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10Seeds are produced in flowering plants just like babies are born in animals.
Germinating seeds contain more nutrients than non-germinating seeds.
All plants produce seeds for reproduction.
Seeds of water plants are usually heavy and sink immediately.
Seeds dispersed by wind often have light and feathery structures.
The seed coat is made up of two layers: Testa and Tegmen.
Monocot seeds have two cotyledons while dicot seeds have only one.
Endosperm stores nutrients in most monocot seeds.
Seed germination requires water, oxygen, light, and suitable temperature.
Gravity does not play any role in seed dispersal.
Percentage: 0%
Which method does thatch-grass (Khar) adopt to disperse their seeds?
What is the main function of a seed?
Which of the following event occurs during germination?
Why are seeds not stored in moist or wet places?
Which statement regarding the ‘dormancy’ is correct?
Seeds of red silk cotton trees, Aak trees, Kans, maple etc., which are dispersed through wind have either air sacs or wing-like structures. How do these structures help them to be dispersed?
Seeds of hydrophytes are dispersed mainly by:
Ideal temperature for germination of most seeds is:
Which of these seeds are dispersed by bursting of pods?
Which seed type always has endosperm?
The development of a new plant from a seed is called ______.
Seeds dispersed by wind are usually ______ and feathery.
The outer thick layer of a seed coat is called ______.
In dicot seeds, nutrients are stored mainly in ______.
The first leaf in a monocot plant develops from ______.
Seeds of lotus and coconut are dispersed by ______.
Dispersal of seeds from their origin to distant places is called ______ dispersal.
The embryo has mainly three parts: ______, radicle, and plumule.
______ is the state in which a seed remains inactive.
Seeds of mango and apple are dispersed mainly by ______.