After the animals eat them, the seeds and the fruits will be in the stomach. The fruit gets digested but the seed cannot be digested. So when the animal goes and take a dump, the droppings left by the animal will be the fresh soil for the plant. and there goes another generation of another plant. :D
Berries disperse their seed when animals eat them and then defecate them elsewhere.
Ivy seeds come from the flowers of ivy plants, which are produced in clusters known as umbels. Once the flowers are pollinated, they develop into small berries that contain the seeds. Ivy seeds can be spread by birds, who eat the berries and then disperse the seeds through their droppings.
Insects predominantly disperse seeds of plants that produce fleshy fruits, such as berries and figs. These fruits are attractive to insects due to their sweet taste and scent. Insects inadvertently aid in seed dispersal by feeding on the fruit and then moving away from the parent plant, where they may deposit the seeds in a new location.
I don't know any kind of scientific answer for that question, but I have a Dogwood Tree in my yard and its seeds are in little red berries that fall off the tree, and also the berries are eaten by birds and then dispersed by them in their elimination.
Like most birds... the parrot eats fruit. The seeds of the fruit are un-digestible, and they travel through the bird's digestive system, to be ejected when the bird defecates.
Wind-Blown
Yes, poison ivy produces white, waxy berries that contain seeds. The seeds are spread by birds and other animals that eat the berries and then disperse them through their droppings, aiding in the plant's reproduction.
Berries disperse their seed when animals eat them and then defecate them elsewhere.
Ivy seeds come from the flowers of ivy plants, which are produced in clusters known as umbels. Once the flowers are pollinated, they develop into small berries that contain the seeds. Ivy seeds can be spread by birds, who eat the berries and then disperse the seeds through their droppings.
Insects predominantly disperse seeds of plants that produce fleshy fruits, such as berries and figs. These fruits are attractive to insects due to their sweet taste and scent. Insects inadvertently aid in seed dispersal by feeding on the fruit and then moving away from the parent plant, where they may deposit the seeds in a new location.
I think this is it. The toucan is very important to the rainforest because they help to disperse seeds from the fruits and berries they eat.
they disperse by wind as the wind flows it takes away the seeds which are connected with the petals
It disperse by splitting then wind
Wind.
Yes, goji berries do have small seeds inside them.
I don't know any kind of scientific answer for that question, but I have a Dogwood Tree in my yard and its seeds are in little red berries that fall off the tree, and also the berries are eaten by birds and then dispersed by them in their elimination.
Yes.