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The seed heads are dustributed by the wind
The seed bearing part of the plant is distributed by wind currents
either about 3 weeks but they grow mostly in soil
Ferns are considered vascular seedless plants. Well, they are seedless, but they do have spores.
If you mean tap root, carrots and dandelions have tap root systems.
as a seed developing in the base of another dandelion flower that will eventually mature and blow in the wind.
Jethro Tull
The pistil
Because geraniums are so wholly unrelated to dandelions, there would have to have been a foreign seed introduced to your container. :-) Dandelions are famous for easily going air born and sticking themselves in inconvenient places. If you store your potting soil in an unprotected area, a seed can easily make its way into containers when one plants them.
After being pollinated, the flower will dry out and fall off. The next morning, the flower will be gone, and a white, fluffy seed head will appear. By seed head, I mean the fluffy thing with seeds. I hope this helps!
Most of the dandelion plants grow in places that we will mow every two weeks or so, but only after the dandelions have gone to seed. We want to keep dandelions around the garden because we value the pollinators that they attract. The bees need the dandelions as an early source of nectar and pollen, but the dandelions do not need the bees. They can reproduce by a process called apomixis, the seeds developing without pollination. Each new dandelion is thus genetically identical to the parent plant. Dandelions brighten the early spring landscape. Together with the carpets of bluets that flower at the same time, dandelions turn otherwise uninspiring expanses of lawn into mosaics of color and texture.
hi sorry no idea :)(