2. Why do you think these fruit trees grow in those particular regions?
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Explanation:
Plant adapt, or evolve, to grow in particular regions. Tropical plant need it warm all the time, some plants evolved where there is winter. Whether they produce fruits that humans like to eat is just coincidence. There are fruit-producing plants that humans like to eat that grow in all but the polar regions.
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Because growth of fruit trees is influenced by environmental factors, consumer demand for products, labor availability, and technological advancements, various fruit trees are grown in different geographical areas.
- Climate and favorable topography of the soil both have a big impact on the crops that can be cultivated there.
- The capacity of a tree species to obtain sunlight, water, nutrients, and air in a certain climate determines the tree's development.
- Each species of fruit tree has evolved over time to have a distinct growth and reproductive advantage for a distinct range of climatic and soil conditions.
- Tropical fruit plants, for instance, outcompete any trees that set aside energy to become cold hardy since they do not invest energy on that process.
- A tropical fruit tree planted in a region where freezing temperatures are common will, on the other hand, grow very tall during the summer and perish from the first frost, but slower-growing trees that invested energy in winter hardiness will survive.
- Similar adaptations happen in low-humidity and high-humidity regions, summer rain and summer drought, and a variety of soil types and nutrient availability.
- Hence, different fruit trees grow in particular regions only.
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