Plants have following major classical groups .
1; Spermatophyta (seed plants ) including Angiosperms and Gymnosperms.
2 ; Pteridophyta (spore producing plants eg club mosses.
3 ; Bryophyta ( Non vascular plants ) eg liverworts.
Only spermatophyta are seed producing plant and they reproduce by seed. Spermatophyta are most highly developed plants.
Angiosperms are flowering plants .
Gymnosperms are coniferous plants.
Common examples of dicot seeds include beans, peas, tomatoes, and sunflower seeds. Dicot seeds usually have two cotyledons, or seed leaves, that provide nutrients for the developing embryo plant.
Gymnosperms are non-flowering seed bearing plants. Examples are: Conifers Spruce Pine Cycas Cycad
All that is needed to make a new plant.
Dicots have two seed leaves, while monocots have one seed leaf. Examples of plants with one seed leaf include grasses, lilies, and orchids.
When a plant starts to grow from a seed we say the seed germinates.
mango is the best example of a seed plant.
The three important parts of a seed are the seed coat, which protects the inner seed tissues; the endosperm, which provides nutrients for the developing embryo; and the embryo, which will grow into a new plant.
The three parts of a seed are the embryo, the cotyledon, and the seedcoat. The embryo is what grows into the plant, the cotyledon provides food for the plant to grow, and the seedcoat helps protect the plant until it grows large enough to survive better.
if a seed then three times the length of the seed. {21/2 to 3 inches deep. if as a transplant seedling then plant at crown of plant.
Common examples of dicot seeds include beans, peas, tomatoes, and sunflower seeds. Dicot seeds usually have two cotyledons, or seed leaves, that provide nutrients for the developing embryo plant.
Gymnosperms are non-flowering seed bearing plants. Examples are: Conifers Spruce Pine Cycas Cycad
All that is needed to make a new plant.
Examples of lipids are: sterol glycosides, cerebrosides, and plant phytoglycolipids
These are examples of plant structures that provide protection for the seeds and help in seed dispersal. The gritty stone cells of pears and hard cells of seed coats act as barriers against physical damage, while plant fibers aid in the dispersal of seeds by wind or animals.
Dicots have two seed leaves, while monocots have one seed leaf. Examples of plants with one seed leaf include grasses, lilies, and orchids.
Seed coat, micropyle, endosperm and embryo are major parts of a seed. The seed coat protects, micropyle allows water to move in, endosperm nourishes the embryo and on germination a new plant emerges from the embryo.
Bean, pumpkin, apple, pear.........