How Seeds Travel

A free interactive lesson on seed dispersal for Class 5 — how plants use wind, water, animals, and explosive pods to scatter seeds far from the parent plant, preventing competition and colonising new ground. Based on NCERT Class 5. Includes quiz.

Class 5 ScienceClass 5 / Grade 5Ages 7–10
Lesson
🌬️ How Seeds Travel
Seeds travel — so plants can spread.🌬️Wind💧Water🐦Animals💥Explosion👟HooksIf seeds stayed under the parent plant, they'd compete and starve.

If all the seeds from a mango tree fell straight down, hundreds of seedlings would grow right under the parent tree, competing for the same water, light, and nutrients. Most would die. Plants have evolved clever ways to send their seeds away — using wind, water, animals, and even explosions.

Why do plants disperse seeds?

If all seeds fell directly below the parent plant, they would compete with each other and with the parent for light, water, and nutrients. Seed dispersal spreads seeds to new locations where they have more space, resources, and a chance to establish without competition. Some seeds travel just a few metres; others cross oceans.

Dispersal by wind

Wind-dispersed seeds are lightweight and often have special structures to catch air:

  • Dandelion — each seed is attached to a feathery parachute (pappus) that can carry it kilometres in a breeze.
  • Maple — seeds have a single wing that spins like a helicopter rotor, slowing their fall and allowing the wind to carry them sideways.
  • Cotton, willow — seeds have fluffy fibres that act like balloons.

Dispersal by water

Water-dispersed seeds are waterproof, buoyant, and resistant to salt damage. The coconut is the classic example — its fibrous husk is full of air pockets that keep it afloat, and the outer shell is watertight. Coconuts can float for months across oceans, germinating on distant beaches. Mangroves, water lilies, and many rainforest plants also use water dispersal.

Dispersal by animals

Animals disperse seeds in three ways:

  • Eaten and passed out — juicy fruits attract animals; seeds pass through the digestive system undamaged and are deposited elsewhere in faeces.
  • Hooked onto fur or clothing — burdock, goosegrass, and many others have barbed seeds that cling to fur or clothing and are carried away.
  • Buried and forgotten — squirrels bury acorns as food stores but often forget some, which then germinate into oak trees.

Explosive dispersal

Some plants fire their seeds like catapults. As a pea pod dries in the sun, the two sides of the pod contract at different rates, building tension until the pod splits explosively, flinging seeds up to 2 metres. The touch-me-not plant (Impatiens) and squirting cucumber use similar explosive mechanisms. Witch hazel can shoot seeds up to 10 metres.

Frequently asked questions

Why do plants need to disperse their seeds?

To prevent competition — if all seeds fell under the parent plant, they would fight each other for light, water, and nutrients. Dispersal also lets plants colonise new habitats.

How does a dandelion seed travel?

Each dandelion seed is attached to a feathery structure called a pappus that acts like a parachute. Even a light breeze can carry seeds hundreds of metres, and strong winds can take them several kilometres.

Why can coconuts float in the sea?

The coconut's fibrous husk contains air pockets that keep it buoyant. The inner shell is watertight and protects the seed from salt water. Coconuts can float for months across oceans and still germinate on arrival.

How do animals help spread seeds?

Animals spread seeds in three ways: by eating fruits (seeds pass through and are deposited in faeces), by carrying hooked seeds on their fur, and by burying seeds like acorns as food stores and forgetting some.

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