FLOWER VISITORS
Not all flower visitors are pollinators, some are looking for food but don't necessarily help the flowers at all. I have included some here that may or may not be pollinators.
Also some flower visitors are predators that feed on pollinators (
see predators).


Click on images to see them enlarged
Ants on pink flower. Sometimes flowers supply extrafloral nectaries to attract ants that keep other insects from stealing the nectar (by entering the flower from the side)and force them to enter the flower in a way that is more conducivel to pollination.
Many species of ants are flower visitors but only a few can pollinate them because they can't fly. Low lying plants like this spurge may be pollinated by ants.
Milkweed bug on Queen Anne's lace ( Lygaeus Kalmii).
Several unidentified insects on Bignoniaceae flower
Black Blister beetle, it can cause irritation if touched, thus the name. This beetle probably doesn't pollinate flowers, it is more interested in parasitizing bees.
Milkweed bugs mating.
Immature grasshoper
Zelus Assassin bug
Another ant
Not all pollinators are insects. There are a number of vertebrates, such as birds and bats. But even slugs can act as pollinators.
The wild ginger flower is so close to the ground that sometimes is covered by leaf litter, that is not the way to attract flying insects; it is believed that its pollinator is a slug. You can see one on the lower flower.
More about other flower visitors
Previous    Next
Back to Homepage
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1