Plants also have the ability to continue their breed and survive in different environments through pollination. There are two kinds of pollination: self-pollination and cross-pollination that are very different from one another. Self-pollination happens when the anther produces pollen that is deposited on the stigma of the flower itself. Pollinators such as insects are not required for self-pollination to occur.
An example of a self-pollinated next-generation plant is it would have the same color as its mother plant. Cross-pollination, on the other hand, is the process of transferring pollen from one plant to another. Bees and the wind help in transferring the pollen to a different stigma of a flower. A good example of the result of cross-pollination is a growing plant that has an orange flower amidst a garden of red and yellow flowers.
In your garden, you may plant some plants, and then they die in the wintertime. They may bloom again in the spring. Sometimes, the plant will reseed into the ground. Then new plants will spring up later after they grow. This can happen in two different ways. It just depends on the type of plant it is. Some plants self-pollinate which means that they take their pollen and send it to their stigma to reproduce.
They don’t need anything else. However, those plants that cross-pollinate need the pollen from another plant. Usually, this is done through bugs like bees. They take the pollen from one plant and carry it on their legs, and when they land on another plant, the pollen from the other plant stays there.