How are fruits and seeds spread?
Nature provided that all plants, trying to continue their genus, had to adapt to local conditions for many millennia of existence on the planet. For reproduction, plants use seeds that must get into the soil and germinate under favorable conditions. Each plant has individual characteristics of the distribution of its seeds. Plants such as burdock and burdock have thorns to catch the animal’s fur and travel to another location. Many birds and animals distribute the fruits of mountain ash, hazel, and other edible plants. Dandelion and ivan tea have a special fluff on the seeds, thanks to which they will be picked up by the wind and carried to another place from the parent plant. With the help of the wind, parachute seeds of birch and maple are also carried. Some plants scatter their own seeds – acacia, touch-me-not.