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Carrots reproduce from
A. Modified stems
B. Modified roots
C. Modified leaves
D. Modified seeds

Answer
VerifiedVerified
458.7k+ views
Hint: The carrots are a biennial plant, which means that the life cycle of the plant takes two years for completion. In the first year of the life cycle, the embryo within a seed develops into the mature plant. If the carrot plant is allowed to winter, it will produce flowers upon growth the next spring.

Complete answer: The carrots reproduce through seeds. The carrot is an outcrossing, insect-pollinated diploid species. It typically does not flower during the vegetative phase of its life cycle when the stage root forms and grows for 60 to 150 days depending upon the environment and genotype. In the early plant growth, it is slow as seedlings are established but then the growth is rapid until interplant competition and seasonal climatic changes to suboptimal temperature limit growth. The planting density of the carrots is dependent on crop use. Same as the potatoes and other root vegetables, these are not grown from the tubers or the rhizomes. The carrots are cold or the late-season crop and it grows best in the temperate environments. The carrots are essentially self-reproducing plants. They grow shaped flowers to produce the seeds to release those seeds to grow somewhere else.
Therefore, the correct answer is option D.

Note: Once the seeds of carrot are planted, they germinate within two weeks. They require soft, pH neutral soil to develop a long and healthy taproot. The transplanting carrot seedling allows planting of carrots at the best temperature for optimal growth.