Balsa flowers attract animals
While Balsa trees are a rare and rare species, their flowers also make many species love with many pollen and honey.
Balsa trees (Ochroma pyramidale) in Panama often bloom in the dry season, when the sun goes down, signaling a new pollination season.This flower is native to South America, but can still be found in Asia and Africa.The flowers filled with honey are the ideal drink of bees.A salsa can bloom about 50-60 flowers per night, giving about 30ml of nectar.
A horse is waiting for the insects to disappear in the night to collect pollen.
White-faced monkeys often gather at their favorite balsa trees before dark.
Hummingbirds visit and suck balsa nectar.
African honey bees fly towards Ochroma flower after sunset to find pollen.If you mistakenly landed in a place with only nectar, bees will drown because they are covered in honey.This bee has the ability to look in low light conditions, so it is often advantageous to get pollen at night.
A flower python is waiting for the right opportunity to catch prey on a flower and seems less interested in Ochroma pollen, but will not ignore the appearance of a hummingbird.
A spearhead bat uses a pointed tip to the flower to pollinate.Bats have long been considered the main pollinator for Ochroma flowers, but recent research has shown that tree mammals can also do this.
Under the dim moonlight at the time of dawn, a small gecko is looking for food that is the worm on a flower.
A hummingbird hatches eggs on a bird's nest made from plant fibers after the lost flowers have withered.
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