One corn seed equals one corn stalk, if all requirements (soil warmth, moisture, sunlight, etc.) are met.
Absolutely. All you would have to do is convince all the seed producers to stop GM seed production, and all the GM corn would disappear within two generations. The bigger question might be, why would you want to?
If this is an unwanted out come, plants should not be planted next to other plants that you don't want to cross. However, the seed from a corn cross will be fine from the yield point of view. What is the reason to change the hybrid? If a farmer wants a purebred crop, he should only buy pure seed from the distributor.
Corn belongs to the kingdom of Plantae. This is because corn is a type of plant, not an animal.
BT corn means that the corn has been genetically modified with DNA from another organism.
In hybrid seed production, the crosses are specific and controlled. The advantage of growing hybrid seed compared to inbred lines comes from heterosis. To produce hybrid seed, elite inbredvarieties are crossed with well-documented and consistent phenotypes (such as yield) and the resulting hybrid seed is collected.
A regular bag of seed corn weighs around 50 lbs depending on variety
$999999.00
from corn
A seed corn is the least common type of corn. Occurring only on the heel or ball of the foot, a seed corn consists of a circle of stiff skin surrounding a plug of cholesterol.
The difference is that the bean seed germinates by dicots and the corn seed germinates by monocots.
no but the seed of the corn is eaten.
It depends how big the seeds are and how far apart they have to be spaced when planting.
you can buy and plant the corn seed or just purchase the corn from Costolot's General Store, or try talking with Seedos to get a corn seed
you need one cup of water to germinate a seed
yes you can by getting one and use a magnifying glass to see it clearly do not forget to have a corn seed
That depends on what cultivar the corn is. Most cultivars enable at least two ears of corn to be produced per seed that is planted, not just one.
From seed dealers or the local cooperative.