Biology, asked by mayankpandey77, 1 year ago

what is pollen nectars

Answers

Answered by Robindeep
1
Nectar is a sweet substance, produced by some plants to attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. Bees collect nectar and make it into honey. While collecting the nectar, pollinators accidentally transfer pollen from male flowers to female flowers.




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Answered by krithika32
1
Plants and bees have a unique symbiosis: they are entirely dependent on each other. The plant produces food for the bees, and the bees reciprocate by pollinating the flowers in order that the plants reproduce.

Pollen and nectar are the two staple foods of bees. Pollen is protein, and nectar is a carbohydrate. For the most part pollen is fed to bee larvae, and is also fed to queen bees. Nectar is the regular daily food for worker and drone bees and is stored in honeycomb, dehydrated, and made into honey.

Pollen comes from pollen bearing flowers on plants, bushes and trees. It is the sperm agent of flowers to produce seeds. Flowers produce nectar to attract pollinators to the flowers to spread pollen from the male pollen bearing parts (stamens) to the female parts (pistils) or pollen receptacle parts of the plant. Bees gather it from the stamens and store it in sacs on their back legs.

Nectar is very sweet and is high energy food for bees (which is probably why they always have a buzz going), butterflies, hummingbirds, and other nectar eaters.


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