Why plants have flowers
Plants have flowers because flowers help them make new plants. Flowers are the part of the plant used for reproduction. Inside a flower, there are special parts that make pollen and eggs. When pollen moves from one flower to another (this is called pollination), a seed can form.
Many flowers are bright and colorful or smell nice to attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and birds. These animals carry pollen between flowers. Some plants use the wind to move their pollen.
After pollination, the flower makes seeds, and those seeds can grow into new plants. So, flowers are important for helping plants grow and spread. 🌼🌿
15 Views






Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)
Yes, they have flowers.
Reproduce using seeds formed inside flowers (often inside fruits).
Non-Flowering Plants
No, they don’t have flowers.
They reproduce in different ways:
1. Spores (like mushrooms do):
Ferns, mosses, algae, liverworts use spores.
Spores are tiny cells that grow into new plants.
2. Cones and Seeds:
Conifers (like pine trees) don’t have flowers.
They use cones to produce seeds (male cones make pollen, female cones make seeds).