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e a e f m si n - Staten Island Orchid Society
e a e f m si n - Staten Island Orchid Society

... is one of our favorite orchids because of ease of growth and the showy display it puts on every Christmas. Even better than that, it follows that December blooming with a slightly lesser one 6-8 weeks after that and can push flushes of flowers throughout the year. Flower color ranges from intense pu ...
Aquatic Plant ID - Killingly Public Schools
Aquatic Plant ID - Killingly Public Schools

... All are easy to grow in water with depth of 4-36 ...
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF RUSCUS HYPOGLOSSUM L. IN
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF RUSCUS HYPOGLOSSUM L. IN

... seed (Fig. 1i). The fruit is a red berry which usually hangs on the fruit stalk till winter, sometimes even till spring. The berry is globular or slightly oblong (1–2 cm in diameter) with one or two seeds (Fig. 1j). Shoots with only one fruit are most frequent (53.8%). The fruits are most often loca ...
Pigeon-Berry (Rivina humilis L.)
Pigeon-Berry (Rivina humilis L.)

... tall in North Texas with smooth (glabrous) leaves that are 1 to 3 inches long. It has an upright habit. PigeonBerry is perennial and deciduous, going dormant over the winter in North Texas. Flowers and Berries: Pigeon-Berry has very small pinkish-white flowers during most of its growing season, that ...
Galinsoga (Galinsoga ciliata)
Galinsoga (Galinsoga ciliata)

... coarsely-toothed, petiolated, and densely covered with hairs on the upper surface. Lower leaves have hairs that primarily occur on the veins. The stems are erect, which can be 60 cm high. They are freelybranched, green, occasionally with maroon-tinges and covered with hairs. ...
Breeding of Brugmansia (Angel`s Trumpet) Rationale
Breeding of Brugmansia (Angel`s Trumpet) Rationale

... 18 cm broad, with an entire or coarsely toothed margin, and are covered with fine hairs. The name Angel's Trumpet refers to the large, pendulous trumpet-shaped flowers, 14–50 cm long and 10–35 cm across at the wide end. They are white, yellow, pink, orange or red, and often have a delicate, attracti ...
Ferns, Gymnosperms, Angiosperms
Ferns, Gymnosperms, Angiosperms

... • Until inoculated with mycorrhizae ...
Giant Reed (ARDO4) Arundo donax
Giant Reed (ARDO4) Arundo donax

... Arundo donax, Poaceae (Grass family) Spread by: Rhizomes (underground stems) and plant fragments. Do not produce viable seeds ...
Viburnum `Pragense`
Viburnum `Pragense`

... ...
2 N - Malibu High School
2 N - Malibu High School

... Example, a new plant grows out of the root or a shoot from an existing plant. Produces only genetically identical offspring since all divisions are by mitosis. Offspring called clones meaning that each is an exact copy of the original organism This method of reproduction is rapid and effective all ...
Classifying Living Things vocab and notes
Classifying Living Things vocab and notes

... Vertebrates are animals that have backbones. This group is further divided into smaller groups: 1) Mammals: warm-blooded; have hair/fur and produce milk for young. Examples: humans, dogs, cats, whales, kangaroos 2) Reptiles: cold-blooded; have thick, dry, scaly skin; live on land. Examples: lizards, ...
CU Walk – Identification of trees
CU Walk – Identification of trees

... Flowers: rare Features similar to grass; unlike grass in having a tough stem Leaf: narrow, alternate, oil glands, no leaf stalk Flowering: 5-6, bottle-brush, red, upright flowers similar to Callistemon viminalis 串錢柳; (except that in C. viminalis, flowers are drooping down & flowering in 4) Fruit: wo ...
Angiosperm Reproduction and Biotechnology
Angiosperm Reproduction and Biotechnology

... similar to that produced by sexually receptive female wasps. This orchid and its wasp pollinators are one example of the amazing ways in which angiosperms (flowering plants) reproduce sexually with spatially distant members of their own species. Sex, however, is not their only means of reproduction. ...
Snyder
Snyder

... • Reduces wildlife habitat and forage • Reduces land values • Depletes soil moisture • Toxicity to horses ...
2009-4 Bat pollination - Bedfordshire Bat Group
2009-4 Bat pollination - Bedfordshire Bat Group

... evolved specialized mechanisms to attract them. Nectar feeding bats are usually slow flying and can be as manoeuverable as a humming bird, hovering as they remove the nectar from the flower. Bats are active at night, so the scent ploy will work. Studies have shown that bat pollinated flowers have su ...
owen BOTANY - Kowenscience.com
owen BOTANY - Kowenscience.com

...  Occurs when a grain of pollen lands on the stigma.  If the pollen is from the right kind of plant, and lands on the flower, the pollen grain will break open and its content produce a tube that grows down through the style into the ovule. ...
Plants
Plants

... known as a seed coat ...
Horticulture
Horticulture

... • Any low growing plant, under 12” tall, that completely covers the ground. • Used in place of grass for large areas (saves labor of mowing) usually planted in mass. Creeping junipers, ivy, monkey grass, etc. Usually very durable plants. ...
Gardens of the Middle Ages
Gardens of the Middle Ages

... during the 15th century several were printed, a notable one being Konrad von Megenberg's Das puch der natur (or Buch der natur, "Book of Nature"). When printed in 1475, it included the first known woodcuts for botanical illustrations. Very few original drawings were prepared for herbals before the 1 ...
Coastal habitats - Wild About Plants
Coastal habitats - Wild About Plants

... Sea Holly has spined, waxy grey-green leaves. It is the spiky leaves that give Sea Holly its common name although it is unrelated to the Holly tree. It is an evergreen plant and has blue flowers that are clustered in a flowerhead. ...
Giant Hogweed *Detected in Michigan*
Giant Hogweed *Detected in Michigan*

... Local Concern: Giant hogweed has the potential to harm humans. Bugwood.org Its sap can cause a severe skin reaction known as photo-dermatitis or photo-sensitivity and damage to the eyes. The skin becomes sensitive to sunlight and may blister when exposed. If you think you may have come in contact wi ...
Bull thistle - Cal-IPC
Bull thistle - Cal-IPC

... flowers bloom. Remove flower heads when feasible, i.e., in small populations. The plant may continue resprouting if the root is left in the ground, so follow-up is important. Mow after the thistles have bolted but before they flower. A second mowing one month later is usually necessary. Thistles mus ...
Study questions - test 2 Excretory systems ch.42 Digestion ch.43
Study questions - test 2 Excretory systems ch.42 Digestion ch.43

... basic setup for simple digestive systems basic setup for mammalian digestive tract... 5) organs, including accessory organs, and what they do… 6) chemical digestion -- study the chart that shows what enzymes are produced, where, and what they do... ...
Rhizogoniaceae
Rhizogoniaceae

... Setae erect, elongate. Capsules erect to cernuous, commonly elongate, often arcuate, short necked, widest at the mouth; operculum ±rostrate. Peristome usually double and well developed. Spores small, globose or ovoid. Rhizogoniaceae comprises eight genera and about 45 species. It is especially diver ...
03_2_SC_Life_Science_T1
03_2_SC_Life_Science_T1

... C. There is abundant plant life but very limited animal life because of weather conditions. D. They support very little marine life because the water is too salty for freshwater organisms and not salty enough for saltwater organisms. 5. Which of these trees keeps its leaves throughout the year in Ge ...
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Plant reproduction



Plant reproduction is the production of new individuals or offspring in plants, which can be accomplished by sexual or asexual reproduction. Sexual reproduction produces offspring by the fusion of gametes, resulting in offspring genetically different from the parent or parents. Asexual reproduction produces new individuals without the fusion of gametes, genetically identical to the parent plants and each other, except when mutations occur. In seed plants, the offspring can be packaged in a protective seed, which is used as an agent of dispersal.
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