Since flowers can't move, they need to be able to attract pollinators or be built so that wind is able to pollinate them. Flowers attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, insects, and birds with sweet nectar, bright colors, and shapes and structures. Some flowers open at special times to attract pollinators such as night blooming plants that are pollinated by bats.
Pollen from the male plant is removed from the anthers (male parts) to the stigmas (female parts), by means such as bees, for example, rummaging around in the flower. The bee is covered in pollen from one plant, and when it flies to another plant of the same species, the pollen is rubbed off on the stigma and so pollination occurs!
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