What is pollination?

Pollination is when flowers send messages to each other so they can make more flowers.

Imagine you have a bag of jellybeans, and you want to share them with your friend. You throw one over the fence, and now both of you have some. That’s kind of like what happens in pollination, but instead of jellybeans, flowers send tiny messengers called pollen.

How Pollen Travels

Sometimes, a bee or a butterfly visits a flower to sip nectar (like drinking juice). As it moves around, some pollen sticks to its body. Then the bee or butterfly flies to another flower, and boom, pollen gets dropped off there!

This helps the flowers make seeds, which can grow into new plants. It's like a flower party where everyone gets to share their jellybeans and make more friends.

Sometimes, wind helps carry the pollen too, it’s like blowing a bunch of jellybeans across the yard so they land in someone else’s bag.

So pollination is just how flowers talk to each other (and sometimes even use bees or wind) to grow more flowers. It's not magic, it's teamwork!

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Examples

  1. A bee lands on a flower and takes some pollen with it, helping the plant make seeds.
  2. Pollination is like when flowers get help from bees to have babies.
  3. Flowers use insects as couriers to send their pollen to other flowers.

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Categories: Biology · flowers· bees· nature