yes, to separate reproduction
no corn is a vegetable and plant/crop
Wind energy and fuel made of corn.
Cereals are starch-rich such as corn, wheat, rice, rye, barley and tubers. ,'J'
because it is made out of corn and it is a plant and it has low emission but fossil fuels have high emission.
They survive by food, crops and plants. Food: They eat animals such as tapir, monkeys, peccari, frogs,crab,fish, alligators and many more. Plants: They collect wild plants. They also grow plants for seasonings and medicine. Crops: They collect plantain( a type of banana for healing wounds and injuries), cotton and corn. Hope this helps. Thanks
Yes they do
Corn bearing unisexual flowers pollinate by wind. The male flowers are produced at the top of the plant and the female flowers in leaf axil, somewhere at midlength of the plant. Male flowers of the plant mature first followed by female flowers. Thus cross pollination is ensured.
All plants that set seed have had flowers therefore corn has a flower however insignificant.
Corn is a plant.
you get many kinds of food from a producing plant like corn,carrots,all sorts of foods.
poop
the dry stems of corn plants
Corn and most other plants are generally planted in dirt.
A pea plant grows faster than a corn plant
Tassels are the male flower of the corn plant that produces pollen. Pollen from the tassels fall down to the silks (where the ears grow) of another corn plant and in doing so, it fertilizes kernels. Corn needs pollination from the tassels or it will not produce corn.
A likely hypothesis for how a corn plant (Zea mays) is pollinated is through a process called wind pollination, also known as anemophily. Here is the hypothesis: Corn plants have male and female flowers located on separate parts of the plant. The male flowers, called tassels, are located at the top of the plant and produce pollen. The female flowers, called ears, are found lower on the plant and contain the ovules. The hypothesis suggests that when the tassels release pollen into the air, the wind carries the lightweight pollen grains to the nearby female flowers. The female flowers have structures called silk, which extend out of the ear. The silk captures the airborne pollen and guides it to the ovules for fertilization. This hypothesis is supported by several observations. First, corn plants have elongated tassels that release copious amounts of pollen. The pollen is small and lightweight, making it easily carried by the wind. Second, the female flowers have long, thread-like silks that are exposed to the surrounding air, increasing the likelihood of capturing airborne pollen. Finally, corn plants are often grown in large fields where wind currents can facilitate the movement of pollen between plants. To confirm this hypothesis, further research could involve studying the pollen dispersal patterns in corn fields, examining the structure and function of the tassels, silks, and flowers, and conducting controlled experiments to measure the effectiveness of wind pollination in corn plants.
Maize, or corn, is a grass. Grasses are monocots that have relatively small flowers that are difficult to notice, but they're there. The scientific name is Zea mays and it is in the grass family, Poaceae.