Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Our Great Pollinators

The amount of pollen that this bee had collected was amazing!  He was sprinkled with pollen everywhere!

A honey bee in utter delight of the reb bud blossoms (like me!) and getting an early start on the season back in March.
Our Salvia seems to be a great attraction for the bumble bees because they visit it often!


This bumble bee is either chilled out or totally pooped out!  I got so tickled at the way it was resting on this leaf.



There are many different pollinators and they work differently since they are not all designed the same. Each type of pollinator feeds on different plants and therefore pollinate different plants in different ways. The most common pollinators are bees, butterflies, birds, and moths. But that's not all, there are more! Other pollinators include flies, beetles, bats, occasionally the wind and man sometimes either by accident and sometimes the deliberate processes that we use to pollinate in order to make better and stronger plants occurs.
To be pollinated, pollen has to be transfered from a stamen to the stigma. When pollen from a plant's stamen is transferred to that same plant's stigma, it is called self-pollination. When pollen from a plant's stamen is transferred to a different plant's stigma, it is called cross-pollination. When cross-pollination occurs it produces stronger plants. The plants have to be of the same species or family in order for cross-pollination to occur. For example, only pollen from a rose can pollinate another rose. Pollen from a daisy or an pear tree would not work on a rose.  It is interesting to watch bees, butterflies and etc. helping this process happen!



This bee had evidently been busy!  And he continued to collect pollen from this thistle flower.


This is an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (Papillo glaucus) helping with the pollination process of the wild azalea. Native azaleas are deciduous shrubs that are in the rhododendron family. They are fairly common where I live as well as an abundance of the mountain Laurel however; I have not noticed the common rhododendron growning abundantly and wild in our forest.



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