No pinecones are not seeds. The trees produces the pinecone to be the bearer of the seeds. The seeds are in between the layers of the pinecone. The seeds have a wing around it so when it falls out it "flies" away in order to populate a larger area. I hope this helped.
A pine cone is neither a seed or flower. When it is formed it is tightly closed. Inside the tightly closed bud are the seeds and when the cone opens the seed fall out to the ground where squirrels and birds feed on them.
It is not unusual for squirrells to chew off the new cones before they open and chew them open to get the seeds out. A few seed may be left and become a sprout of a new tree.
A pine cone has many seeds. Inside each "petal" is a seed.
from what i understand, they contain seeds within them. that's why when they are displaced they tend to repopulate themselves.
Yes inside each scale of the pine cone is a seed.
No, the seeds are inside the pine cone, one seed under each 'leaf' or 'petal' of the cone.
Yes, but only male pine cones.
No
Some pine trees and Pine cones.
A pine cone and tassel is what Maine's state flower looks like. The people of Maine opt for a non-flower as their state flower and stick to it, since legislative action of 1895. The pine cone serves as one of the distinct, fragrant, seed-full body parts of the white pine (Pinus strobus) in this case.
coniferstrees with needlesdeciduous trees
Loquats have between one to ten seeds. Ordinary they have 3 to 5 seeds.
One
i think they come out of the tree in the direction they are facingAnother answer:When pine cones are on the tree, they grow down. The point grows toward the ground. The stem part in the middle of the cone attaches to the cone. The pine cone itself is a container for pine seeds. The cone will open and release the seeds. If you pick up a large pine cone, you may find that the front part has opened and the rear part has not. If you take the part that has not opened and open it, you may find the pine cone seeds inside. Each one is a seed attached to a membrane. The membrane acts like a propeller that helps the seed spin around. If the pine tree burns, all the pine cones open and release all their seeds. The new plants grow straight up.
Conifer seeds are typically contained within a cone. The pinyon pine nut is one of the larger, tastier conifer seeds.
Conifer seeds are typically contained within a cone. The pinyon pine nut is one of the larger, tastier conifer seeds.
Pine trees have seeds in the cone. Ferns are the only plants that I can think of off hand that have spores (I'm sure that there are more out there). Otherwise, if it is a natural plant, one that was not created from grafting/hybridization and so on, it has seeds.
They reproduce using cones also known as seeds.Pine trees grow pine cones much like a flower grows blossoms. Inside the pine cone their are seeds that grow and mature. Then the cone falls off to the ground where it dries out. As it dries, the cone opens up so that the seeds can fall out. Birds and rodents grab some of the seeds and carry them a certain distance away. Little pine trees start where the seeds are on nice, moist soil.The seeds of some pine trees are called, "Pine nuts", and are edible and delicious. You can buy them at your grocery store.seeds are in the pine coneleafy gametes.A pine tree produces cones which contain the seed to produce further generations.
Some pine trees and Pine cones.
The trick to that one is Coniferous starts with cone as in pine cone. So they have pine needles.
No, the ginkgo plant (as there is only one surviving species) is a gymnosperm, meaning it has seeds enclosed in cone-like structures, much like a pine or fir tree.
No. A pine tree has its own seeds so there only needs to be one tree.
Conifers are cone bearing trees.Conifers are because they help the world with pretty needles and pleasant scents, almost as if someone planned it just that way. Perhaps one day ice cream conifers will, and why not? conifers are every shape and sizethey also have spiky needles coming from out of there body.
This question is one whose answer is far from indicative of the quantitative analysis of the pine cone's annual polen flake release... there are so many factors that go into determining approximate figures pertaining to the pollination of conifers. It depends on the specific dendrological history of the tree as well as the climate in which the tree is living.
A cone has one vertex.