A herbaceous perennial is a plant that grows and blooms in the warm months and dies back to "hibernate" during the cold months. They return year afte year, multiplying by roots or corms or bulbs. With that in mind, the daffodil very much fills the description, and therefore it IS a perennial plant.
Yes because they bloom each year
Trees are deciduous, daffodils are perennials and the foliage dies back late May.
Adjective: I was amazed at her perennial beauty.Noun: I've been planting early; first the daffodils and other perennials.
Some sentence examples for the word perennial are: A perennial is a plant that lives from year to year. A tree is a perennial. Irises, daffodils, tulips, and other flowers are perennials.
perennials
Hops are perennials.
They are perennials. They are very hardy plants!
No, daffodils are perennials. When you plant the bulb in the fall, it remains dormant until spring when it shoots up new growth. The bulb stores up food made by the leaves through photosynthesis and uses it to send up shoots again the following year. Bulbs multiply underground and can be separated and planted in the fall to start new daffodil plants in other locations.
Both annuals and evergreen perennials. For example the Balsamina and the Gladulifera are annual and the New Guinea group perennials
Yes we have daffodils
Bryophytes (aka embryophytes) is a term used for mosses, hornworts and liverworts. These plants are small, green, rootless, and they reproduce by spores instead of seeds. Daffodils are flowering herbaceous perennials reproduce by seeds. Daffodils are NOT bryophytes.
Pilea, the Low-growing tropical perennials
"Daffodils" is the plural of "daffodil."