and other types of trees, which in turn affects the environment.
Yes, monarch butterflies can indirectly help pollinate flowers as they visit them for nectar. While they are not as efficient as bees or other insects, their movements between flowers can help transfer pollen and facilitate pollination.
Butterflies with hairy legs pick up more pollen. This adaptation would help a butterfly pollinate more flowers by carrying more pollen.
Indirectly, i suppose. Butterflys pollinate (the same as Bee's) flowers. Not to create honey but because of the polination flowers continue to grow, so if you like flowers, then the answer is yes.
they are agents of pollination.
No, butterflies do not spread pollen with the purpose of creating other flowers. Butterflies may inadvertently transfer pollen between flowers while they feed on nectar, but this is not the primary way that flowers are pollinated. Other pollinators like bees, birds, and wind play a more significant role in pollination.