Science, asked by sihhsjjs1103, 1 year ago

Imagine you have a garden with the plants listed below. A swarm of bees visit your
garden. Do you think the bees will visit all the flowers? Name the flowers which you
think the bees will be attracted to. Give reasons to substantiate your answer.
(Jasmine, Nerium, Gulmohar, Rose, Lotus, Corn, Sugarcane, Bamboo, Chrysanthemum,
Dahlia, Grass, Coconut and Peas)

Answers

Answered by soham2759
0

Answer:

bamboo .

Explanation:

because bees like to suck honey from bamboo plant

Answered by bestanswers
0

Appending below is list of flowers that bees are friendly-with:

1. Jasmine – is a highly fragrant plant wherein swarms of bees visit their wide flowers for vine.

2. Rose – is a highly fragrant and also full of nectar, hence bees visit them often to collect the sweetness.

3. Lotus – Bees visit lotus and they usually cover by their pollen and carry loads in her pollen basket. Generally bees love the two species of lotus known as Nelumbo lutea and Nelumbo nucifera.

4. Chrysanthemum - These plants have mixed bags of nectar for bees and their autumn blooms are more bee-friendly.

5. Dahlia – since there are more numbers of hybrid varieties leaving no pollens for the bees, Dahlia is unvisited by the bees unfortunately.

6. Coconut – Bees visit the coconut flowers and cause pollen exploitation in order to aid the coconut the pollination.  

7. Peas – Bees have shortened tongues and relatively love open flowers. Hence, bees visit legumes such as peas, sweet peas, beans et al and help pollinating the species.

Appending below are few points why those plants are not visited by bees:

  • Nerium on the other name as Oleandar attract not that much swarm of bees and stay unvisited unfortunately.
  • Not only the ornamental flowers but also the balcony flowers stay unvisited by the bees unfortunately though they are pleasing to eyes.
  • Food crops such as corn, rice, wheat, et al requires no bees for pollination, wherein they depend on wind pollination.  
  • Bees sometime draw towards sugarcanes in terms of harming the crop in the case of wild bees, wherein no nectar is collected and no possibilities of pollination in sugarcanes.  
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