“…Many desert plants retain the seeds within the maternal tissue in dry fruits such as capsules or schizocarps, lignified fruits, or dry flowering scape that could detach in parts from the mother plant or shed seeds continuously for many months or even years when enough moisture softens the seed-retaining structure (Martínez-Berdeja et al, 2015). The ability of plants to retain seeds in the mother plant, which allows plants to reduce risk by retaining seed safely within protected maternal structures, is a frequent adaptive mechanism described in Mediterranean (Gutterman, 1994(Gutterman, , 2002Navarro et al, 2009a, b), Asian (Liu et al, 2014;Zhao et al, 2017), and American (Barrera et al, 2020) deserts. Generally, the retention of seeds on the mother plant is associated with seed releases (dispersal) triggered by environmental factors such as fire, drought or wetting (Lamont, 1991).…”