A strawberry plant is an example of a plant in which the sepals remain attached after fertilization. The sepals of the strawberry fruit are the leafy structures that enclose the fruit as it develops, even after fertilization has occurred.
yes it does
pollination; if it from the same plant (self-fertilization; self-pollination); pollen from one plant to the stigma of another plant (cross-pollination; cross-fertilization)
A chili plant typically has five stages of growth: seed germination, seedling, vegetative growth, flowering, and fruiting. These stages mark the different phases of the plant's development from a seed to a mature plant bearing fruit.
The study of the earliest stages of plant and animal growth is called "embryology." It focuses on the development of embryos from fertilization to the early stages of growth, examining how different species develop and differentiate. By comparing embryological stages across various organisms, scientists can gain insights into evolutionary relationships and developmental processes.
firstly pollination then followed by fertilization then by germination
The life cycle of a seed plant typically consists of two main stages: the sporophyte stage (where the plant produces spores through reproductive structures like flowers or cones) and the gametophyte stage (where the plant produces gametes through the process of fertilization).
the stages of flowering plant's life cycle starts as a seed then the seedling,mature plant and finally death.
Cross-Fertilization!
Fertilization has nutrition in them which plant can take. It helps the plant grow bigger. Fertilization come in a form of animal waste which plant uses. When people comsum these plant, they also eat the fertilization of the plant. All farmers use fertilization. When you go drive around and you see a lot of cows, Then you see this bigg hill cover in a big white sheet with wheels tires on them; that is cow waste which is fertilization. That is why it smeels too. ☺☻
The embryonic plant is the young plant form from the fertilization process
sumthing
ovary
A strawberry plant is an example of a plant in which the sepals remain attached after fertilization. The sepals of the strawberry fruit are the leafy structures that enclose the fruit as it develops, even after fertilization has occurred.
The pair of terms that best describe this process are "fallopian tube" for the usual location for fertilization and "blastocyst" for the first stages of development.
The plant that produces berries after fertilization is the holly flower. There are between 400 and 600 species of holly flower.
The chronological stages of human fertilization are ovulation, where an egg is released from the ovary; fertilization, where a sperm penetrates the egg to form a zygote; cleavage, where the zygote divides rapidly to form a blastocyst; implantation, where the blastocyst embeds into the uterine wall; and finally development, where the blastocyst continues to grow and differentiate into an embryo.