Science, asked by rekhagupta237, 7 hours ago

2. In some cases, pollen stick to an animal's
when it brushes against a flower,​

Answers

Answered by goodboy53
4

Answer:

2 ohm resistor and 6 ohm resistor are connected in series with a 4 V battery. Calculate amount of charge passing through the battery in 10 seconds

Answered by gargshrasti6
0

answer:

flower

Flowering plants need to get pollen from one flower to another, either within a plant for self-pollination or between plants of the same species for cross-pollination to occur. However, pollen can’t move on its own, so animals or the wind (and water in rare cases) move the pollen for plants.

animal's

Most New Zealand native flowering plants are pollinated by animals – most by insects, but some by birds or even bats. Plants provide nectar and pollen as edible rewards to the animals for visiting a flower. As an animal reaches into a flower for its reward, it brushes against an anther, and some of the pollen sticks to its body. When the animal visits another flower, some of this pollen comes off onto the stigma – pollination has occurred. The pollen of animal-pollinated plants has a rough surface to help it stick to a pollinator

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