yes and the size of the apple can also effect the amount of seeds there is
The variety of apple, how fertile the soil is, and the growing season determines the amount of seeds in the apple. All apples have 5 segments or carpals and each can have 0-25 seeds in it.
Yes. The type of apple does affect the amount of seeds a apple will have
THEY ARE DIFFERRENT SIZES !
yes
4 or 5 seeds
Well, that depends. If you want lots of apple trees and aren't picky, plant them all. If you want a certain kind of apple tree, say a Washington or Golden Delicious, you could not grow it from seed. To get a specific type of apple tree you have to grow a grafted tree. Grafting is the process of fusing a branch or clone of the known and desired apple to sturdy root stock. This is because apple genetics are highly variable, and no two seeds are identical. If you just want to grow your own apple trees, plant the best looking or biggest seeds. Give them their own pot or space so they are not competing.
tiny seeds
Apples have dicotyledonous seeds. Their leaves have net-like venation, their flowers have petals and sepals in multiples of 4 or 5 (in this case 5) and they have five carpels (that is why when you cut an apple in half it makes a star shape, those are the five seed containing carpels). The apple seed has two cotyledons, not just one.
Because an apple comes from an apple green apple trees a type of living plant.
No. The number of seeds is determined long before the apple reaches its maximum size. It depends on the number of ovules in the flower, and the number of seeds that are fertilized and which then mature. Seed counts in various fruit varies from species to species as well as cultivar to cultivar
4 or 5 seeds
Pumpkin seeds, apple seeds, orange seeds, strawberry seeds, and most other seeds in fruit
You have to be a paid Moshi Member to get a Snap Apple. You go to the Super Seeds shop at the Port to buy Snap Apple seeds.
well it depnds what kind of apple it is and also you can ask how many seeds does a apple have
seeds
the green apples have the most seeds because if you take 3 green 3 red and 3 yellow and have them the same size and you cut them in half and you count all the seeds and then you have your anwser.
If you were to cut an apple in half cross sectionally you would find that an apple has five compartments. Each of these compartments should include a seed in order for the apple to be full sized and well shaped as the seeds produce hormones which allow the fruit to develop. Fruit which lack seeds often abort from the tree in times of stress. Varieties can have more than one seed in each carpel depending on the health and vigor of the tree. The healthier a tree is, the more potential seed the fruit can have per carpel. If you want to produce a certain type of apple it is not probable to do this by planting a seed from the wanted type. The seed will have DNA from the apple that the seeds came from, but it will also have DNA from the apple flower that pollinated the seeds, which may well be a different type. This means that the tree which would grow from planting would be a mixture of two. In order to grow a certain type of apple, a small twig, or 'scion', is cut from the tree that grows the type of apple desired, and then added on to a specially grown stump called a rootstock. The tree that grows will only create apples of the type needed. *Plants usually produce far more seeds than are needed. This is because many seeds don't survive and grow to maturity.
Apple seeds are not poisonous to guinea pigs. I give apples with the seeds in to my guinea pigs everyday. However one must be careful as guinea pigs can choke easily on apple seeds. Please NEVER give guinea pigs ANY type of seeds because thy can choke on them. If you have been giving them seeds and nothing has happened that doesn't mean seeds are safe, it means you guinea pig has been very lucky. Ask any exotic or cavy savy vet.
They are all types of fruit. A fruit is a type of food which contains seeds.
Crab apple trees are members of the Rose Family, they are edible and delicious, they were the only apples around for millions of years until the ancient Turks bred them into domestic apples in the Ili valley of Kazakhstan. See related links.
Some do, some don't.