From the seed whence it came from. The endosperm is what contains the most nutrients for a seedling to grow from, so that it can sprout up its first leaves called the cotyledons, and sprout roots down into the soil. Once the plant is big enough to grow on its own and has used up all the energy from the seed it came from, the seed itself (or what's left of it) decomposes back into the earth.
Yes, snowdrops do have seeds, which are produced after the plant flowers. The seeds are typically dispersed by ants, who are attracted to the seeds as a food source. Snowdrops can also be propagated by dividing their bulbs.
Mention a plant whose and seeds are used as food
By agriculture through seeds and other plant propagules.
Yes, seeds contain an embryonic plant (young plant) in addition to stored food reserves to support its initial growth. The stored food provides essential nutrients for the germination and early growth of the seedling until it can produce its own food through photosynthesis.
Yes, plant seeds contain stored food reserves that provide energy for the growing seedling until it can photosynthesize its own food. This food reserve is typically in the form of starch, oils, or proteins.
Seeds store it in the endosperm.
yes, it does
The tomato plant stores food in its storage tissue allover the plant body and to allure animals and birds for its seed dispersal the ripe berries of this plant have seeds embedded in the pulp. This fruit pulp has no direct use as food by the plant. The new plants germinating from the seeds utilize the food reserves in the cotyledons of the seed.
It acts as a way to get more food for a plant and has seeds so the plant can reproduce.
If you plant them they make new plants. However some seeds can be ground up for food - for instance wheat seeds make flour.
Seeds are made of... seeds. Seeds are not manufactured in a factory. A plant is grown, and the seeds are collected from them. The seeds are put in bags and shipped to pet stores. Simple as that.
Yes, snowdrops do have seeds, which are produced after the plant flowers. The seeds are typically dispersed by ants, who are attracted to the seeds as a food source. Snowdrops can also be propagated by dividing their bulbs.
Mention a plant whose and seeds are used as food
stem,fruit,flower,seeds,roots,
By agriculture through seeds and other plant propagules.
Grasses, such as wheat, produce seeds but no fruit. Many orchids produce seeds, as fine as flour, that even lack a food source for the new plant. They rely on a hypha from a fungus to invade, upon which they use the fungi as a food source, at least in the short term. And some orchids do produce seeds, notably vanilla.
Yes, seeds contain an embryonic plant (young plant) in addition to stored food reserves to support its initial growth. The stored food provides essential nutrients for the germination and early growth of the seedling until it can produce its own food through photosynthesis.