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FLOWERS
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FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Mar 31, 2015

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Paula Benedict
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Page 1: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

FLOWERS

Page 2: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Parts of a Flower

• Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds.

• Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have a similar structure:

• Sepals • Petals • Stamens • Pollen • Pistil • Ovary• Ovules

Page 3: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

What’s In A Flower?

http://www.nybg.org/chil_edu/teachersguide/purposeofaflower.html

Page 4: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Pollination

• The shape, color, and fragrance of a flower provide clues as to the size and shape of its pollinator.

• Tube-shaped flowers, such as honeysuckle, are typically pollinated by animals with a long beak, proboscis, or tongue.

Page 5: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Pollination

• Fragrant, showy flowers attract pollinators.

• Flowers that use wind to disperse pollen tend to be small and lack fragrance.

Page 6: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers Come in Many Colors, Shapes and Sizes

Page 7: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Some flowers attract bats

The flowers that are visited by bats are typically:

• open at night

• large in size (1- 3.5 inches)

• pale or white in color

• very fragrant - fermenting or fruit-like odor

• A good supply of dilute nectar

Page 8: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Prickly Pear

Banana PlantKapok Tree

Page 9: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Bees are the champion pollinators!

The flowers that are visited by bees are typically:• full of nectar • brightly colored with petals that are usually blue or yellow

or a mixture of these (bees cannot see red) • sweetly aromatic or have a minty fragrance • open in daytime • provide landing platforms • often bilaterally symmetrical (one side of the flower is a

mirror image of the other) • flowers are often tubular with nectar at the base of the

tube

Page 10: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers pollinated by bees

Page 11: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers pollinated by birds

The flowers that are visited by birds and hummingbirds are typically:

• Tubular and have petals that are curved to be out of the way

• Have tubes, funnels, cups • Strong supports for perching • Brightly colored (red, yellow, or orange) • Odorless (birds have a poor sense of smell) • Open during the day • Prolific nectar producers with deeply hidden nectar • Modest pollen producers that are designed to dust the

bird’s head/back with pollen as the bird forages for nectar

Page 12: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers pollinated by birds

Page 13: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers Pollinated by Butterflies

The flowers that are visited by butterflies are typically:

• In clusters and provide landing platforms

• Brightly colored (red, yellow, orange)

• Open during the day

• Ample nectar producers, with nectar deeply hidden

• May be clusters of small flowers

Page 14: FLOWERS. Parts of a Flower Flowers make pollen, attract pollinators, produce fruit, and make seeds. Despite differences in appearance, most flowers have.

Flowers Pollinated by Butterflies