Yes. Yes, and the Ark in Scandinavia is currently collecting seeds and plant samples fromaround the world to preserve the planet's diversity.
You can water plants after a freeze, but it is much more important to make sure they are well-watered before the freeze. Most tissue damage occurs because of a lack of water inside the tissues, which then lose the heat energy from inside the cells (and the cells rupture when they freeze).
it will freeze in to a ice block
yes you can freeze camels milk you can freeze any thing that is a liquid
Seeds are not detritivores
Not if you freeze it. The water in it will simply freeze into globules which will eventually stick together.
put it in the freezer
If you are going to be cooking with them, yes.
Freeze dry them
becausethe ground would freeze
There are a lot of seeds in tomatoes if you freeze them for a while.
Remove the seeds then place them in a small container, add a little water and put in the freezer. or use liquid nitrogen either way should work
It can freeze the land then freeze the plants all the plants will die then it will not be able to produce anymore plannts because the seeds freeze too.The ground gets coverd in up to 2 feet of snowAnd then after the snow has melted yes there is the ice
The strawberry will freeze the best because it has more oxygen it a has water that will get cold and freeze. This is why it is the answer. Scientists have studied this and they predict that the seeds and water that are in the strawberry give of more oxygen that they freeze up when it gets somewhere cold.
2/2/09 Unintentionally my basil seeds froze in my garden shed! Last week I thought I'd better try to see if they would germinate...I planted several and 7 have germinated so far. I too hope the rest of my winter frozen seeds made it through.
You can water plants after a freeze, but it is much more important to make sure they are well-watered before the freeze. Most tissue damage occurs because of a lack of water inside the tissues, which then lose the heat energy from inside the cells (and the cells rupture when they freeze).
Yes! I bought frozen pomegranate seeds last week from the grocery store. They taste great. You can also freeze fresh seeds, or those you have removed from the fruit yourself. Simply spread seeds in single layer, freeze for 2 hours, then seal in freezer bags or containers. The common wisdom is to keep in freezer for no more than 3 months, but I keep them longer if I have enough.
Yes it can freeze.