Milkweed seeds are light and feathery because they have a parachute-like structure called a pappus that allows them to be easily carried by the wind. This helps them disperse over long distances to find suitable locations for germination and growth.
Milkweed seeds have little silken parachutes. They travel with the wind.
Cirrus clouds are light and feathery.
by wind
Cirrus clouds are light and feathery in appearance. These high-altitude clouds are made up of ice crystals and typically indicate fair weather.
Milkweed creates silken parachutes for its seeds so they can travel in the wind.
Milkweed has seeds that travel by the wind and runners underground to produce more plants.
Not all locations of the Home Depot sell milkweed plants. They are usually a few dollars for milkweed seeds online.
Mother Nature, people, and wildlife interventions and structural adaptations are the ways in which milkweeds spread their seeds. The plant in question (Asclepias) has a parachute-like covering to each seed which therefore can be spread easily by breezes, storms, or winds. Its seed likewise cooperates with any opportunities for dislodgement and movement through intentional or non-intentional displacements by people and wildlife.
Yes, milkweed plants have seeds. The plants in question (Asclepias spp) produce overlapping rows of seeds that are covered in filament-like, white hairs commonly known as floss or silk. The coverings split open to permit wind-dispersed seeding, which accounts for the prolific nature of milkweed stands.
Milkweed seeds have silk parachutes and fly with the wind. In addition, the plant sends out underground runners to start new plants.
In the context of milkweed, "oven" refers to the seed pod of the plant. The seed pod resembles a small, green oven in shape and is where the seeds are contained.
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