Flowers are typically not green because their vibrant colors serve essential functions in attracting pollinators and facilitating reproduction. Bright colors like red, yellow, and blue help signal to insects and birds that nectar or pollen is available, while green is often associated with foliage and could be less visible to these animals. Additionally, the green pigment chlorophyll is primarily used for photosynthesis in leaves, not for attracting pollinators. Thus, the evolutionary advantage of colorful flowers lies in their ability to enhance pollination success.
his weakness is every colour of the rainbow except green
Jute plants produce small, yellow flowers.
there is a species of helleborus that has green flowers
There are many different species of iris - the most well-known are a bluey purple colour, but they can be white or even bright yellow!
Turquoise is a mix of green and blue and not a very natural colour. There are many flowers that are blue and/ or green but none that are truly turquoise. Some suggest dying flowers to gain a turquoise colour such as leaving stems of white flowers in dyed water
no its infact every colour but green proven fact
Chlorophyll absorbs every color of the sunlight except for green. It is green and it cannot absorb its own color.
Dandelion flowers are a bright yellow colour with a hint of orange to it. Dandelion stems are a pale brownish colour with a hint of green. Dandelion leaves are a deep green colour with a hint of blue to them.
every color except green
You get white light, the basic light colour you see every day.
the skin of the orange absorbs every colour of the spectrum -red, orange, yellow, green, blue ,indigo ,violet - except orange--- that's why its orange :)
Trillium plants typically bloom in the spring with flowers that vary in color, such as white, pink, red, or purple. Once the flowers have bloomed and faded, the plant's foliage remains green for the rest of the growing season. The color change in trillium is primarily associated with the flowers, not the foliage.