Yes, especially annuals. Rain causes the seeds in the soil to germinate quickly, grow quickly, flower quickly and produce seeds that are then scattered on the soil to wait for the next good rain.
Yes, it is an adaptation for survival in the desert. Rain is scarce so plants take advantage of the rare showers to have quickly sprouting seeds that grow and flower quite rapidly before the perpetual drought returns.
Apparently mulunggay plants reproduce by seed. The plants produce pods which contain the seed. Also it is common in the Philippines to grow plants from cuttings.
they reproduce quickly -apex
Yes. Seeds may lie dormant for years until a good rain stimulates them to germinate and grow quickly to maturity so they can flower and produce a new generation of seeds.
Two false statements: Deserts have no permanent vegetation. Deserts are alwats hot.
C is incorrect as there are cold deserts, some of which are always cold.
They reproduce quickly (apex) Add me on snap:@ricop576
They reproduce quickly (apex) Add me on snap:@ricop576
They reproduce quickly (apex) Add me on snap:@ricop576
asexually
because, they are adapted in such a way to optimise the available water resources. and moreover the bright colours will attract insects for a possible pollination
Plant seeds need water to germinate, grow into a mature plant and then reproduce. Water in the desert is a rare commodity so when sufficient rain does fall, the seeds quickly sprout and grow, bloom and form more seeds. It's a matter of a survival adaptation.