Science, asked by Sujal99999, 23 hours ago

To which part of plants are butterflies and insects attracted? do all plants have that part? How are plants classified on the basis of that?​

Answers

Answered by shashidevibcm
0

Answer:

Butterflies and insects are attracted to pollen. No, all plants do not have pollen.

Answered by IIRissingstarll
0

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Butterflies and insects are attracted towards the petal of a flower for pollination . Yes all flowers have petal . A flower without petals is called an incomplete flower.

The most accepted and popular classification of plants is based on whether they are flowering plants (angiosperms) or non-flowering plants (gymnosperms).

Together, all of the petals of a flower are called the corolla . When the petals and sepals of a flower are difficult to distinguish, they are collectively called tepals.

  • A corolla of separate petals, without fusion of individual segments, is apopetalous .
  • If the petals are free from one another in the corolla, the plant is polypetalous or choripetalous .
  • while if the petals are at least partially fused, it is gamopetalous or sympetalous .
  • In the case of fused tepals, the term is syntepalous.
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