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The genus (or first part of the scientific name) for bougainvillea is actually "bougainvillea." There are several species, including Bougainvillea glabra, which if you are in the southern United States, this is most likely the horticultural species you will find.If in South America, there are species called Bougainvillea peruviana and Bougainvillea spinosa.Bougainvillea glabra
No, Bougainvillea is a terrestrial plant.
since it has both androecium and gynoecium
A bougainvillea is a shrub and a climber but if it has no support it will become a creeper.
bougainvillia
They are flowering plants
they both have built in lava
Both pine trees and hibiscus plants have seeds. Ferns do not. That's actually a pretty important distinction from an evolutionary standpoint.
yes it is similar
Gymnosperms, such as pine trees, and angiosperms, such as hibiscus, both sport an important evolutionary feature that ferns do not. Gymnosperms and angiosperms both make seeds through sexual reproduction, while ferns produce spores through a type of asexual reproduction. (the latin word sperma means seed.)
Pine is more similar. Other two more primitive
no...Bougainvillea is a dicot
It depends on the plant, the most popular thorn plants are cactuses and roses, i hope this helps
The genus (or first part of the scientific name) for bougainvillea is actually "bougainvillea." There are several species, including Bougainvillea glabra, which if you are in the southern United States, this is most likely the horticultural species you will find.If in South America, there are species called Bougainvillea peruviana and Bougainvillea spinosa.Bougainvillea glabra
Tropical Hibiscus are not deciduous but are evergreen. Because they only grow in warm areas with no frost or tempretures below freezing.But there is a hibiscus,Hibiscus syriacus or Rose of Sharon that is deciduous and is both frost and cold hardy.
bougainvillea flower
No, Bougainvillea is a terrestrial plant.