All seed plants store food within the seed; this takes the form of the cotyledons which are there to provide nutrition to the embryo while it is dormant and then while the seed is germinating and before it is able to produce its own food
All seed producing plants store their food in seeds to nourish their embryo at the time of storage and germination
Seeds store it in the endosperm.
yes, it does
Seeds can be refereed to as plants in storage because you can store seeds somewhere for years until you are ready to plant them. After you plant them they obviously become plants.
Why do seeds need a store food
The tomato plant stores food in its storage tissue allover the plant body and to allure animals and birds for its seed dispersal the ripe berries of this plant have seeds embedded in the pulp. This fruit pulp has no direct use as food by the plant. The new plants germinating from the seeds utilize the food reserves in the cotyledons of the seed.
It store food in its seeds.
Yes corn seeds store plenty of food in their endosperm
Plants that store food in their seeds are, Pears and peas.
you go to a plant store and buy seeds
they store food in their seeds which also contain their embryos The central vacuole, an organelle inside each plant cell, stores food, water, and waste.
The tomato plant stores food in its storage tissue allover the plant body and to allure animals and birds for its seed dispersal the ripe berries of this plant have seeds embedded in the pulp. This fruit pulp has no direct use as food by the plant. The new plants germinating from the seeds utilize the food reserves in the cotyledons of the seed.
Plants usually store food in their fruits and seeds such as many crop plants like wheat, pea, pegion pea etc; in the stem tubers like potato or in roots like sweet potato. Whether they store their food in roots or fruits depends on the plant.