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Ch. 5 Plant Hormones
Ch. 5 Plant Hormones

... – It moves away from the light source, accumulating on the darker side – causing growth to occur more quickly at the darkest side – because of the difference in growth rates on the dark side and illuminated side of the shoot, it starts to bend ...
Lithops - CSSA Archives
Lithops - CSSA Archives

... of 5 such subfamilies of the family Aizoaceae. The genus name Lithops was first described by Nicholas Edward Brown (1849-1934) in 1922. He was a herbarium botanist and taxonomist in England. The Lithops name comes from the Greek lithos which means 'stone' and óps which means 'appearance' or 'a face' ...
Plants
Plants

... dioxide and have to let go of oxygen, so they’ve developed special parts to deal with this – Water and minerals: required for photosynthesis and survival, so they’ve evolved structures that limit water loss and increase the intake of water and nutrients upwards from the soil ...
teacher resources: The Basics of Botany
teacher resources: The Basics of Botany

... avoid calling these plants “trees”, because they do not contain wood. Woody trees increase in girth over time, but these plants remain the same width from top to bottom. Therefore, they use roots, leaves and other features to support their height. ...
Learn how to grow Tasty Tomatoes
Learn how to grow Tasty Tomatoes

... good for producing fruit. All-purpose fertilizer will also work, but is not specially formulated for tomatoes. Make sure that you follow all directions when using fertilizer. More is not always a good thing. Pruning Most tomato plants will need some corrective pruning. Don’t worry, this is very easy ...
Plant Hormones
Plant Hormones

... • The main effect of gibberellins in plants is to cause stem elongation and flowering. • Also prominently involved in mobilization of endosperm reserves during early embryo growth and seed germination. ...
PPT as PDF
PPT as PDF

... • Vines types (climbing) • Pods can be yellow or purple in addition to the common green type ...
Wild Blue Indigo Baptisia australis
Wild Blue Indigo Baptisia australis

... late spring and early summer. It requires little maintenance and is quite hardy. The seed pods are popular in flower arrangements, which also contribute to its popularity in cultivation. Several American Indians tribes made use of the plant for a variety of purposes. The Cherokees used it as a sourc ...
Terminology Used in Plant Descriptions
Terminology Used in Plant Descriptions

... sheath, which encircles the stem; a ligule, a ridge of tissue at the top of the sheath, may be present. Small (usually) leaflike structures, the stipules, are often present at each side of the point of leaf attachment. The space described by the angle between the upper side of the leaf attachment an ...
Xanadu Philodendron*
Xanadu Philodendron*

... - General Garden Use - Mass Planting - Container Planting - Hanging Baskets ...
LEAVES
LEAVES

... • External Anatomy • Internal Anatomy • Specialized Leaves ...
Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummondii
Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummondii

... diameter, tough, green, with short unbranched and stellate hairs, the largest with 4−5 arms. Leaves: helically alternate, palmately 3-lobed, long-petiolate, with stipules; stipules 2, attached to stem at base of petiole, spreading, linear, 7−9 × 1 mm, green, becoming reflexed before abscising; petio ...
Plant Timing Responses
Plant Timing Responses

... •Scarification may be done using •Acid or hot water •Abrasion •Passing through the digestive tract of an animal. •Decomposition of seed coat by soil organisms •Fire (in some cases). •Exposure to moist chilling (Stratification). The seed must spend time at or near freezing temperature. This ensures t ...
Russian wheat aphid (RWA) Kevin Wanner The Schutter Diagnostic
Russian wheat aphid (RWA) Kevin Wanner The Schutter Diagnostic

... leaf, and the leaves may not unroll, producing a tube-like appearance. Mild winter and spring conditions may have favored survival of overwintering populations. As the growing season progresses, small grain crops should be monitored for this damaging aphid pest. Leaves infested with RWA may not unro ...
22.5 Plant Hormones and Responses TEKS 10B
22.5 Plant Hormones and Responses TEKS 10B

... 22.5 Plant Hormones and Responses !   Plant hormones regulate plant functions. •  Hormones are chemical messengers. –  produced in one part of an organism –  stimulates or suppresses activity in another part ...
Japanese Climbing Fern - SE-EPPC
Japanese Climbing Fern - SE-EPPC

... WHAT IS JAPANESE CLIMBING FERN? Plant Type: Perennial fern/vine Form/Size: Twining vine, can climb to 90 ft.; Stem is thin, wiry, green, orange or black. Dies back in winter. Forms mats, old stems provide trellis for new growth. Leaves: Fern fronds opposite, triangular, usually twice compound, deepl ...
File
File

... Display Plant Life Cycles Pictures of plants slide #31. Each picture has the common and scientific name of the plant. Students will research or use previous knowledge they may have to determine how long each plant lives. On the wall you will find pictures of several different plants. You are going ...
Sexual and Asexual Reproduction of Plants oVERVIEW
Sexual and Asexual Reproduction of Plants oVERVIEW

... of a flower stigma, it germinates and produces a pollen tube. The pollen tube grows down through the style and into the ovary where it eventually reaches an ovule. During the fertilization process:  one sperm cell from the pollen tube unites with the egg cell in the ovule to form a zygote.  the se ...
Ch.8 - Wikispaces
Ch.8 - Wikispaces

... • The root cap protects the root from injury from rocks as the root grows through the soil • Root hairs grow out of the root’s surface; these tiny hairs can enter the spaces between soil particles, where they absorb water and minerals (root hairs help the plant absorb large amounts of substances; al ...
01463-02.1 Classify Plants
01463-02.1 Classify Plants

... A.Gymnosperm - a botanical group of evergreen plants with generally needle like foliage and usually bearing cones. Ex. pine, juniper, and spruce. B. Angiosperms - a botanical group of evergreen and deciduous plants that produces seeds in ovaries. Ex. oak, holly, and maple C. Monocot - a subdivision ...
Lecture 11, Bot 499H/505 Secondary Growth
Lecture 11, Bot 499H/505 Secondary Growth

... • Many taxa of reproductive structures (see lab manual for drawings of different types) • Pollen types include-bisaccates, monolete and trilete spores • Therefore, this is probably a large group with a lot of diversity and maybe there are several orders of plants involved here. • They all have a sim ...
Full Text Article
Full Text Article

... temperature, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, sweating, cold limbs leading to seizures drop in blood pressure. CONCLUSION This present review gives some phytochemicals as well as brief detailed about the pharmacological formulations of Combretum indicum. The main focus and aim of this review paper is used ...
DanDelion - PGG Wrightson
DanDelion - PGG Wrightson

... Identification Dandelions can be slightly tricky to distinguish from some other similar looking weeds in the paddock, including catsear, hawksbeard and hawkbit (great names aren’t they). Dandelions will grow from a flat rosette of deeply lobed leaves but unlike the above impersonators, there will be ...
Modified Stems - Georgia Organics
Modified Stems - Georgia Organics

... source of energy for living things. Photosynthesis converts light into nutrients that can be used by plants and animals.  Releases oxygen ...
Catasetinae Plant Culture
Catasetinae Plant Culture

... Catasetinae have distinctive growth and rest periods (dormancy). For best plant development, it is important to understand and respect these growth phases. When the plants are in active growth, maintain constant root-zone moisture and fertilize regularly. This is essential to optimizing the developm ...
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Venus flytrap



The Venus flytrap (also referred to as Venus's flytrap or Venus' flytrap), Dionaea muscipula, is a carnivorous plant native to subtropical wetlands on the East Coast of the United States in North Carolina and South Carolina. It catches its prey—chiefly insects and arachnids— with a trapping structure formed by the terminal portion of each of the plant's leaves and is triggered by tiny hairs on their inner surfaces. When an insect or spider crawling along the leaves contacts a hair, the trap closes if a different hair is contacted within twenty seconds of the first strike. The requirement of redundant triggering in this mechanism serves as a safeguard against a waste of energy in trapping objects with no nutritional value.Dionaea is a monotypic genus closely related to the waterwheel plant and sundews, all of which belong to the family Droseraceae.
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