answ2. Some plants are wind pollinated - the pollen is just spread by the wind. Notably pine trees. But the Beech mast of Nothofagus in the Southern Hemisphere is spectacular.
The stigma of a flower is quite sticky, and there is a good chance that a stray pollen grain will adhere.
Insect Pollination comes next, where an insect is lured (by smell, nectar, colour, shape) to visit the flower for its reward. Many insects actually gather pollen as it is a good source of protein, and they store different pollens separately. Indeed, a foraging bee will take pollen from one plant type only in a journey.
A honey bee transports the pollen in special sacs on its legs.
Bird pollination rather copies that of insects, except the birds are usually only interested in nectar.
In all of these methods, the pollination itself is rather adventitious.
Well the Bee lands on one flower and than it's feet collects pollen and than it goes to the next flower and it goes on and on and on and on!
flower seeds or necter
It is transferred by wind or bees.
They carry pollen grains from one flower to another.
Bats and other small mammals carry eggs from one flower to another. hope that answerd it for you
Usually insects although other methods such as wind can do it.
Erosion
The earliest means of pollen dispersal was likely through the wind. As plants evolved, they developed mechanisms for attracting pollinators such as insects, birds, and mammals to help carry pollen from one flower to another, increasing their chances of successful reproduction.
Pollen is moved from one place to another by pollinators like bees, butterflies, birds and wind. These pollinators carry pollen grains from one flower to another, facilitating the fertilization process in plants. This movement of pollen is crucial for the reproduction of many plant species.
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.
An organism that carries pollen from one flower to another is called a "pollinator." These can include insects like bees, butterflies, and beetles, as well as birds, bats, and some small mammals. Pollinators play a crucial role in plant reproduction by facilitating the transfer of pollen between flowers.
Cross pollination is when the wind or a insect carries pollen from one flower to another. Self pollination is when a flower produces pollen and uses it in asexual reproduction.
There are certain adaptations for wind pollinated flowers..one, is being light and has plenty of hairy structures to trap pollen or being carried by air easily. two, the morphology and phyllotaxy of such flower is arranged in a manner at which wind can blow it easily and its reproductive activities perfectly suits the external environment.