Tomato seeds are scattered by other organisms eating the tomatoes and then digesting the seeds. The seeds are then deposited in a new area.
Seeds with feathery structures are scattered by the wind. The feathery structure allows the seed to be easily carried by air currents to new locations. When the wind blows, the seeds are lifted and dispersed, helping the plant to spread and colonize new areas.
Forget-me-not seeds are tiny, round, and dark in color, typically ranging from brown to black. They are about the size of a pinhead and are easily scattered when sown in the soil.
A monocot seed has only one cotyledon, which is also known as a seed leaf. Monocots typically have leaves with parallel veins, flower parts in multiples of three, and scattered vascular bundles in the stem. Examples of monocot plants include grasses, lilies, and orchids.
If your question is how deep to cover seeds - the basic rule is to the depth of the size of the seed itself. Tiny seeds like poppy seeds can be scattered on the surface of the soil, slightly larger seeds like radish seeds just need to be barely covered, while larger seeds like corn and beans should be covered to about a half an inch - basically the same width of the seed. Hope this was what you were looking for.
seed coat
Scattered by the wind
mango and cherry
By washing the seeds away the soil.
'Flocked' - As in:- I soon as I had scattered the bird seed the pigeons flocked to eat it.
Animals eat the apples and then move around, afterwhich they poop the seed out.
Animals eat the apples and then move around, afterwhich they poop the seed out.
if you want to know the perfect answer for this it is dispersel!
Women of the time scattered the seed and reaped the harvest, so the divinity of earth, fertility, and corn should be female.
" i scattered sown on the ground." it's a plant seed
Tomato seeds are scattered by other organisms eating the tomatoes and then digesting the seeds. The seeds are then deposited in a new area.
Seeds with feathery structures are scattered by the wind. The feathery structure allows the seed to be easily carried by air currents to new locations. When the wind blows, the seeds are lifted and dispersed, helping the plant to spread and colonize new areas.