{"id":21197,"date":"2023-10-21T02:45:10","date_gmt":"2023-10-21T00:45:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.branchthetree.com\/?p=21197"},"modified":"2023-10-21T02:45:10","modified_gmt":"2023-10-21T00:45:10","slug":"where-are-the-seeds-in-a-cherry-blossom-tree","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.branchthetree.com\/where-are-the-seeds-in-a-cherry-blossom-tree\/","title":{"rendered":"Where Are The Seeds In A Cherry Blossom Tree"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n
\n

The Seed Development Process<\/h2>\n

Cherry blossom trees are a beloved sight to behold each year during the blooming season. The sight of those clouds of cheerful pink and white petals inspires an appreciation for the cycle of life as the trees signal the start of spring. But what about the tiny seeds tucked beneath the petals? Where are the seeds in a cherry blossom tree?<\/p>\n

The seed development process begins before the flower even blooms. The tiny seeds take shape at the beginning of the summer season after the flowers have bloomed and begun to wither. During this time the untouched petals protect the seeds from the intense sun and rain while they mature. After a few weeks, the petals fall and expose the small green pods that house the fibrous black seeds. This green pod is known as an infructescence, and it grows in a tree’s place of origin and serves as home to its seeds.<\/p>\n

These infructescences remain firmly attached to the tree branches until they become ripe with seeds, a process that typically takes a few weeks or up to summer’s end. Depending on the climate, fruits can form from the infructescence of one or more flowers within the same group. They range from one to three centimeters in length and turn from green to yellow or red.<\/p>\n

Gently snipping at the ripe infructescence yields black seeds the size of small grains of sand. Once opened, the individual black seeds may be sowed or eaten as a particularly sweet snack. But these infructescences serve another, equally important purpose.<\/p>\n