Fruits with one seed typically belong to plants that produce larger seeds, such as avocados and peaches. Fruits with many seeds often belong to plants that produce smaller seeds, like strawberries and raspberries, to increase the chances of successful propagation. This variation in seed number reflects the diverse evolutionary strategies plants have developed to ensure successful reproduction and dispersal.
Fruits aid in seed dispersal by enticing animals with their sweetness and nutrients, causing them to eat the fruit and subsequently disperse the seeds through their droppings. This process allows seeds to be spread to new areas, increasing the chance of successful germination and growth. Additionally, some fruits have adaptations like hooks or sticky surfaces that allow them to attach to animals, ensuring their distribution.
Bananas, strawberries, grapes and oranges are the edible fruits. There are many different fruits including the ones listed above. Fruits are usually anything sweet with seeds, excluding gourds such as zuchinnis and cucumbers. Tomatoes are also fruits.
I don't know why a seed would need a seed to grow. it is a seed! a seed does need water, oxygen (it will only need the carbon dioxide from the oxygen to give us the waste which is oxygen so we can breath), and only the amount o sunlight it needs to make sugar. so it doesn't need a seed because it's a seed!
No, each marijuana seed typically produces only one plant. However, there are some instances where a seed may produce multiple plants due to genetic mutations or abnormal growth patterns.
Coming from Malaysia which is in the tropic, mango trees grow tall and they last many many years. I don't have horticultural knowledge, but I remember mango trees grown from seed can be 50 metres or taller and have a fruit bearing age of 20 years or longer. In the tropic, the trees bear fruit every year without fertilizer. Our only problem was how to get the fruits which are very high up the trees. In Eastwood, Sydney (Australia) where I have some grafted mango trees which are about 5 year old, it is difficult to have much fruits, I think mainly because they fall off in the high summer heat. However, I have seen some bigger mango trees (about 10 metres tall) with literally hundreds of big fruits last summer at Ryde and Meadowbank. So, this year, I have started to apply some fertilizer and watering and at the moment it looks like I will eventually have 20 staying fruits in one of the trees. Currently, the fruits are a little bigger than egg sizes. However, I have no idea what specific fertilizer I should be using and how much or how often and how much watering I should do. I would really appreciate proven knowledge in those aspects.
depend which fruit
They're not stones. They're seeds. All fruits either have many small seeds or one large seed. Naturally, when the fruit falls from the tree, the seed gets pushed underground by nature and the fruit itself contains all the nutrients required for that seed to grow into a tree.
That is the correct spelling of "fruit" (seed repository in some plants).
So that they can reproduce. All fruits and vegetables have a seed of some kind.
hello guys based on my own perception as a biology student, fruits of lesser value to palnts are compared with seeds because there are some fruits that can be also associated to seed. If once disperse, it can be be also be seed..
Many fruit plants are trees because of the beneficial seed distribution. By being something that many animals are attracted to, it gets the animals to eat more fruits and spread their seeds further from the original plant.
Acorns milkweed and single seed fruits are some common toxins also avacados
When not chewed, they are often not digested, similar to the seeds of some other fruits.
The fleshy pulp around some seeds inhibits the seed from sprouting prematurely. When the pulp is removed by rotting or chemical application, the seed will sprout.
Some fruits, such as peaches, mangoes and avocados contain just one large seed inside a hard stone. Other fruits, such as Oranges, lemons, apples, and Pears, contain several seeds called pips. Berries have lots of tiny pips around the outside of each fruit.
dont know thats what I want to know of some more fruits for an holiday assingment
dont know thats what I want to know of some more fruits for an holiday assingment