No. A cabbage is grown and used as a vegetable. As the heart is cut before maturity it does not get time to flower though it would if left alone.
The phylum for common marigolds is angiosperms. Angiosperms are the flowering plants.
After being found in fossils, angiosperms were claimed to be 135 million years old
Yes, dogs can eat cabbage it is safe for them to consume. Many dogs like cabbage and it a healthy and nutritious treat for them.
they produce seeds
A cabbage white is the common name for the butterfly Pieris brassicae.
To whomever wrote "assexually, for it is a plant" - well that was not a very astute answer. Many plants do reproduce asexually, but most produce sexually and produce seeds (the angiosperms). Cabbage reproduce sexually - they flower in their second year and produce seeds.
Yes, parsley is related to cabbage as both belong to the Apiaceae family. While parsley is classified under the genus Petroselinum, cabbage belongs to the genus Brassica. Both plants are part of the broader group of flowering plants known as angiosperms, but they are not closely related within their respective genera.
Angiosperms.
A way that angiosperms are not useful to people as a major source of fertilizer. In angiosperms, after a zygot is formed a fruit forms.
Yes, they are flowering plants/ angiosperms
Angiosperms do not have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts play an important role in photosynthesis and angiosperms do not undergo photosynthesis thus, the absence of chloroplasts.
yes angiosperms have roots yes angiosperms have roots
angiosperms
Gymnosperms have cones and angiosperms have flowers/fruits
Gymnosperms have cones and angiosperms have flowers/fruits
No Angiosperms consist of diacotyledonous and monocotyledonous plants
The phylum for common marigolds is angiosperms. Angiosperms are the flowering plants.