What is pollen?

Pollen is like tiny seeds that help plants make more plants.

Imagine you're playing with a bag full of little marbles, each one is special because it can grow into something new if it finds the right spot. Pollen is kind of like those marbles, but even smaller. They float in the air and travel from one plant to another, helping them have babies, which means more flowers, trees, and grass for us all to enjoy.

How Pollen Moves

When a flower is ready to make more flowers, it sends out pollen like tiny messengers on a breeze. Bees, butterflies, or even the wind can carry these little messengers from one plant to another. This is called pollination, it's how plants say "I want to have more friends."

Why Pollen Matters

Sometimes, pollen lands on your nose or in your eyes, and that’s what makes you sneeze or get itchy, just like when you accidentally touch something really dusty. But for the plants, it's a happy day because they're making more plants!

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Examples

  1. A tiny grain from a flower that floats in the air and helps plants make more flowers.
  2. Pollen is like the little helpers that help plants reproduce when they're carried by wind or animals.
  3. Tiny bits of plant material, like dust, that float around and can cause sneezing.

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Categories: Science · pollen· allergy· plants