Yes like when it dies or when it is growing.
the time that it take for a flower to change color is 30 min.
You can do that. You can also change the color of the flower depending on the soil.
No, once a flower is cut, it cannot change color. The color of a flower is determined by its genetics and the presence of certain pigments in its petals. Cutting a flower only affects its hydration and lifespan, not its color.
No, you cannot change the color of an amaryllis flower while it is still in bulb form. The flower's color is determined genetically and will only become apparent once the bulb blossoms into a flower.
Yes, the color of the flower will change, it will be better to use a white flower for this experiment because its easier to tell if it changed.
No. Colored sodas do not change the color of a white flower. Any soda can makes the flower die because sodas have acid and sugar which can make a flower die.
When an acidic substance is added to marigold flower indicator, the color generally turns red or pink. This color change indicates the presence of acidity in the substance being tested.
A daffodil does not change color during its lifetime. There have been color changes in the genus because of breeders/hybridizers picking certain parent blooms looking for their perfect flower, but the plant's flower cannot change its color from one day to the next.
View it under an untraviolet light. It changes the color of the flower immediately. This is also how an insect sees it.
You can not change them, you have to dig up the flower and re-plant it!
Ammonia increases the pH of the solution around the flower, which can alter the structure of the pigment molecules in the flower petals. This change in structure can affect the way the pigment molecules interact with light, leading to a shift in the flower's color.
yes but mainly roses