Papayas have tiny black peppercorn sized seeds and several hundred in each Papaya. It is an easy fruit to pick. I would think an animal that ate a papaya would also eat some seeds and they would germinate after going through them.
The fruit gets eaten which the animals eat and they do not get eaten because they are too big and then they germinate and grow into a new plant.
It disperse by animals
It disperse by animals
We have many seeds being dispersed by water, wind, bees, butterflies, etc. Papaya seeds are enclosed inside its fruit. When ripe and sliced for consumption, the seed is exposed and dispersed by man or beasts. In the rural areas a ripen papaya do fall from its tree to the ground and devoured by chickens not kept inside the coop. These birds do also disperse papaya seed also.
By animal.
Dried papaya seeds
A pomegranate typically has more seeds than a papaya
no papaya's have alot of seeds
Male papaya seeds are typically smaller and rounder in shape, while female papaya seeds are larger and more elongated. Male seeds also tend to have a smoother texture compared to the rougher texture of female seeds.
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.
No, Papaya is NOT a Parthenocarpic since it is developed by sexual reproduction in plants and simply it has many seeds. PARTHENOCARPS do not have seeds.