Mostly One per plant- the plant is actually capable of multiple ( as is often seen in the case of baby corn varieties) cobs. The main contributing factors being soil quality+water availability and crowding of plants (spacing between them and spacing between rows.) The more space you give (with good soil+fertiliser+water) the better the chances of the plant being able to sustain >1 cob per plant.
Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
Corn is a monocot plant. This means that its seeds have only one cotyledon or seed leaf.
One
Neither. It is an annual plant that is more of a grain, like corn or oats.
a plant cell may have one large and one small vacuoles.
One "cow corn" plant--more properly called field corn--plant will often have two to three ears on it.
On average, a corn plant will have one to two ears or cobs of corn. The number of cobs per plant can be influenced by factors such as the variety of corn, growing conditions, and planting density.
One or two ears of corn are a normal expectation per stalk when well fertilized and maintained. Sweet corn can produce two to four ears on one stalk.
about 3 o each one
Generally 2. One big ear and one smaller one.
48 ears in 1 case of corn, such as the cases you see the produce dept. at grocery stores.
Typically around July, the tassel on top of the corn plant fertilizes the silks (those stringy things when you husk sweet corn) on the ear of corn. After the pollen gets on the end of the silk, it travels down into the ear where it pollinates the kernel. Each kernel has its own silk. After fertilization, the ear starts forming. Pollination is dependent on when you plant and the temperature outside. So when you see the tassel at the top open up, the ear will start forming in the coming weeks.
That depends on what cultivar the corn is. Most cultivars enable at least two ears of corn to be produced per seed that is planted, not just one.
Corn plant
Per this website: [[http://whatscookingamerica.net/corn.htm]],Two medium ears of corn equals 1 cup corn kernels. One (10-oz.) package frozen corn kernels equals 1 3/4 cups corn kernels.
Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
If it was a standard "open pollinated" corn (an "old style" corn), yes - it will reproduce new corn plants and ears exactly like the one you planted the kernels from. If it is a newer hybrid corn (and 98% of all corns grown are hybrid corns) then no, it can't. It will create corn plants, that will grow ears, but the ears will revert to one or another of the parents mated to produce the hybrid - maybe with good results, maybe with very disappointing results.