Strawberrys, blackberries and spider plants.
Runners in a botanical sense are basically offshoots of the main plant. It's not so much a matter of "reproduction" as it is of "growth", though once the runners take root you can clip them off the main plant and transplant them, which is effectively a way of "cloning" the original plant.
Any plant that reproduces asexually (and therefore has an identical set of genes) for example strawberries (which reproduce through runners) or potatoes (that reproduce through tubers)
Plants can indeed reproduce asexually through the use of runners and rhizomes. Runners are horizontal stems that grow above the ground, while rhizomes are underground stems. Both structures can give rise to new plants that are genetically identical to the parent plant, allowing for rapid clonal propagation.
One is a fruit while the other is a plant and they both produce scents from oil. They also reproduce sexually.
Plants that use only one parent to reproduce are called asexual plants. These plants reproduce through methods such as fragmentation, budding, or producing offspring from a single parent plant. Examples include potato tubers and strawberry runners.
Reproduction. Both flowers and runners are things that plants use to reproduce themselves. Flowers are used in sexual reproduction of plants, and runners are used in the asexual reproduction of plants.
the seeds and runners (parts of the root)
The mustard plant drops seeds.
runners grass is vascular plant.
No strawberries can produce sexually and asexually with runners.
Strawberry plants produce runners which grow out from the stem. From the runner a new shoot and root forms which produces a new plant.
To plant strawberry runners from hanging baskets, gently separate the runners from the main plant and place them in small pots with soil. Keep the soil moist and place the pots in a sunny spot. Once the runners have developed roots, you can transplant them into the ground or larger containers for growing.