Seed producers are entities or individuals engaged in the cultivation and production of seeds for various plants, including crops, flowers, and trees. They focus on breeding, growing, and harvesting seeds with specific traits, such as disease resistance or improved yield. Seed producers play a critical role in agriculture by ensuring the availability of high-quality seeds for farmers and gardeners, which is essential for food production and biodiversity. Their work often involves adhering to regulations and standards to maintain seed quality and purity.
ferns are spore-producing :) !
monsanto
Seeds and plants are not decomposers. They are producers.
I've never heard of a seed-eating bird... but if there is such a thing then yes, they would be a consumer.
Cedar trees are seed producers. They belong to the conifer family, which means they reproduce using seeds contained in cones rather than flowers. Cedar trees produce male and female cones, with the female cones eventually developing seeds that can be dispersed for reproduction.
don't you mean 'thatching'?Threshing is the process of removing the seed from a grass crop after cutting. This is not usually a lawn process but is carried out by the producers of lawn seed.
Tomatoes are produced with a seed in the ground and you water them regulary and it will grow and remember a tomato is a fruit not a vegetable.
Avocados grown from seed may not produce fruits. So gardeners will graft from avocados that are known producers.
Grasses will produce seed only if you let it grow to seed, which means not cutting it at all, and letting it grow to maturity, going from the vegetative stage to the seeding stage. But if you keep cutting it, then no, it won't produce any seeds.
No, a seed is not a consumer. Seeds are a reproductive structure produced by plants that contain the genetic information needed to grow into a new plant. Consumers are organisms that obtain energy by consuming other organisms.
Producers in an ecosystem refer to organisms that can create their own food through photosynthesis, primarily plants. Giraffes, being herbivores, rely on producers, specifically leaves from trees such as acacias and other vegetation, as their primary food source. By consuming these plants, giraffes play a role in the ecosystem by aiding in seed dispersal and maintaining the health of their habitats.
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?