a snowflake
Ans.Because the process of Photosynthesis is triggered by the sun. The sun is stronger in summer and the temperatures are warmer - the cells metabolisim is increasedGreen is the most efficient color for absorbing light, hence maximising the amount of light captured by chlorophyll for photosynthesis.
No, every part of your body ceases to grow after you are dead.
Plants need soil to grow otherwise they couldn't absorb the water and they would die.
The monarch butterfly migrates south by flying. It flaps its wings. Something in its brain is hardwired to the location it must go and the directions it must follow. Monarch Butterfly larva must grow on milkweed. Other insects know where to lay their eggs so their young will grow on the proper food source. Aphids lay their eggs on maple trees. Milkweed will grow on land that was cleared during a winter storm. So, a Monarch would need to return from its winter quarters to a freshly cleared area of ground where Milkweed would sprout. Monarchs then needed to spend the winter in a place where the temperatures were such that they could survive. They would not freeze, but their temperature would be low enough they would not use up all their food resources. Then we can assume the ancestors of today's Monarchs began in the valleys of Mexico eating milkweed and other plants. Some ate more milkweed and flew to the top of the mountain and survived the winter. In spring they flew down to a milkweed patch and laid their eggs. Any birds that ate a milkweed fed caterpillar never ate another one. Some of those caterpillars turned into Monarchs that spent winter on the mountain. The process repeated. Soon Monarchs arose that ate only milkweed. They returned to the same mountain. Any Monarch Butterflies that did not return to that ideal location for the winter either froze to death or used up all their food storage before they found another patch of milkweed where they could lay their eggs. So today, Monarch Butterflies return to the ancestral location for the winter. In spring the males breed with the females and then the males die. The females find a new patch of milkweed, lay their eggs, and die. The new caterpillars will turn into monarchs that will fly north to find new patches of milkweed, breed, lay eggs, and die. Just before winter comes, the milkweed will die. The living monarchs will either return to their ancestral home where they can survive the winter or they will die without breeding.
it will probably die unless its a plant able to grow in the dark
no i grow veg all the time in the summer and not in the winter or they will die so you can plant em in the spring summer lots not winter
In The Spring Leaves Grow In The Summer Leaves get darker In The Fall Leaves Turn Orange And Die And In The Winter Trees With Now Leaves They Grow As They Change
they reflect there body from the cold but they may die in the summer survive
because in the winter you want to stay warm and in the summer you want to breath. if you were to wear winter clothes in the summer you would die of heat. if you were to water summer clothes in winter you would freeze to death
In the winter they can die of the cold. And in the summer they can die of dehydration or heat stroke.
You'd die of starvation if you didn't eat, whether it's winter, autumn, spring or summer
No. It will die during the winter.
They die off in countries with a winter season, the adults having mated and laid eggs in the summer. These eggs overwinter and hatch in the spring to start a new population of summer grasshoppers.
Yes, a palm tree will easily grow in Illinois during the summer months. However, it is quite possible the said palm tree will also die come the winter season.
Trees don't, but crops can. For example: Turnips grow in the spring. When it turns to summer, they go brown and die. You cannot plant more, but you can plant any other seeds that grow in the summer.
Annual plants are plants which grow from seed, through to flowering and die - all within one growth season. This gives you two sorts of annual plants, winter annuals and summer annuals.
Lesley Riddle died in 1980.