As the seed develops after fertilization, the ovary changes into a fruit-a ripened ovary and other structures that enclose one or more seeds. Fruits are the means by which angiosperm seeds are dispersed. Animals that eat fruits help to disperse their seeds. Fruit nurishes the developing seeds inside the fruit and on maturity it helps in the dispersal of seeds.
The flower structure containing one or more ovules is the ovary. Ovules are located within the ovary and are potential seeds that develop into fruits after fertilization. The ovary is the female reproductive organ of the flower and plays a crucial role in seed production.
the papaya is not very appetizing it may need to have more seeds to boost the chance of getting dispersed
No. [1] The avocado [Persea americana] is a flowering tree in the Lauraceae family. Fruit refers to the ripened ovaries of flowers. And the fruit of the avocado tree is the berry. Within the berry is a pit that protects the seeds inside. [2] Not all seeds are nuts. The only that are just have 1-2 seeds within a hardened stony or woody ovary. The seeds are separate from, and loose within, the ovary. [3] And all true nuts are members of just two families. One's the Betulaceae family of alder, birch, hazel, and hornbeam. The other's the Fagaceae family of beech, chestnut, oak, stone-oak, and tanoak.
pretty much all fruit have seeds, so if it has seeds, it qualifies as a fruit Not quite true: figs and pine cones both have seeds, yet neither is technically a fruit. A fruit is the ripened ovary – together with seeds – of a flowering plant.
1. Pollination occurs [arrival of pollen on stigma]*self pollination*cross pollination2. Pollen tube forms from sperm nuclei.3. Some of sperm nuclei travel down tube to ovules ---> FERTILIZATION4. Ovary further develops into fruit.(fruits contains fertile seeds)
The difference between an Angiosperm and a Gymnosperm is that Angiosperms are flowering plants while Gymnosperms are not. A. include plants that use flowers to reproduce. More information on this topic can be researched online or in a biology book. I strongly recommend Dale Layman's Biology Demystified for more info. An angiosperm also forms seeds inside a protective chamber called an ovary and a gymnosperm bears naked seeds (no ovary).
The gynoecium consists of three parts: the stigma, the style, and the ovary. The stigma is the receptive surface for pollen, the style is the structure that connects the stigma to the ovary, and the ovary contains the ovules which develop into seeds after fertilization.
Examples of a simple multi-ovule fuit: apples, pears. NOT peaches or cherries.[1] simple fruit: formed from a single ovary and may contain one to many seeds.[2] multiple ovule: two or more compartments where seeds are kept.
A locule in a plant is a compartment within an ovary that contains the ovules. It is where the seeds develop after fertilization. The number of locules in an ovary can vary depending on the plant species.
In flowering plants, one or more seeds develop within an ovary. The seed coat, which is the hard structure that surrounds the seed, develops from the wall of the chamber where the fertilized egg begins to develop.
Fruit typically develops from the ovary of a flowering plant, containing seeds within. Seeds are the mature ovules of gymnosperms and angiosperms, which develop after fertilization. In angiosperms, seeds are enclosed within the ovary wall that develops into a fruit.