By the wind.
wind
The hard maple is a specific type of maple, Acer saccharum, also known as Rock or Sugar Maple. The fruit is a double samara with two winged seeds, so it is dispersed away from the mother tree by the wind.
wind The wind blows the seeds off the tree. The seeds are 'winged' and float/spin down to the ground.
Maple seeds are dispersed through wind dispersal. The seeds have wing-like structures that allow them to spin and twirl as they fall from the tree, helping them to travel long distances away from the parent tree.
Dandelion seeds Milkweed Maple tree seeds Pine seed (although also largely by gravity) cotton seed
Organisms like dandelion seeds, maple tree samaras, and fungal spores are commonly dispersed by the wind. These organisms have special adaptations, such as light weight and aerodynamic structures, that help them be carried over long distances by the wind.
it is dispersed by animal waste It is dispersed by exploxion
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.
Dispersed by animals
the norway maple is not particularly long lived; its maximum age is believed to be around 250-300 years old. flowering occurs in mid-april and a large amount of seeds are mature in september that is dispersed by the wind and animals. the leaves of the norway maple are often the last to change. They keep their green color until early november before turning into a bright yellow
It can be (dispersed locations, dispersed protesters). But it is primarily a verb form. Dispersed is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to disperse).