One can learn how to grow a Mulberry tree by visiting online websites such as eHow or wikiHow. As well as this, one may ask help from a local gardener on how to grow a Mulberry tree.
yes!.....we have one in our backyard here in Round Rock, Texas
One can identify a mulberry tree by its distinctive lobed leaves, small purple or black berries, and often gnarled trunk.
One can learn about tree trimming at local evening classes which are offered in a number of cities. One can also learn about tree trimming on gardening websites.
About 57 mangoes can grow on a mango tree
You could try mulberries.I have a mulberry tree and only fruit's once a year.
The relationship between a silkworm and a mulberry tree is not considered commensalism; rather, it is an example of herbivory. Silkworms primarily feed on the leaves of mulberry trees, benefiting from the food source while the tree may experience some damage, but not significantly enough to classify it as a commensal relationship where one organism benefits without affecting the other. In this case, the silkworm benefits and the mulberry is negatively impacted, aligning more with a predatory or herbivorous interaction.
When you think you can grow one.
As far as I know you only need one pit to grow cherry tree. lol
Silkworms are the larvae of any number of species of moths, collectively called Silk Moths. The species used for nearly all commercial silk is Bombyx mori. and they are highly "host specific" meaning the organism (the symbiont) depends upon one particular species of plants, animal, or insect for its host, and they will only eat Mullberry leaves.
Yes some mulberry leaf are simple leaf Simple leaf that is one blade although it may be deeply lobed divided or dissected Mulberry is not one type some are white mulberry have simple leaf while some are black mulberry that leaf are compound leaf
No one tree, no one answer. Different trees have different rates of growth.
one seed, equals one plant and a tree upon maturity