Sunflowers produce seeds through a process called pollination. Pollen from the male part of the flower (the stamen) fertilizes the female part (the pistil), leading to the development of seeds within the flower's ovary. The seeds mature and eventually form the familiar sunflower seeds that we eat or use for planting.
Yes, all sunflowers produce seeds.
Yes, dwarf sunflowers do produce seeds.
No, not all sunflowers produce sunflower seeds. Some varieties of sunflowers are grown for their ornamental flowers and do not produce seeds suitable for consumption.
Mammoth sunflowers can produce up to 2,000 seeds per flower.
No. In fact, roasted sunflower seeds are a popular snack.
All sunflowers produce seeds if they are fertilized. The only way they would not develop seeds is if they were pollenless and there were no sunflowers with pollen within range (about 3 miles for a honeybee) to fertilize them.
Yes, most of them do, in fact the seeds are very good for birds. If you just leave the flower head to seed on the plant the birds can come and get them, or you could harvest them yourself and place them where birds can find them. However I have heard of pollenless sunflowers, I don't know if they produce seeds.
erm no ofcourse not! sunflower seeds arent from sunflowers!
Yes, all sunflowers have seeds within them.
Sunflowers have seeds.
Yes, you can propagate sunflowers by collecting and planting their seeds.
Sunflowers reproduce by large seeds that form in the center of their flowerhead.