Baby corn is the young state of the maize crop.
Corn, an angiosperm, reproduces by seeds instead of spores. This is a form of sexual reproduction. No angiosperm reproduces with spores.
sunflowers daisies tillandsias corn apple trees
I think venules
popcorn is the seed of the corn plant (a particular variety), produced on the corn cob. generally pollinated by the wind and insects
Corn reproduces sexually, through pollination and fertilization. Each corn plant produces both male and female reproductive structures, allowing for cross-fertilization between plants.
Sterile ones, like most of the corn grown today (in the US).
the corn borer must have or generate heritable variation in resistance to the toxic protein. the resistance corn borers must survive better or reproduce more than nonresistant corn borers
Pea plamts, peas, edemame, some corn. Anything related to peas.
all plants that reproduce with seeds
If it was a standard "open pollinated" corn (an "old style" corn), yes - it will reproduce new corn plants and ears exactly like the one you planted the kernels from. If it is a newer hybrid corn (and 98% of all corns grown are hybrid corns) then no, it can't. It will create corn plants, that will grow ears, but the ears will revert to one or another of the parents mated to produce the hybrid - maybe with good results, maybe with very disappointing results.
Copperhead snakes reproduce sexually. You can tell because they are reptiles. All reptiles reproduce sexually.