fruits and stuff
Petals
The endosperm, which contains both the embryo and its starchy food supply.
A monocot stores its food supply in the endosperm of the seed. Dicots store the bulk of their food in the two cotyledons.
A part of a seed which is inside the seed coat is called cotyledon and it contains EMBRYO and the stored food
the roots
There is no food supply for seeds but there is a food supply for animals that eat seeds is called food seed supply.
Petals
The endosperm, which contains both the embryo and its starchy food supply.
cotyledon
Like all other plants, the growth or germination of a seed is affected by the food supply by how abundant or how scarce it happens to be. A seed which needs special requirements may be very senstive to the amount of available food.
A monocot stores its food supply in the endosperm of the seed. Dicots store the bulk of their food in the two cotyledons.
an embryo, the endosperm (food supply), and the seed coat.
It is called dropping of leaves due to abscission. It happens in deciduous plants regularly. When leaves get dropped, the supply of fresh food material is stopped.The flower buds do not develop further and get dropped. Thus seed production is reduced.It is called dropping of leaves due to abscission. It happens in deciduous plants regularly. When leaves get dropped, the supply of fresh food material is stopped.The flower buds do not develop further and get dropped. Thus seed production is reduced.
The starchy food that helps the seed develop is called the endosperm
If you are referring to a seed, then the embryo, the food store and the seed coat. If you actually mean the embyo itself, then precursor tissues for the leaves, stem and root, as well as one or more cotyledons.
Portions of the seed supply food for the plant before it emerges from the soil. The plant's seed actually stores food for use during the germination phase of growth.
Cotyledon