the ---------- contains food for the embryo?
The yolk of an egg cell contains food storage tissue, which provides nutrients for the developing embryo. The egg white, or albumen, contains a sticky fluid that helps cushion and protect the developing embryo.
An embryo inside the seed coat may contain two cotyledones, a radicle and a plumule etc., if this seed belongs to dicot; if it is a monocot seed, the embryo will have a scutellum, an epiblast, a coleoptyl, a coleorhiza and plenty of endosperm.
The seed structure that stores food for the embryo is called the endosperm. It provides essential nutrients for the developing plant embryo to germinate and grow.
A seed leaf that stores food for the embryo is called a cotyledon. Cotyledons are part of the seed that provide nutrients to the developing plant embryo until it can sustain itself through photosynthesis.
The embryo of a cone-bearing plant, also known as a gymnosperm, develops within the female cone. After fertilization, the zygote within the embryo develops into the seed, which contains the next generation plant. The mature seed is then dispersed from the cone, where it may germinate and grow into a new plant.
coteledens
The yolk of an egg cell contains food storage tissue, which provides nutrients for the developing embryo. The egg white, or albumen, contains a sticky fluid that helps cushion and protect the developing embryo.
Seeds have an embryo, which is the tiny plant inside the seed that can grow into a new plant. They also contain stored food, such as starches and oils, to provide energy for the embryo to grow until it can photosynthesize on its own.
embryo
Yes, plant seeds contain stored food reserves that provide energy for the growing seedling until it can photosynthesize its own food. This food reserve is typically in the form of starch, oils, or proteins.
A plant embryo needs only good soil, sunlight, and carbon dioxide (CO2) to grow into an adult plant.
The embryo is the baby plant. It has an embryo root to push its way eventually out of the seed coat, and embryo stem, and embryo leaves which will later start food production.
the roots
i am hundred persent sure that seeds contain food, but like a seed grows right? so it should also contain an embryo for the seed to break apart and the living organism to survive using soil and light. so in a different way to humans it should have an embryo
This describes the basic structure of a seed. Within the seed, there is an embryo that has food reserves within the seed coat.
An embryo inside the seed coat may contain two cotyledones, a radicle and a plumule etc., if this seed belongs to dicot; if it is a monocot seed, the embryo will have a scutellum, an epiblast, a coleoptyl, a coleorhiza and plenty of endosperm.
The seed structure that stores food for the embryo is called the endosperm. It provides essential nutrients for the developing plant embryo to germinate and grow.