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Article 54 Phytolacca dioica Belhambra and octandra Inkberry
Article 54 Phytolacca dioica Belhambra and octandra Inkberry

... On a lighter note we look at some less awful but still threatening invasives by way of change. Our subjects for this instalment are two species of Phytolacca commonly found in our area – many of us will be particularly familiar with P. octandra (Inkberry) which is a very common herbaceous weed along ...
plant diversity ii
plant diversity ii

...  Dicots - vascular bundles arranged in a ring; monocots - scattered. ...
Plants Powerpoint
Plants Powerpoint

...  Dicots - vascular bundles arranged in a ring; monocots - scattered. ...
Reproduction Notes
Reproduction Notes

... A parent organism produces one or more new organisms that are identical to the parent and live independently of the parent ...
Previous Questions - 1999
Previous Questions - 1999

... (4) Helianthus The position of the micropyle' found in an orthotropous ovule are turned down about 160° (degrees) with reference to the funicle. In addition the ovule and embryo sac are curved. Such a type of ovule is called as (1) Anatropous (2) Campylotropous (3) Hemitropous (4) Amphitropous Scale ...
Starting Plants from Seeds
Starting Plants from Seeds

... This is the process of getting the little plants used to the conditions they are going to live in outdoors.  Start the hardening process about two weeks before transplanting. Gradually lower their temperatures and relative humidity.  Reduce water, which causes an accumulation of carbohydrates and ...
All About Plants - Montessori for Everyone
All About Plants - Montessori for Everyone

... Leaves help plants make their own food. Within the leaf is a green material called chlorophyll. Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight to make a natural sugar that the plants uses for food. This process is called photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide is used by the plant, and oxygen is release ...
HERE
HERE

... ____________________ is a type of reproduction in which the genetic materials from two different cells combine, producing an offspring. The female sex cell, an ____, forms in an ovary. The male sex cell, a ______, forms in the testis. During a process called ________, an egg cell and a sperm cell jo ...
Plant parts
Plant parts

...  Potatoes and kūmara look a bit like roots and they grow underground, but they are special stems called tubers. They store nutrients to help a plant survive winter or drought and are a form of vegetative reproduction.  An onion is a bulb – a special underground stem surrounded by modified leaves. ...
BDOL Interactive Chalkboard - Biology with​Mrs. Ellsworth
BDOL Interactive Chalkboard - Biology with​Mrs. Ellsworth

... pollination (sex) is the transfer of the pollen grain from the anther (male part) to the stigma (top of female part).  Depending on the type of flower, the pollen can be carried to the stigma by wind, water, or animals (birds and bees) that are attracted by nectar (sugar water). ...
Viburnum acerifolium – Mapleleaf Viburnum
Viburnum acerifolium – Mapleleaf Viburnum

... eastern  Texas.    Occurs  throughout  Wisconsin,  but  is  more  frequent  in  moderately   dry  forests  of  the  north  and  east  parts  of  the  state.   ...
19. Indiangrass - Friess Lake School District
19. Indiangrass - Friess Lake School District

... The color of the flower is a yellow and maroon. The flowers are produced as a spike on the top of 3 to 7 foot tall flower stalks. Indiangrass produces tight bunches of flowers in clusters that are 10in. long and 3in. wide. Pollen is produced on yellow stamens. What is unusual about the seedpods or s ...
File - Ms. Richards IB Biology HL
File - Ms. Richards IB Biology HL

... • Female gametes are contained in ovules in the ovaries of the flower • Pollen grains are produced by stamens contain the male gametes • The 4 kinds of flower organs, in sequence from the outside to the inside of the flower are the sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels ...
Introduction to Pollinators
Introduction to Pollinators

... to  global  food  webs,  and  to  human  health.    At  least  80%  of  our  world’s  crop  species  require  pollination  to   set seed. An estimated one out of every three bites of food comes to us through the work of animal/insect pollinators. Pollination is the transfer of pollen from a stamen t ...
Plant and fungi review key
Plant and fungi review key

... cells allow them to open and close. They are essential in transport because they also allow for transipiration of water. 11. What is transpiration? Evaporation of water out of stomata 12. What are vascular bundles? Xylem and phloem cells. 13. What are sori? Spore producing structures under the leave ...
Introduction
Introduction

... are extracted for soaps and disinfectants. They also have many medicinal uses, including taxol from Yews, which is used in treating ovarian cancer. Gymnosperms are also very important ecologically as they provide food and shelter for numerous animals and insects. Gymnosperms prevent soil erosion in ...
Key Concepts -- Lecture 9 (cycads, ginkgos, and gnetophytes) IB168
Key Concepts -- Lecture 9 (cycads, ginkgos, and gnetophytes) IB168

... A. Date back to the Jurassic at least, prehistorically a worldwide group with considerable diversity. B. Conifer-like in overall growth form (excurrent branching), and once placed in Taxaceae. C. Leaves highly unusual: fan-shaped, with forked venation, deciduous (unlike most conifers, except e.g., l ...
Climax Community
Climax Community

... which the community modifies the physical environment to eventually establish an ecosystem which is as stable as possible at the site in question. ...
APMeiosis
APMeiosis

... (haploid or diploid; gametophyte or sphorophyte) • Stages where the organism is unicellular, multicellular • Organism specific vocab • Seed Plants, Ferns, Mosses, Fungi ...
Unit 2 Section 4
Unit 2 Section 4

... All trees lose their leaves. Some trees, such as pine and holly, shed some of their leaves year-round so that some leaves are always on the tree. These trees are called evergreen trees. Evergreen trees have leaves adapted to survive throughout the year. The leaves are often covered with a thick cu ...
Solutions - Vanier College
Solutions - Vanier College

... gamete-producing organism. Which of the following statements about alternation of generations is FALSE? a. The haploid and diploid organisms may or may not differ morphologically. b. The haploid and diploid organisms differ genetically. c. Only the haploid organism may also reproduce asexually. d. H ...
Biology 20 Laboratory Plant Diversity and Reproduction OBJECTIVE
Biology 20 Laboratory Plant Diversity and Reproduction OBJECTIVE

... plant kingdom into four informal types: bryophytes (mosses, liverworts, hornworts), seedless vascular plants (ferns, horsetails, club mosses), gymnosperms (conifers or “cone-bearing” trees, including pine, spruce, redwood, juniper and cypress trees), and angiosperms (flowering, “seed-bearing” plants ...
Botany-Fern
Botany-Fern

... Phylum Psilotophyta – The Whisk Ferns ...
Hypericum kalmianum – St. John`s Wort
Hypericum kalmianum – St. John`s Wort

... SITE  REQUIREMENTS:    Rocky  to  sandy  soils  in  relatively  dry  open  woods  to  moist   lakeshore  areas.    Prefers  moist  rich,  calcareous  soil  and  full  sun.   ...
Plant Responses - Madison County Schools
Plant Responses - Madison County Schools

... • So STEMS (shoots) and leaves show negative gravitropism • A plant laying on its side will have the stems grow up toward the sun and the roots grow downward ...
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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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