00:01
Okay, so for this question, we're just defining multiple different terms.
00:04
I'm assuming all of these are botany related in some capacity.
00:09
So pollination in general, it's basically when the pollen from the male goes towards the stigma, which is the female part of the plant, and pollinates or basically inseminates them, which is similar to how like sperm and egg fertilize one another.
00:29
It's basically the reproductive method or fertilization to be more specific in plants.
00:35
So it can be different per plant type.
00:38
Each type of plant typically has their own unique way.
00:43
I'm sure a lot of people are familiar with like the whole bees, you know, bees go over to the plant, you know, get pollen all over them from one flower and transfer it to another.
00:54
And that's one example of pollination.
00:58
Then there's two types of plants beyond that.
01:00
There's self -pollinating and then there's cross -pollinating.
01:04
Self is exactly what it sounds like.
01:06
The plant itself literally pollinates itself and is autonomic in that regard.
01:10
It does everything on its own.
01:13
Versus cross -pollinating requires another means or another vector of transference.
01:18
And examples of that would be like wind, animals, another plant, something like that.
01:24
The next term that was listed was a psychophile.
01:30
Ultimately, these are extremophilic bacteria and archaea.
01:34
They love cold weather...