Home
09 February 2012
  • Home
  • Lessons by Topic
    • Air
    • Chemistry
    • Creatures
    • Earth Science
    • Electricity
    • Energy
    • Forces and Motion
    • Habitats
    • Human Body
    • Light
    • Our Community
    • Perception and Illusions
    • Plants
    • Sound
    • Structures
    • Water
  • Lessons by Grade Level
    • Kindergarten
    • Grade 1
    • Grade 2
    • Grade 3
    • Grade 4
    • Grade 5
    • Grade 6
    • Grade 7
  • Activities by Type
    • Activity
    • Demonstration
    • Exploration
    • Game
    • Make + Take
  • About
  • Thank You

LOGIN

To access these free activities, you must log in to the Science World Resources site.






Forgot login?
Register

More from Science World

  • Ask an Educator
  • Book a Field Trip
  • New! Catalyst for Science High School Resources

Keywords

absorb  aileron  air  air pressure  air resistance  airplane  art  balloons  bernoulli  birds  camber  christmas  creatures  creepy science  drag  dry  earth and space science  evaporate  flight  fluid  fly  gravity  halloween  halloween science  holiday  kindergarten  lift  magic  observation  parachute  physical science  pitch  plane  pressure  roll  rudder  sand  scary science  solution  sound  technology  texture  thrust  water  waves  wind  wing  winter break  winter holiday  yaw

Related Items

  • Hummingbirds
  • SuperGreen Trivia
  • Grade 1 Topic List
  • Grade 2 Topic List
  • Litterless Lunch
  • Save Our Salmon
  • Urban Wildlife
  • Water Savers
  • Solar Energy
  • Rainforests
  • Recycling Detectives
  • Kindergarten Topic List
  • Growing Food
  • Alternative Energy
  • Coastal Connections
  • Breakdown
  • Micro Water Cycle
  • Neighbourhood Scavenger Hunt
  • Animal Grossology
  • Magic
  • Elastic Energy
  • Human Grossology
  • Forces
  • Goo
  • States of Matter
  • Hummingbird dress-up
  • Hummingbird size
  • Hummingbird flight
  • Torpor Tag
  • Hummingbird feeder
  • Pollinator characteristics
  • Colour Call
  • Finding Pollen
  • Moving Pollen
  • Bee Waggle
  • Drinking Nectar
  • Butterfly feeders
  • Bird Silhouettes
  • Salmon Lifecycle Mix & Match
  • Salmon lifecycle hexaflexagon
  • Salmon migration
  • How to make a redd
  • Salmon Stream Design
  • Backyard Brainstorm
  • Static Electricity
  • Will It Wilt?
  • Ocean Connections: Orcas
  • Ocean Connections: Ocean In A Jar
  • Nearshore Connections: Sea Otter Story
  • Rainfall
  • Niche and Habitat
  • Living Or Non-living?
  • Old Growth Trees
  • Seed Dissection
  • Biodegradable Seedling Pots
  • Get To Know A Plant
  • Plant Relay
  • Map Your Fruit
  • Fruits From Afar Relay
  • Science Fair Guide
  • Balloons
  • Balloon Boarding
  • Air
  • Eggstraordinary Eggsperiments
  • Sound
  • Creature Features
  • Carbon Cycle
  • Wonderful Water
  • Colour and Light
  • The Nose Knows
  • Get to Know a Potato
  • Paper Helicopters
  • What's in a Bottle
  • Ice Cube Towers
  • Sound Map
  • Kalliroscope
  • Illusions
  • Incompressible Water
  • Survival Strategies
  • Balance
  • Air Cannon
  • Feathers, Fur, or Fin?
  • Animals Extraordinaire
  • Sound and Smell
  • Picky Eaters
  • Animal Restaurant
  • Humans vs. Wild Animals
  • Create A Creature
  • Carrying Capacity
  • Current Electricity
  • Flight
  • Wet and Dry

Lessons by Topic Creatures Pollinators

Pollinators

Pollinators

pollination-pollinators-pollen-bird-bee-butterfly-animals-flower-plants-green-kindergarten-grade 1-grade 2

Learn about pollinators and the role that they play in our ecosystems.

Introduction

Pollination plays an important role in our everyday lives. It has a particularly great effect on the variety of food that we have available to us—apples, berries, chocolate and peanut butter are all by-products of the work that pollinators do.

In this lesson, students will learn about the process of pollination, the animals that pollinate, and the strategies that they can use to promote pollinator health and wellbeing.

Objectives

  • describe the importance of pollinators in nature
  • describe, in general terms, how pollination works
  • list a few characteristics of common pollinators (birds, bees, butterflies)
  • list human actions that benefit pollination and pollinators

Background

Pollination occurs when insects and animals go to feed on nectar at flowers. They accidentally rub against the pollen inside of the flower and transport it from one flower to another. When this happens, the flower is fertilized and can make fruit and seeds.

There are roughly 200,000 varieties of animal pollinators in the wild, most of which are insects. Other animals such as birds and bats can also help with pollination.

Flowering plants have several different parts that are important in pollination. Flowers have male parts called stamens that produce a sticky powder called pollen. The tiny grains of pollen produce the male reproductive cells. Most pollen in North America is a yellow or orange colour. The female part of the flower is called the pistil. The top of the pistil is called the stigma, and is often sticky. Seeds are made at the base of the pistil, in the ovule.

For a plant to be pollinated, pollen must be moved 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. Cross-pollination produces stronger plants. The plants must be of the same species in order for fertilization to take place. For example, only pollen from a daisy can pollinate another daisy.

Plants which use bats or moths as pollinators typically have evolved to have flowers with white petals and a strong scent. Plants that use birds as pollinators tend to have flowers with red petals and rarely develop a scent (few birds have a sense of smell).

Entire Lesson

These resources are free!
You must LOGIN to download the full lesson + activities. 

Other Resources

Science World Resources | Full Lesson | Hummingbirds
Science World Resources | Full Lesson | Urban Wildlife
Science World at TELUS World of Science | School Workshops | Insects
Science World at TELUS World of Science | Search: The Sara Stern Gallery
Stanley Park Ecology Society | Urban Wildlife
VanDusen Botanical Garden | School Programs
The Bug Lab | Workshops
Seeds of Diversity Canada | Pollination Canada
The UBC Farm | Children's Learning Garden
UBC Botanical Garden | School Groups

 

Comments  

 
#1 I like this lesson — Kat 2009-08-14 11:15
Bring more of this stuff.
 
Refresh comments list
RSS feed for comments to this post
JComments
Science World Home | Sitemap | Thank You | Legal | Support Us