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The plant is thought to be anemophilous (pollinated by wind).
Anemophilous flowers use the wind to move pollen from one flower to the next.
It is suspected that the extension was involved in anemophilous pollination.
Most late summer and fall pollen allergies are probably caused by ragweed, a widespread anemophilous plant.
Ragweed, the bane of many hay fever sufferers, is anemophilous.
Female flowers are grouped five by five, and pollination is mainly anemophilous.
In anemophilous flowers, pollen are light and non sticky so that they can be transported by air currents.
Anemophilous plants typically produce great quantities of very lightweight pollen grains, sometimes with air-sacs.
This transfer can be mediated by the wind, in which case the plant is described as anemophilous (literally wind-loving).
Flowering is from early summer to early autumn; pollination is anemophilous.
Anemophilous flowering plants generally have inconspicuous flowers.
The anemophilous groups within the Hamamelidaceae are often andromonoecious.
However, flowering anemophilous species do not develop scented flowers, nor do they produce nectar.
Also anemophilous pollens may also be inadvertently captured by bees' electrostatic field.
Almost all pollens that are allergens are anemophilous.
V. An elementary theory of anemophilous dissemination".
Most conifera are anemophilous; they depend on wind pollination.
The fruit is a greenish achene with seeds bearing feathery anemophilous filaments.
Male and female flowers are on separate plants and like grasses are wind-pollinated or anemophilous.
Anemophilous - wind pollinated.
Anemophilous plants may be either gymnosperms (non-flowering) or angiosperms (flower-producing).
Generally pollens that cause allergies are those of anemophilous plants (pollen is dispersed by air currents.)
Honeybees and bumblebees actively gather anemophilous corn (maize) pollen, though it is of little value to them.
Other common anemophilous plants are grass species, conifers, oaks, sweet chestnuts, alders and members of the hickory family.
The flowers are usually hermaphroditic-- maize being an important exception-and anemophilous or wind-pollinated.