Wind and moving air helps plants grow. Wind also carries a plants seeds to colonize distant lands and ensure survival.
Weeds are able to spread to various places and this include; animals, wind, water and mechanical ejection.
Hickory nut seeds are primarily dispersed by animals like squirrels, who bury them for storage and then forget about them, allowing the seeds to germinate. Other methods of dispersal include wind and water, which can carry the seeds to new locations.
American elm trees disperse their seeds through a wind-dispersal method. The seeds are enclosed in samaras (winged fruits) that help them float in the wind and travel away from the parent tree.
Ipil-ipil seeds are dispersed from the parent tree by wind. The pods of the ipil-ipil tree split open when they are mature, releasing the seeds which are then carried away by the wind to new locations for germination.
Typically, seeds are blown by the wind (corn and dandelions, for example) or by having burrs or stickers that cling to the fur of passing animals. Some seeds are carried by birds, or other animals to new locations.
Seeds dispersed by wind often have adaptations like light weight, wings, or hairs that help them travel long distances on air currents. This method of dispersal allows seeds to reach new locations and reduce competition with parent plants.
SEEDS OR SPORES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
flower seeds or necter
The wind would carry seeds in the cave and they would grow ...
Birds can drop the seeds. Animales help to carry seeds. The wind. Flowers drop seeds in late summer/early fall.
By developing hairy or winged seeds/ fruits.
Seeds dispersed by wind typically have adaptations to aid in dispersal, such as wing-like structures or hairs that catch the wind and carry the seed away from the parent plant. These adaptations help the seeds travel greater distances to find suitable germination sites.
The wind is the most common way in which tulip seeds are spread. Even a mild wind can easily carry the flat, light seeds a distance. Tulip seeds also stick to the fur of animals. Seeds often take root where they drop. Birds are responsible for spreading tulip seeds as well. Some birds eat the seeds, which then pass out in the bird's droppings. Other birds carry the seeds to new places on their feathers.
Maple seeds have little wings that allow the wind to carry it. Cherry seed are consumed and released through animal waste.
by dispersing it seeds around so the wind can carry it , also animals who eat the plant excrete (poo) the seeds out.
Bluebell seeds are dispersed primarily by ants, which are attracted to the seeds' nutritious appendages called elaiosomes. The ants carry the seeds back to their nests, where they consume the elaiosomes and discard the seeds, thus aiding in their dispersal. Additionally, bluebell seeds can also be spread by wind and by animals that walk through the plants and carry the seeds with them.
Edelweiss seeds can be dispersed through various means such as wind, water, or by attaching themselves to animals' fur or feathers. The wind can carry the seeds to new locations, while water can transport them downstream. Animals can inadvertently spread the seeds as they brush against the plants.