When plants are ready to reproduce, they make pollen spores. These spores are very small, and are easily picked up on the wind. When an animal walks by, the pollen spores catch onto their fur. So, where ever the animal travels, some spores fall of, hopefully to reach another plant either near or far from the original plant.
Birds can carry seeds and drop them to make a new plant and sunflower seeds. W hen you make a wish and blow it on the grass the seeds create sunflowers which are weeds!
Photosynthesis: Plants do the Photosynthesis, if they don't, they die. If the plants die, then herbivores will die out and the carnivores will go with them.Cellular Respiration:
Plants invest energy in producing sweet and tasty fruits to entice animals into eating them and dispersing their seeds. By appealing to animals' sense of taste, plants increase the chances of their seeds being carried away and planted in new locations, thereby aiding in the plant's reproduction and survival.
do both plants and animals make atp
To populate and make more plants.
Plants produce fruits with high sugar content to attract animals that will help disperse their seeds. Animals are more likely to eat and spread the seeds of fruits that are sweet and energy-rich. This increases the plants' chances of reproducing and dispersing their seeds to new areas.
The fruit is the seed bearing part of the plant, it will not help the parent plant but will produce the progeny.
Plants reproduce and make new plants by seeds: They get planted or settle in an area and then grow to new plants. Seeds are not the only ways plants reproduce and make new plants. Some plants use bulbs, branches, pollen,etc.
The action that directly helps a plant make new seeds is fertilization. Once these seeds have developed they will be dispersed.
one makes seeds and another does not make seeds
Angiosperms depend on animals to pollinate their flowers and drop their seeds and make more plants.
Pollination: Animals such as bees, butterflies, and birds help transfer pollen between flowers, enabling plants to reproduce and produce seeds. Seed dispersal: Animals like squirrels, birds, and ants help disperse seeds through eating and carrying them to new locations, promoting plant growth and distribution. Pest control: Some animals, like ladybugs and certain birds, help control pest populations that may harm plants, contributing to the overall health and survival of plant species.
Birds can carry seeds and drop them to make a new plant and sunflower seeds. W hen you make a wish and blow it on the grass the seeds create sunflowers which are weeds!
Trim the leaves
is it true that all plants make seeds
Plants are at the bottom of the food chain. Plants can take nutrients from the soil and sunlight to make food for animals. Plants also make oxygen for animals including us to use, and we make carbon dioxide for the plants to use to make more oxygen. Plants can rely on animals to. Birds eat berries with seeds and poop them out in different places to help the plants reproduce.
Here are just a few of the many reasons that modern ecosystems depend on animals: Animals help to keep plant species from overcrowding each other by eating them. Many animals help to spread the seeds of plants, either by carrying them on their fur by accident, or by swallowing seeds they can't digest when they eat fruit and later depositing the seeds elsewhere in their excrement. Specific animals, especially bees, pollinate most modern species of flowering plants, allowing them to create seeds and reproduce. Animals help to recycle nutrients in the ecosystem so that plants can use them again (i.e., earthworms eat dead plant material, making its nutrients bioavailable for plants; all animals release carbon dioxide, which allows plants to make food; etc.). Additionally, some animals specifically alter the ecosystem allowing for certain plants to grow (i.e., beaver dams create wetlands, elephants clear trees allowing for more grasses and shrubs to grow in the savanna, etc).