A Septal Nectary is tissue within a plant ovary that produces nectar. Its function is to produce nectar to attract pollinators. After pollination, if the plant continues to secrete nectar, it will attract ants who will protect the developing fruit from predators in exchange for the nectar.
A nectary is a specialized structure in a flower that produces nectar, a sugary fluid. The main function of a nectary is to attract pollinators like insects and birds, which help in the process of pollination by transferring pollen from one flower to another.
The glandular organ in a flower that secretes a sugary fluid is called the nectary. Its primary function is to attract pollinators, such as bees and butterflies, which help in the pollination process.
it is the part bees go to to get what they need for honey Nectaries secrete a sugary fluid or nectar which serves as a food source for pollinating insects
Petal and Nectary!
It is a gland that sectetes the nectar. It is a gland that sectetes the nectar.
Nectar is secreted in the nectary glands situated at the base of the ovary
Butterflies are attracted to nectar which are produced in the nectary glands of a flower.
Pollen is collected in the stigma.
The rhyming words are nectary, rectory, refectory, and directory. A near-rhyme is peremptory.
Nectar is found at the center of the flower in glands called nectary; pollinators are forced to go between the stamens and end up covered in pollen in order to collect the nectar.
No that's aphids, bees are collect pollen and nectar. No, bees collect nectar from nectary glands and pollen from the anthers in their pollen sacks. A lot of pollen also gets stuck to them elsewhere, and this can brush off in other flowers to pollinate them.
Partly by the strategic location of their nectary glands and ultimately the foreign pollens are rejected by the stigmatic cells of the gynoecium.