Seed dispersal can over plant a certain area or the seed can be bad for that certain environment
It can be detrimental if the plant spreading the seeds is diseased of parasitic (damaged plants around it to survive).
It can be detrimental if the plant spreading the seeds is diseased or if its parasitic (damages plants around it to survive).
Spores are lighter (make that less dense).
When seeds are dispersed by explosion, the force of the explosion sends seeds scattering in all different directions. The following is a list of plants in which this method of dispersal occurs: Broom, Eurphorbia, Geranium, Viola, Ceanothus, Oxalis, Lupin, Erodium, and Lathyrus. Please refer to the Related Link to view pictures of each of the plants and to read more information about the dispersal of seeds in each.
Seed dispersal helps to spread the seeds of a plant far away from the parent plant. This helps to avoid overcrowding. this also helps the baby plant to receive all nutrients it needs without fighting with the adult plants.
A pumpkin is a fruit - the seeds are contained in a sweet fleshy material - animals eating the pumpkin will invariably ingest some of the seeds and will disperse them in their excrement.
kiwi is a tasty fleshy fruit so the animals will come along and eat it and then pass it as faeces and then it will grow. The seeds are very hard so the animal cannot digest them
wind dispersal, water dispersal, animal dispersal and mechanical dispersal
wind dispersal, water dispersal, animal dispersal and mechanical dispersal
The spreading out of seeds from the original plant is called dispersal.
What does dispersal mean?
dispersal of seeds and polination in duckweed
Dispersal by splitting
by animals
I think it's zoochory(the dispersal of seeds by means of animals/humans)
By dispersal of fruits and seeds of that plant
Seeds having wings or hairy parachute are adapted to self dispersal
Seed dispersal is the movement or transport of seeds away from the parent plant.
Seed dispersal