All animals pass wind.
Allamanda seeds are dispersed through mechanisms such as wind, water, or animals. The seeds may be carried by the wind to new locations, float in water to reach suitable habitats, or pass through the digestive systems of animals which help in dispersing them to different areas.
Yes, birds produce gas as a byproduct of digestion just like other animals, so they do pass wind. However, since they have a different digestive system than mammals, their flatulence is less frequent and not as noticeable.
The seeds dispersed by the wind are small, light and have a feather or hair-like structures that make it easy for the wind to carry and disperse them in other places. The seeds dispersed by animals have adaptations such as burs that cling onto the fur or feathers of animals and get carried to new sites. In some other plants, the seeds are produced inside fleshy fruits that are eaten by animals and pass out through the digestive tract and are dropped in other places.
The seeds dispersed by the wind are small, light and have a feather or hair-like structures that make it easy for the wind to carry and disperse them in other places. The seeds dispersed by animals have adaptations such as burs that cling onto the fur or feathers of animals and get carried to new sites. In some other plants, the seeds are produced inside fleshy fruits that are eaten by animals and pass out through the digestive tract and are dropped in other places.
Two general methods of seed dispersal are wind dispersal, where seeds are carried by the wind to new locations, and animal dispersal, where seeds are ingested by animals and later deposited in new areas through their feces.
yes it is.
Animals and wind have a positive effect on polination because they help in dispersal of pollen grains.
pollination
wind ( farty wind )
animals
Apple seeds can be spread by animals that eat the fruit and pass the seeds through their digestive system, allowing them to be deposited in a new location. They are not typically spread by wind or water.
The Tehachapi Wind Farm, with around 5,000 wind turbines, is the second largest collection of wind generators in California.