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      • Flowering plants provide bees with nectar and pollen, which will feed their entire colony. Bees provide flowers with the means to reproduce by spreading pollen in the process called pollination. Without pollination, plants cannot create seeds. Without seeds, there wouldn't be any more plants.
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    • Bumblebees. Bumblebees can vibrate their bodies to dislodge pollen from a flower. The bee then combs the pollen off its hairy body into little baskets on its legs, called corbiculae.
    • Hoverflies. Hoverflies are prolific pollinators. They are known to visit at least 72% of global food crops and over 70% of animal-pollinated wildflowers.
    • Solitary bees. Solitary bees don't travel very far, although foraging distances vary among species. Most forage up to 500 metres from their nest and some as little as 100 metres.
    • Wasps. Wasps are hungry minibeasts with high energy needs, so many of them search for flower nectar. Wasps are not as hairy as bees, so pollen does not stick to them as easily, but they are still important pollinators.
  2. Nov 22, 2019 · Flowering plants and insects often exist in mutually beneficial relationships. We are familiar with the idea that insects such as honey bees are essential to plants' reproductive processes, but there are other ways that plants can benefit from their association with insects.

    • Why do insects need flowering plants?1
    • Why do insects need flowering plants?2
    • Why do insects need flowering plants?3
    • Why do insects need flowering plants?4
    • Why do insects need flowering plants?5
  3. Insect-pollination of flowering plants is responsible for the majority of the world’s flowering diversity and is an essential part of plant reproduction. Flowers have bright colours,...

  4. Bees and flowers. Lots of plants rely on insects like bees to reproduce. To make a seed, a flower needs to be pollinated. Pollen from one flower needs to travel to another. Bees are very...

    • Results and Findings
    • Project Overview
    • See Also

    Pollinating insects: paper one

    1. Advice for supporting pollinating insects 2. Plants for Pollinators 3. Read interpretation bulletin 1 4. Read the full paper

    Plant-dwelling invertebrates: paper two

    1. Advice for supporting plant-dwelling invertebrates 2. Read interpretation bulletin 2 3. Read the academic paper abstract

    Ground-active invertebrates: paper three

    1. Read interpretation bulletin 3 2. Read the academic paper abstract 3. Advice for supporting ground-active invertebrates

    Project start date: 2009
    Lead researchers:Andrew Salisbury and Helen Bostock
    Collaborative researchers:James Armitage, Stephanie Bird, Anna Platoni, Mark Tatchell, Ken Thompson and Joe Perry
    Research team:Plant Health
    Download the full list of plants used in the Plants for Bugs project (979kB pdf)
    Download background information on the Plants for Bugs project  (2MB pdf)(please note: plots at RHS Garden Wisley are now dismantled)
    For more about what life on the plots was like read Helen Bostock’s Plants for Bugs blog
  5. Aug 27, 2023 · Insect pollinated flowers play a vital role in enhancing genetic diversity within plant populations. When pollen is transferred between different flowers or even different plants, it introduces new genetic material, increasing the genetic variability of offspring.

  6. May 24, 2017 · Some plants rely on wind and water, most flowering plants reproduce through animal pollination. Around 75% of crop plants require some degree of animal pollination, including many of our everyday fruit and vegetables. Of all the different animals and insects that serve as pollinators, the most important are bees. Bees and pollination

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