GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/)
-   -   How do trees reproduce? (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/20984-how-do-trees-reproduce.html)

Requester 06-05-2003 04:44 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks

Cereoid-UR12 06-05-2003 05:08 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
They reproduce the same way other seed plants do.

Read up on your basic botany, particularly sexual reproduction.


Requester wrote in message
m...
im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks




Pam 06-05-2003 05:20 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 


Requester wrote:

im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks


It depends on the type of tree. Most trees will have both male and female
flowers on the same tree and are pollinated by wind or insects, so only
one is required. A few number of species need both a male and female plant
and they don't necessarily have to be planted adjacent to each other to
produce seeds. Somtimes just in the same neighborhood is sufficient.
These trees all can produce viable seedlings although some are more ready
to set seed than others. Other hybrid or grafted trees, while they may (or
may not) produce seedlings, what seedlings are produced may have no
resemblance to the parent plant. You only need one spruce and it could
very well produce seedlings from the cones for you - I pull out small
conifer seedlings from my garden constantly, but they are mostly the
native Doug firs and hemlocks and cedars. Would love it if my Hinokis or
golden shore pine would generate some offspring :-)

The only sure way to duplicate the exact features in a plant is to
propagate by clonal reproduction - cuttings, etc. Some trees are very easy
to propagate this way, others less so. Most growers do this - seeds can
take a long time to germinate or require specific germination techniques
or not be viable, while cuttings can be cheap, quick and quite reliable.

pam - gardengal


Phisherman 06-05-2003 11:08 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
On 6 May 2003 08:46:30 -0700, (Requester) wrote:

im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks


Grammatically speaking, trees "reproduce" but don't "duplicate" nor
"copulate," (although once I saw a tree that looked like it was). All
mature healthy trees produce cones or flowers. Most trees produce
flowers that have both male and female parts, but a few others only
produce a male or female flower. The Colorado spruce has both male
and female parts, so you really need one plant to make cones
containing seeds.

Linda Adie 06-05-2003 11:56 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
(Requester) wrote in message om...
im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks


I have a whole load of cherry tree seeds that have germinated straight
of the tree on to the ground also sycamore if you wanted them it
wouldnt happen
but its a great thing nature

Linda

Andy N 07-05-2003 12:08 AM

How do trees reproduce?
 
Late at night the leaves get together when no one sees them and that is when
the reproduction starts! That is why when a person thinks all the leaves
raked in late Fall from his or her yard that the neighbors leaves blow in
and cross-pollinate with! Since a person is unable to rake (all the leaves),
new offspring sprouts from the fruits of that secret union very similar to
human beings.



John S. DeBoo 07-05-2003 05:08 AM

How do trees reproduce?
 
Andy N wrote:

Late at night the leaves get together when no one sees them and that is when
the reproduction starts! That is why when a person thinks all the leaves
raked in late Fall from his or her yard that the neighbors leaves blow in
and cross-pollinate with! Since a person is unable to rake (all the leaves),
new offspring sprouts from the fruits of that secret union very similar to
human beings.


ROTFLMAO!



--
John S. DeBoo




zxcvbob 07-05-2003 05:44 AM

How do trees reproduce?
 
Birds and bees.

Best regards,
Bob


Andy N 07-05-2003 08:56 AM

How do trees reproduce?
 
John, It's good to know that you are the Fox in-charge of the Hen House!



Iris Cohen 07-05-2003 01:56 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds that grow into new
trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?

Oh, dear, that is the subject of many books. I'll try to be brief. In most
cases the flowers are pollinated by bees or other insects. The pollinated
flowers turn into fruits which contain seeds. Most conifers are wind
pollinated. The pollen is blown from the male cones to the female cones. The
female cones ripen & contain seeds. Some conifers, like Junipers, have male &
female cones on separate trees, so you need one of each to get seeds. Pine
trees have male & female cones on the same tree. I am not sure about spruces.
In the case of most fruit trees, like apples, although the flowers on all the
trees have both male & female parts, you need two, & sometimes three different
varieties to get fruit.
Iris,
Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40
"If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming
train."
Robert Lowell (1917-1977)

Andy N 07-05-2003 03:20 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
How about if a person prunes the ends of as many limbs as one chooses and
pushes each individually into moist, fertile soil and each and everyone
takes root and develops into a tree, would this also be reproduction?



Pam 07-05-2003 03:32 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 


Andy N wrote:

How about if a person prunes the ends of as many limbs as one chooses and
pushes each individually into moist, fertile soil and each and everyone
takes root and develops into a tree, would this also be reproduction?


Yes, but it is clonal (asexual) reproduction rather than natural.



Marion Margoshes 07-05-2003 03:56 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
Andy N wrote:

How about if a person prunes the ends of as many limbs as one chooses and
pushes each individually into moist, fertile soil and each and everyone
takes root and develops into a tree, would this also be reproduction?


Certainly !!!! Asexual reproduction.

Requester 07-05-2003 06:20 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
thank you for the details.
so does this mean that if i take the pine cones and bury them in soil
they will actually grow into new trees?




im curious. if you have a tree how does it reproduce and make seeds
that grow into new trees? do you need two of the same type of tree?
for example. if i buy two colorado spruces and plant them in the same
location say 10 feet apart, when it makes cones will those conese make
new spruces? im curious as to how trees duplicate.

thanks


It depends on the type of tree. Most trees will have both male and female
flowers on the same tree and are pollinated by wind or insects, so only
one is required. A few number of species need both a male and female plant
and they don't necessarily have to be planted adjacent to each other to
produce seeds. Somtimes just in the same neighborhood is sufficient.
These trees all can produce viable seedlings although some are more ready
to set seed than others. Other hybrid or grafted trees, while they may (or
may not) produce seedlings, what seedlings are produced may have no
resemblance to the parent plant. You only need one spruce and it could
very well produce seedlings from the cones for you - I pull out small
conifer seedlings from my garden constantly, but they are mostly the
native Doug firs and hemlocks and cedars. Would love it if my Hinokis or
golden shore pine would generate some offspring :-)

The only sure way to duplicate the exact features in a plant is to
propagate by clonal reproduction - cuttings, etc. Some trees are very easy
to propagate this way, others less so. Most growers do this - seeds can
take a long time to germinate or require specific germination techniques
or not be viable, while cuttings can be cheap, quick and quite reliable.

pam - gardengal


Requester 07-05-2003 06:32 PM

How do trees reproduce?
 
so your saying that if i cut off a branch or stem of say my japanese
maple. then plant it in a pot of rich soil, it will grow roots and
thus a new tree is formed??
does this work for all and any tree?


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:48 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter