wind
Yes, maple trees are an example of seed dispersal by explosion. When the maple fruits, known as samaras or "helicopter seeds," mature, they rely on wind to carry them away from the parent tree. The seeds are dispersed as the samaras spin and glide through the air, helping the tree to spread its seeds over a wider area.
Dandelion seeds Milkweed Maple tree seeds Pine seed (although also largely by gravity) cotton seed
Angsana is dispersed by wind. It has a wind-like structure.
Pear seeds are dispersed in human waste after the fruits of the pear have been eaten
Seeds of plants like dandelions, maple trees, and cottonwood trees are dispersed by wind. These seeds are lightweight with structures like wings or fluffy fibers that allow them to be carried by the wind to new locations for germination and growth.
how is ash seed dispersed Answer. The seed of the Ash tree is normally dispersed on the wind.
The means by which seeds are dispersed depend on a seed's structure, composition, and size. Seeds dispersed by water are found in light and buoyant fruits, while those dispersed by wind may have specialized wing-like appendages. Examples are - Winged fruits of Dipterocarus, Holoptelia, Hiptage and Shorea etc.
A yew seed is dispersed when it is eaten by an animal.
Coconut seeds are most likely dispersed by water. They have a fibrous husk that allows them to float on water, enabling them to travel long distances across oceans and eventually germinate on distant shores. In contrast, milkweed, burr, and maple seeds are primarily dispersed by wind or animals.
In 1911, Robert Scott Troup undertook an experiment to determine how the seeds of C. fistula are dispersed. He found that golden jackals feed on the fruits and help scatter the seeds.
maple seed is a seed with wings around it. it's agent of dispersal is wind .
Yes, the Angsana fruit (from the Angsana tree, a type of Dipterocarp species) has a distinctive wing-like structure that helps it disperse with the wind when it falls from the tree. These wings assist in carrying the fruit to new locations for seed dispersal.