angiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilizationangiosperms attract bees and other insect to flower causing a pollen transfer and possible fertilization
Flowers benefit a plant by attracting pollinators like bees, butterflies, and birds, which help in the process of reproduction through pollination. The flowers produce seeds after successful pollination, leading to the formation of new plants. Additionally, flowers contribute to genetic diversity within a plant species.
The aesthetic guarantee of a continued place within nature and the attraction of pollinators are two explanations as to how flowers benefit their plant. Flower colors, shapes and smells may be vivid, pleasing, and fragrant. That they're beautifully aesthetic is a main reason for the popularity of Flower Gardening and arranging, in terms of human interest.
In terms of nature's interest, flowers attract the pollinators that help the plant's survival. Specifically, flowers contain the nectar that pollinating bats, bees, beetles, birds and butterflies seek out. In return, the pollinators leave with pollen, which thereby is spread over a far wider area than the plant's immediate location.
Cutting off flowers from a mint plant can actually benefit it by encouraging more leaf growth and preventing the plant from putting energy into seed production. So, it will not hurt the plant.
No, lilies cannot be grown from cut flowers. To propagate lilies, you would need to plant bulbs or seeds. Cut flowers do not have the necessary structures to develop roots and grow into a new plant.
The flowers appear before the seed.
Flower color is an example of a trait that can be passed from a parent plant to its offspring. If a plant with red flowers is crossed with another plant with red flowers, their offspring are likely to also have red flowers due to the genetic inheritance of the trait for red flower color.
No, flowers are a parts of a plant. Some plants don't have flowers, but all flowers come from plants.
Some annual flowers benefit from deadheading while others do not need it at all. It depends upon the variety of annual plant.
Cutting off flowers from a mint plant can actually benefit it by encouraging more leaf growth and preventing the plant from putting energy into seed production. So, it will not hurt the plant.
Flowers produce seeds for the plant
Yes! The bats get food (nectar) from the flowers and also spread pollen from plant to plant. Both organisms benefit.
This process is called cross-pollination. It occurs when pollen is transferred from the flowers of one plant to the flowers of a genetically different plant, leading to the fertilization of seeds.
The relationship between bees and flowers is interdependence; the bees fertilize the flowers by moving pollen from plant to plant and the flowers provide the bees with nectar for their assistance.
yes
It is not up to the plants when to or not to produce flowers. It depends on how healthy the plant is after fertilisation. The healthier the plant is, the faster it will produce flowers.
Yes, the pipal plant, also known as the sacred fig or Ficus religiosa, does produce flowers. The flowers are tiny and bloom within the fruit of the plant.
The time you plant flowers depends on the type of flowers you are planting. An almanac can help you determine the best times to plant anything.
nector is in the flowers and the bees use nector for their honey so the suck it out of the flowers and take it back to their hives
flowers is a plant.