It seems a miracle that a tiny seed has the ability to grow into a copy of the plant that produced it. There are several different stages in the life cycle of a flowering plant. Read on to see how a flower seed becomes a seedling, then grows into a mature plant which produces its own seeds.
Seed
Every seed contains an embryo, which is like a miniature plant in waiting. A seed remains dormant until conditions are favorable for it to grow. It is protected by a hard seed coat until it is time to germinate. Germination happens when a seed gets oxygen, water and warmth. First the seed sends out roots into the soil, then a stem which grows upward toward the sunlight. The new plant's energy comes from a store of food inside the seed.
Growth
As the seedling's stem grows higher, it begins to develop leaves. Now it can begin to make its own food through photosynthesis. To achieve photosynthesis, a plant requires water, sunlight and carbon dioxide in addition to the chlorophyll within its own leaves. The seedling continues to grow until it has many leaves.
Reproduction
Once a flowering plant reaches a certain height, it stops growing and starts putting its energy into making offspring. First it produces buds, then flowers. Inside the flowers are the reproductive parts of the plant, including pollen.
A flowering plant requires a pollinator to complete its reproduction. Pollination can happen through wind, or animals, such as birds and insects. Plants that rely on animals for pollination are often brightly colored or strong-smelling. Some flowers even have coloration that looks like a "landing strip" for insects.
When bees, birds and moths are feeding on a flower's nectar, they often brush the pollen from one plant to another, and in doing so assist in pollination.
Dispersal
Once it is pollinated, a flower becomes a fruiting body, which serves to protect the seeds inside. The flower has now completed its purpose, so it fades away or drops from the plant.
When the seeds are mature, the plant disperses them. If the seeds all stayed near the parent plant, there would be too much competition for resources and few seeds would survive. Flowering plants have adopted many different methods of spreading their seeds to new places. Some seeds have barbs that attach themselves to passing animals. Other seeds easily travel on the wind.
Death
After a flowering plant has reproduced, it has completed its function and dies. But it lives on within its seeds. Any seeds which land in a spot where conditions are right for growth will start the cycle again.