No they are not still a plant. When they are picked they don't have their vitamins, food or their roots.
If all the flowers are picked off the plant, it may not be able to produce seeds, which can impact future growth and reproduction. However, the plant will typically redirect its energy into producing more flowers in an attempt to reproduce.
Certainly - the plant will still live without the flowers. It will simply be unable to reproduce.
Yes, you can plant flowers in mulch and still expect them to thrive. Mulch helps retain moisture, suppresses weeds, and provides insulation for plant roots, which can promote healthy growth for flowers.
Yes. Although the flowers are fairly insignificant and it is grown for fruit production it is still a flowering plant i.e. it flowers.
Because it was a plant and it was picked. Parchment isn't still attached to the ground.
Harvesting safflower flowers requires some care. The flowers are picked just as they begin to wilt and can be used fresh or dried. The seeds produce an edible oil.
If a groundhog eats the flowers off a vegetable plant zucchini and squash, it will not make vegetables.
If the flower is not picked from the plant, the zucchini grows from the center of the flower if it is a female flower that has been pollinated. If it is a male flower, it provides pollen for the insects to fertilize the female flowers with. The flowers wither and die quickly, within a day.
Yes, green peppers are unripe when they are picked from the plant.
probably in the spring, since many flowers bloom in the spring i am still not for sure
Flowers produce seeds for the plant
Yes, singular is flower. The plural is flowers.I picked a flower.My friend picked three flowers.My mother got angry that we picked the flowers, so she made me weed the flower bed as punishment.