Daffodils have two ways to reproduce:
For the home gardener, it is best to grow the daffodils from bulbs, so that you'll know what you're getting. Removing the seed pods will allow more energy to be stored in the bulb for more flowers the following year. Also, growing daffodils from seeds is a waiting game. It will be 5-7 years before the new plant can produce a flower, and you don't know what kind of flower you will eventually be seeing.
Daffodils generate seed that are later fertilized by pollen to create new daffodils. This is a form of sexual reproduction. Another way daffodils reproduce is by producing bulbs called bulbils which can be planted by gardeners. This is an asexual form. So yes, daffodils can reproduce both asexually and sexually.
Daffodils do not need plant food. These are autotrophs and hence prepare their own food.
Daffodils grow anywhere you plant the bulbs.
Tulips, hyacinths and daffodils are spring bulb plants. You plant them in the fall for spring bloom.
Daffodils are not animals, they are in the plant kingdom
sexually.
sexually.
It will make food for the plant
Yes. Daffodils can cause vomiting and diarrhea in cats that eat any part of the plant, be it leaves, pods, or flowers.
A spider plant is an example of asexual reproduction because it creates it own seeds and then someone comes and plants it and then they have reproduced asexually
yes it does not need help producing
Plant daffodil bulbs about 6-8 inches deep in well-drained soil.