What is a cat?
Katkin, also known as Amen, is dense, elongated and decreasing cluster of flowers without petals. Most often flowers are found on a cat of one sex. In some trees, such as poplar, male and female flowers are present. Catkins usually occurs on trees that are pollinated by wind, such as oak, birch, willow and hickory. Several herbal plants, as well as stabbing nettle, also produce Catkins.
Most catkins are formed in front of leaves of leaves to allow wind pollination. The wind carries pollen from the male or female cat to the flowering of the opposite sex, usually in a different form, such as a floral tip. In rare cases, Catkins may be pollinated insects, but most often rely on the wind to complete this process.
Depending on a particular plant, Catkins is formed at the end of the winter to the end of summer and produces floral clusters several weeks after forming. These flowers are formed to seeds at the end of the growing season, which usually at the end of autumn for mosttrees. The seeds fall from the cat, and if they survive, the growing process begins to form a new tree.
Every cat contains small, modified leaves known as documents that differ from leaves found on tree branches. They are different color than leaves of leaves, different texture or sometimes both. Some cat documents act as attractors for insects in the case of insect pollination.
Catkins is usually found to hang from branches of tree or shrubs, but in some trees such as white birch, they can grow erect. Some catkins, such as Willow Catkin, will be covered with fine hair before the flowers. These hairs often cover small deeds of cats and further reduce after flowering.
Manual pollination is also possible with a cat. This is a popular practice for American flowering trees chestnuts. The male cat is harvested from one tree and then hand -carried to a tree carrying a female cat. The male cat is wiped about a woman untilThe pollen does not exhaust, and then the process is repeated as needed.
homeowners with cats with cat trees on their property often consider them to be harassment. After disruption, they will emit large clouds of pollen and as soon as they dry and fall from the tree, they can organize the backyard. However, their appearance is essential for reproducing these plants.