It is a flowering plant
Yes, the papaya tree (Carica papaya) has a woody stem. The stem of the papaya tree is typically soft and succulent when young, but it gradually becomes woody as the tree matures.
The scientific name of the papaya tree is Carica papaya.
Papaya is a tropical fruit which grows on a vascular plant (tree).
Papaya flowers are generally unisexual. Hence these are never complete.
A papaya has many seeds. Each papaya seed can grow into a new tree. However, that does not happen. Why?
Yes, the papaya tree (Carica papaya) has a woody stem. The stem of the papaya tree is typically soft and succulent when young, but it gradually becomes woody as the tree matures.
Yes, the papaya plant is a large tropical herb.
The Carica papaya or pawpaw plant comes in three sexes: male, female and hermaphrodite The male papaya plant only produces flowers with pollen. They can never make fruit. Almost all commercial papaya orchards contain only hermaphrodites.
The scientific name of the papaya tree is Carica papaya.
papaya tree
Yes, most are wind pollinated but many have fairly large insect pollinated flowers. Deciduous trees with noticable flowers include, magnolias, laburnum, horse chestnuts, apple, cherries and lilacs.
It grows on a tropical plant, native to Brazil.
because the female and parts of papaya plant are on two different plants so a alone plant fails to pollinate and fruit doesnot develop
Papaya is a tropical fruit which grows on a vascular plant (tree).
The flowers of the cacao tree are not fertilized by bees like most flowers. These flowers are pollinated by gnats. It is this insect that carries the pollen from flower to flower which allows the cocoa pods to grow.
It's bright and showy, and even has little nectar ducts under its petals, so insect-pollinated. Wind-pollinated plants generally don't have flowers, or the flowers are very small and inconspicuous, like those of grass. Wind-pollinated plants also make far more pollen (try tapping a pine tree or reed in spring) because the wind does not take it directly to its destination, much of it will be lost. With insects there's a fair chance the little there is will reach another flower of the same species.
Papaya flowers are generally unisexual. Hence these are never complete.