Ovuliferous scale
A watermelon is a flowering plant. It belongs to the Cucurbitaceae family, which includes other plants like cucumbers and pumpkins that also produce flowers.
seed formations reproduce and flowering plants do notAt this level of taxonomy, there are gymnosperms and angiosperms. The gymnosperms have 'naked seed'. (Hence the gymno part of the name)The angiosperms have an ovary for producing seed, in conjunction with pollen.Earlier taxonomy has the ferns, mosses, and the non-vascular plants, seaweeds, and in New Zealand we have a a few species of Tmesipteris. These early plants do not have flowers, but the ferns at least have sexual reproduction.
A flowering plant is an angiosperm. Gymnosperms are plants with "naked" seeds, like conifers (cone-bearing trees).
If if has a cone it's a conifer because it has needle -like leaves and a cone for seed making.... have you ever seen a bush with white kinda blue looking berries on it? that's a conifer because it makes seeds inside of it and it has needle-like leaves
No, fruit is not a nucleic acid. Nucleic acids are biomolecules like DNA and RNA that contain genetic information, while fruit is a plant organ that typically contains seeds and is produced by flowering plants for reproduction.
Nonflowering plants like fern have archegonium where as a flowering plant like Gumamela has an embryo sac.
Pretty.
[1] A tulip's a flowering bulb. [2] Fruits are the ripened ovaries of flowering plants. Within the tulip's flowers, they occur as leathery capsules within which are many flat seeds. [3] And the seeds can be successfully planted. But it'll most likely take 5-7 years.
Yes, like all types of squash, pumpkins do flower. Each plant has male and female flowers. The male flowers grow on long, thin stalks, while the stalk end of the female flower eventually becomes the fruit. For a while, each pumpkin will still have a flower attached to its base. As the fruit matures, the flower will dry up and fall off.
No... Because like lemon, it is a citrus fruit and citrus fruits don't flower. P.S orange is NOT a citrus fruit. From Zac Peterson 12 yrs old. :D hope i helped.
Not at all. I assume you are refering to fruits that people eat, so... Some fruits grow on trees, like grapefruits and olives. Some on vines like grapes and kiwis. Some on herbaceous plants (a plant without wood, usually a small plant) like strawberries and pumpkins and grains. Some on shrubs like blueberries and raspberries. Some on cacti (which I suppose is an herb), like a prickly pear. Actually, any plant that has a flower has a fruit, even if it's not a fruit that people eat or something that you would recognize as a fruit. And likewise, any plant that produces fruit had a flower. Flowering plants are called "angiosperms" and make up most of the plant kingdom. The only plants that aren't angiosperms are cone bearing plants like pines and junipers, as well as ferns, mosses, club mosses, and some other primitive plants.
A non-flowering plant produces seeds the same way that a flowering plant does (i.e. with the reproductive organs on the stigma and the stamen.) The only difference is that the seeds do not develop in a fruit. Instead, they develop in a cone or a fleshy structure.