Gibberellic acid, but you do not need very much because too much Gibberellic acid will prevent germination.
Cooking seeds will make sure the seeds do not grow. The only seeds that need heat to germinate are some evergreen tree seeds.
well it might not make a difference
yes Further answer Not necessarily. Seeds don't take in fertiliser. But they take in water that may have fertiliser in it. But this fertiliser may not make them germinate faster.
by scrapping it with sand paper and putting it in boiled or distilled water
Most plants make seeds but a chemical plant doesn't make seeds it makes chemicals.
Plants make seeds when they are reproductively mature and the environment appears (to the plant) to be suitable for possible seed spread. Different plants spread their seeds at different times based upon how the plant develops - some germinate and reseed in the early spring while others wait until late fall.
They were never "invented". Sunflower seeds are just that, sunflower seeds. Seeds that contain the genetic makeup up sunflowers that will then germinate in the soil to become a sunflower which will make more sunflower seeds. The question "When did people begin eating sunflower seeds?" is another topic
Its easy to grow cumin seeds all you have to do is allow them to germinate when the warm weather comes around, usually around spring or the beginning of summer. Make sure the soil has good drainage, and is not to rich.
No, it makes LSA
yeah, because you can't make the popcorn seeds again.
You can start the chrysanthemum seeds indoors before putting them outside. Make sure the soil is well draining. Sprinkle them on top of the soil because they need light to germinate.
Usually the fruit is to nourish the seed contained within long enough for the seed to germinate. However, some plant seeds can survive a passage through an animal's intestine. These plants produce fruit which is attractive to animals which then disperse the seeds through their feces.