It is far too cold to support that type of plant life.
When plants are ready to reproduce, they make pollen spores. These spores are very small, and are easily picked up on the wind. When an animal walks by, the pollen spores catch onto their fur. So, where ever the animal travels, some spores fall of, hopefully to reach another plant either near or far from the original plant.
It depends on the person as far as you need to dig to plant your flowers. It depends on how deep the hole is and how far you want to plant the product as well.
Spores are like the seeds in flowering trees and conifers except they are smaller and many thousand can be released in one spore sac. The spores enable a plant to grow again but only ferns, mosses and liverworts have spores.
Depending on what variety you have I would plant them at least 10-12" apart
When plants are ready to reproduce, they make pollen spores. These spores are very small, and are easily picked up on the wind. When an animal walks by, the pollen spores catch onto their fur. So, where ever the animal travels, some spores fall of, hopefully to reach another plant either near or far from the original plant.
It is far too cold to support that type of plant life.
Pilobolus
as far as 10ft.
As far as I would guess from some brief research, nothing would happen, except maybe the spores would be picked up by the wind and the mushrooms would grow elsewhere. Mushroom spores only form mushrooms given special conditions, e.g., the spore must land on the ground where it can form a network of mycelium threads below ground and then grow the 'fruiting' part of the plant above ground. What I imagin you're wondering is if a mushroom could grow ontop of another mushroom. Chances are the base mushrom would not provide the correct nutrients for the mycelium to grow.
6x4 meters
When plants are ready to reproduce, they make pollen spores. These spores are very small, and are easily picked up on the wind. When an animal walks by, the pollen spores catch onto their fur. So, where ever the animal travels, some spores fall of, hopefully to reach another plant either near or far from the original plant.
That depends on what substance(s) you are spraying and what you expect the spray to land on.
10-15ft
No, it so far is not a plant
No, spray tanning is by far the safest way to get a tan. The dyes in spray tanning stain your skin for a short while and do no permanent damage.
Bacterial spores are far more resistant to disinfectants than non-spore forming bacteria. As a result, bacterial spores are more virulent and therefore more capable of causing disease since they can survive most methods that kill 'normal' bacteria...