No. There is no way to tell if a marijuana seed will grow into a male or female plant. Size shape and coloration of marijuana seeds can vary considerably and wont really tell you much (if anything at all) about the plant inside.
Decline of the plant, growth of another leaf, improvement in the plant, and propagation of another plant are possible outcomes when a leaf is cut off a weed. The consequence for the plant depends upon the function, health, location and size of the severed leaf and of the weed. The consequence for the leaf will be decline into death or, if proper procedure is followed, propagation of another plant.
Yo, bro. LMFAO. yeah anyway, just take your mature male plant shake it in a bag full of air. And then "blow" the air at the females you wish to seed.
Creeping wood sorrel (Oxalis corniculata) The plant is indeed a weed, with the foliage resembling green or purple clover, with a small yellow flower. The seed pods are expolsive and can reach distances up to 10 feet! More info at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_corniculata.
no, because when i asked if grass is a non-vascular plant they said no and when i checked my science book, it said that angiosperms have monocot and dicot and monocots are like grass, so therefore, grass is not a non-vascular plant
Paterson's Curse, also known as Salvation Jane, Riverina bluebell, blue weed and purple bugloss is a weed because it was introduced to Australia from Europe in the mid 1800s, and quickly spread, and quickly took over agricultural lands and native plant regions. Paterson's Curse has a very high seed production of thousands of seeds per square metre, and seed longevity exceeding seven years. This, together with its ability to germinate at any time of year, depending on the conditions, makes it a persistent and pervasive weed.
its a seed grown plant. plant the seed, water it, and then wait!
After a seed germinates, it should be able to grow on its own, however, you must have a male and female plant to reproduce.
The pollen grain originating from weed plant is a weed pollen. If weeds are removed from the field before production of pollen grains, seed formation in weeds will be checked .
Yes. Weed gets better with every new generation. When you take the seed from a plant and plant a new one the new plant is the 2nd generation. So in theory not only is weed better today, but it will be even better in the future.
A female marijuana plant does not produce any seeds, unless it is polinated by a male plant. Once the plant is pollinated there is not set number of seeds that are produce, but there will be a lot depending on the amount of pollinations.
To remove Tarweed from your lawn you can do a few things. First use a herbicide to kill the weed, second mow your lawn to breakdown the plants and that removes the seed part of the plant or third pull the weed from the root.
weed
Decline of the plant, growth of another leaf, improvement in the plant, and propagation of another plant are possible outcomes when a leaf is cut off a weed. The consequence for the plant depends upon the function, health, location and size of the severed leaf and of the weed. The consequence for the leaf will be decline into death or, if proper procedure is followed, propagation of another plant.
You don't plant weed, they just grow from gardens.
A plant becomes a weed when it's not wanted.
A weed is an unwanted plant.
When using dill, you will find that both the feathery leaves and the flower heads can be used. Most often the flower heads are allowed to mature and harvested as dill seed. I usually get about a tablespoon of dried dill seed per plant (plants often have more than one seed head). I also dry the leaves, and because they are so fine I don't get much dried dill (1 -3 tablespoons per plant) from each plant.