Peas or beans
The plant would likely be a gymnosperm, a type of seed-producing plant that does not produce flowers but has vascular tissue. Some examples of gymnosperms include conifers like pine trees and spruces.
i said what makes seeds grow inside flowers now
YES.If these flowers are wild flowers, yes. Flowers go on to produce seeds and seeds are needed to produce plants next year. Thus if you pick the flowers there will be no seeds an those flowers will never be there again in the years that follow as no new flow plants can grow.
not possible
angiosperm
Seed plants have roots, stems, leaves, has vascular tissue, and flowers that produce seeds.
Peas or beans
Bryophytes (aka embryophytes) is a term used for mosses, hornworts and liverworts. These plants are small, green, rootless, and they reproduce by spores instead of seeds. Daffodils are flowering herbaceous perennials reproduce by seeds. Daffodils are NOT bryophytes.
Seeds, greeen and succulent fruits, flowers and green leaves, insects
Flowers attract insects. Insects pollinate the flowers. Pollinated flowers produce seeds. Seeds grow into apples.
Yes, the Christmas cactus [Schlumbergera spp] has seeds. Their lopsided, trumpet shaped, mostly red flowers grow out of stem ends. They're followed by green or reddish, grapelike fruits if they've been pollinated. The seeds are in the fruit. But if the flowers aren't fertilized, then they aren't followed by fruits or seeds.
The plant would likely be a gymnosperm, a type of seed-producing plant that does not produce flowers but has vascular tissue. Some examples of gymnosperms include conifers like pine trees and spruces.
Flowers attract insects. Insects pollinate the flowers. Pollinated flowers produce seeds. Seeds grow into apples.
flowers grow from seeds and then they produce more of the same seed you planted
Flowers form seeds, if there are many flowers means more seeds to form new plants
flowers, seeds