Pollen sticks due to its sticky surface texture, which helps it adhere to surfaces such as insects' bodies or the pistils of flowers. This stickiness is important for the pollination process as it allows the pollen to be transferred from one plant to another.
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
The structure where pollen grains land and stick is the stigma of a flower. The stigma is the uppermost part of the pistil, and its sticky surface helps to capture and hold pollen grains for fertilization.
The reason why some pollen grains have spikes is because of the plant species. It also may be because of where the plant was adapted. Pollen grains have spikes also simply due to the location where the species is found. It is located in the coastal species where pollen grains have a different pollen shape to help with things such as salt resistant while a species found inland will be more heat resistant. It really just depends on the type of environment in which the plant has adapted. By Lyn Le
The stigma is sticky so that it can pick up the pollen grains easier, or, in other words, so that the pollen wll stick to it.
the pollen might stick to their clothes, hands/fingers and hair, which can be an easy source to find out where the person has been.
its legs because there hairy which helps the pollen stick to them
Pollen sticks due to its sticky surface texture, which helps it adhere to surfaces such as insects' bodies or the pistils of flowers. This stickiness is important for the pollination process as it allows the pollen to be transferred from one plant to another.
Pollination the process in which pollen arrives at the pistil and will stick to the stigma
no
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
Gravity
Yes,as pollen are made of small dust
it is stick so therefore it holds the pollen in place.
The structure where pollen grains land and stick is the stigma of a flower. The stigma is the uppermost part of the pistil, and its sticky surface helps to capture and hold pollen grains for fertilization.
The reason why some pollen grains have spikes is because of the plant species. It also may be because of where the plant was adapted. Pollen grains have spikes also simply due to the location where the species is found. It is located in the coastal species where pollen grains have a different pollen shape to help with things such as salt resistant while a species found inland will be more heat resistant. It really just depends on the type of environment in which the plant has adapted. By Lyn Le
So the pollen will stick.