No. Sunlight is necessary to provide the light energy to make the food (sugar) which nourishes the plant tissues and is stored in the bulb. When you pick the flower, it will utilized the energy left in the stem to support the flower, but the entire time you keep the stem in a vase, the tissue is deteriorating, which is noticable after a couple of days. The daffodil is not one of those plants that will produce roots from a cut stem, so once cut, that is the end of that part of the plant and there is not need for sunlight.
Daffodils generally need direct sunlight to thrive and bloom well. They may still grow in partial shade, but they may not flower as abundantly.
Daffodils do not need plant food. These are autotrophs and hence prepare their own food.
As a plant, the grape does need sunlight to grow. Without sunlight, the plant will die, just as any other plant will. The actual grape that is picked and eaten/turned to wine/whatever, does not need sunlight. it is already dead.
Water, sunlight, and sometimes fertilizers. Plants make their own food from water and sunlight and minerals from the ground.
Yes they do -Anonymous
Daffodils should be planted about 6-8 inches deep in order to thrive.
Root hair cells do not need chloroplasts as they are under the ground. They can not reach sunlight for photosynthesis. So there is no point of them having chloroplastsgougugugiugyyreslololololololmfao
No need to cover them but they may need to be supported against 'falling over'
If it is a particularly dry spring, the daffodils might appreciate supplemental watering. Generally because of their growing season, there is no need for additional water.
Many of the old varieties of daffodils do grow wild along the roadsides, in meadows and around old homes that may be falling down or gone, but the daffodils return each spring. There are some new varieties that do need a bit of looking after, but in general daffodils do well without tending from humans.
Objects such as buildings, trees, and clouds can block sunlight and create shadows on the ground.
Daffodils can be found in what is called the "temperate zone". They need a period of cold for the flowers to bloom properly. They do well in the USDA Plant Hardiness Zones 3-9. They can be growing wild in a meadow, pasture or lakeside, or they can be a cultivated ornamental type grown in gardens both rural and urban.