sampaguita
Sampaguita, also known as Jasminum sambac, is not a bryophyte; it is a tracheophyte. Tracheophytes are vascular plants that have specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients, which sampaguita possesses. Bryophytes, on the other hand, are non-vascular plants like mosses and liverworts. Therefore, sampaguita belongs to the group of vascular plants.
use sampaguita leaves
Sampaguita Pictures was created in 1937.
because sampaguita is sweetly scented tropical flower and besides sampaguita is the national flower of the Philippines and Indonesia.
Sampaguita plants reproduce through pollination. Bees and other insects are attracted to the fragrant flowers and help transfer pollen between flowers, leading to fertilization. Once fertilized, the flowers develop seeds that can be used to grow new sampaguita plants.
You can propagate the sampaguita by cutting the hardwood stem or by cutting its leaves. Propagating the leaves can result in the sprouting of new sampaguita.
The phylum of sampaguita is Magnoliophyta, which includes flowering plants.
I think it's a dicot since it has two flowers.
Sampaguita is known as a national flower. This type of flower is sene in the Philippines.
The sampaguita stem is typically slender, green, and has small, elongated leaves arranged opposite each other along the stem.
the sampaguita is many petal and santan many flowering