If the plants are not true-breeding(they clone themselves to make children), then plants that resemble their parents just share the same genetic traits by chance due to independent assortment. chances are if you let another generation come from the children, they will have different traits, because of dominant and recessive alleles(forms of a gene) in the parents.
We call those "weeds."
Botanists.
That's sort of a definition question. We call those things with chlorophyll plants, and those without animals.
Because through photosynthesis plants create energy which other animals can only get by eating those plants. They make their own sugars.
Those are hunter-gatherer societies.
Male and female parents. The pollen is transferred from male to the female parent.
This phenomenon is called "mimicry," where the butterfly's markings resemble those of a larger, dangerous, or toxic animal, deterring predators from attacking it.
It does not really matter whether it is the groom or bride's parents who call. In many cases the groom's parents call, but, etiquette does not dictate this.
plants can live in all sorts of places. in water like cattails or whatever you call those things, then there's flowers and desert plants too. they can live about anywhere
Grandparents
Your parents might call you idle if you're sedentary.
late parents