Dandelions disperse their seeds using the wind. The wind can blow the seed miles away from its parent. Therefore the new dandelion will not have to compete with the parent plant for space or water.
The further the wind carries the seeds the further away the starting seed is likely to be from competitive plaint of the same species. Statistically this increases the chances that more dandelion plants will survive to reproduce their own progeny who will also be wind born.
the answer is dandelion
Some plants have seeds are borne by wind such as dandelion, cottonwood, and maple "helicopters."
NO. dandelions are vascular plants! :)
Other "lucky" dandelions! The dandelion can self-pollinate, although like other flowering plants, it is mostly pollinated by insects, bees primarily.
The further the wind carries the seeds the further away the starting seed is likely to be from competitive plaint of the same species. Statistically this increases the chances that more dandelion plants will survive to reproduce their own progeny who will also be wind born.
Yes
the answer is dandelion
Plants get their energy from the Sun.
dandelion
Some plants have seeds are borne by wind such as dandelion, cottonwood, and maple "helicopters."
Their seeds can, on the wind like a dandelion seed.
dandelion leaves
NO. dandelions are vascular plants! :)
Seeds for plants are dispensed in a variety of ways. Fruit-bearing plants dispense their seeds into fruit so animals will spread the seeds far. Some seeds, especially in tall grasses, will attach to fur and clothing to be carried away and replanted, some are carried away in pine cones, others have 'wings' or someway to float away by the wind, an example would be the dandelion.
no its not dandelion is a flower that is yellow.
they might eat them