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I can't be sure what you would use it for but I do know that it can be used for converting kilometres into miles i.e. 5 miles =8 kilometres and so on and that many flowers have a Fibonacci number of petals.
There are many different kinds of dahlias. Some are like globes and some are flat faced. The number of petals is a Fibonacci number.http://www.popmath.org.uk/rpamaths/rpampages/sunflower.html
Depends entirely on the flower. Monocotyledonous flowers have floral parts in multiples of 3 - so they would have either 3, 6, 9 (etc.) petals. Dicotyledonous flowers have floral parts in multiples of 4 or 5 - so they could have 4, 8, 12, 16 (etc.), or 5, 10, 15 (etc.) petals.
I think Fibonacci wanted to find how many swirls or petals were on a flower ....... most of them are Fibonacci numbers....i think.... doin a projct......= )
Grass flowers lack petals .
Grass flowers lack petals .
Flower petals are rarely a different quantity than a Fibonacci number. Look it up. It's pretty amazing. However, for a sunflower, that number should be 34, 55 or 89 depending upon its size.
5
Chrysanthemums have two types of flowers on the flower head: disk and ray flowers. The amount of petals vary by cultivar.
The flowers with most petals are currently artificially selected flowers; that is, wild forms of, say, roses which have been cultivated into mutated forms with much more petals than would occur in nature. Wild flowers mostly have only one ring of petals, up to a total of either five or six in non-composite flowers, while cultivated flowers have many times that number.
because of your mom
Dicot plants usually produce flowers with four or five petals.