Examples of nectar guide in the following topics:
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- They visit flowers that are open during the day, are brightly colored, have a strong aroma or scent, and have a tubular shape, typically with the presence of a nectar guide.
- A nectar guide includes regions on the flower petals that are visible only to bees, which help guide bees to the center of the flower, thus making the pollination process more efficient.
- The nectar provides energy while the pollen provides protein.
- These flowers are brightly colored, have a strong fragrance, are open during the day, and have nectar guides.
- A corn earworm (a moth) sips nectar from a night-blooming Gaura plant.
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- For example, bees see near-ultraviolet light in order to locate nectar guides on flowers.
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- The flowers have a strong, fruity, or musky fragrance and produce large amounts of nectar.
- As the bats seek the nectar, their faces and heads become covered with pollen, which is then transferred to the next flower.
- As a bird seeks energy-rich nectar, pollen is deposited on the bird's head and neck and is then transferred to the next flower it visits.
- Unlike the typical insect-pollinated flowers, flowers adapted to pollination by wind do not produce nectar or scent.
- Flowers often attract pollinators with food rewards, in the form of nectar.
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- Many bird or insect-pollinated flowers secrete nectar, a sugary liquid.
- Flowers that attract these pollinators usually display a pattern of low ultraviolet reflectance that helps them quickly locate the flower's center to collect nectar while being dusted with pollen .
- As a bee collects nectar from a flower, it is dusted by pollen, which it then disperses to other flowers.
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- This method of pollination does not require an investment from the plant to provide nectar and pollen as food for pollinators.
- This allows insects to easily cross-pollinate while seeking nectar at the pollen tube.
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- The nectar-eating birds have long beaks to dip into flowers to reach the nectar.
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- The scorpionflies probably engaged in pollination mutualisms with gymnosperms, long before the similar and independent coevolution of nectar-feeding insects on angiosperms.
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- The adult butterflies feed on the nectar of flowers of wild lupine and other plant species.
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- A classic example of mutualism is the relationship between insects that pollinate plants and the plants that provide those insects with nectar or pollen.
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- The difference is exemplified in Canova's Hebe (1800-05), whose contrapposto almost mimics lively dance steps as she prepares to pour nectar and ambrosia from a small amphora into a chalice, and Thorvaldsen's Monument to Copernicus (1822-30), whose subject sits upright with the a compass and armillary sphere.