i am hundred persent sure that seeds contain food, but like a seed grows right? so it should also contain an embryo for the seed to break apart and the living organism to survive using soil and light. so in a different way to humans it should have an embryo
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoYes, the stigma of a flower does not contain food for the embryo. Its main function is to receive pollen grains during pollination and facilitate fertilization. Once pollination occurs, the embryo is nourished by the endosperm in the seed.
Seeds
A seed contain embryo and nutritive tissue
Yes, plant seeds contain stored food reserves that provide energy for the growing seedling until it can photosynthesize its own food. This food reserve is typically in the form of starch, oils, or proteins.
The seeds are oil bearing.
They act as a food source for the embryo
an embryo, the endosperm (food supply), and the seed coat.
Seeds contain embryos to provide an energy source for the plant when it starts to shoot out of its seed. Think of it like the yoke for a chicken inside an egg. The yoke is the embryo of the egg.
Seeds contain embryos to provide an energy source for the plant when it starts to shoot out of its seed. Think of it like the yoke for a chicken inside an egg. The yoke is the embryo of the egg.
coteledens
The phylum that includes plants with seeds is the Angiosperms (Phylum Anthophyta) and Gymnosperms (Phylum Coniferophyta). These two phyla are characterized by the presence of seeds, which are structures that contain and protect the embryo of the plant.
Spores are usually haploid and unicellular and are produced by meiosis, they are not seeds and do not contain the "bulky" multicellular embryo and seed coat that encloses it of plant seeds.