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Plants: Study Guide Characteristics of Plants Describe the common
Plants: Study Guide Characteristics of Plants Describe the common

... Compare sexual reproduction in seedless and seed plants. Identify the roles of the parts of a flower in reproduction. Plant Responses Identify the types of stimuli that plants respond to. Relate transpiration to a plant’s ability to maintain in internal balance of water. Describe two types of plant ...
Session 3 Reading
Session 3 Reading

... food products of photosynthesis to other parts of the plants. The leaf blade is connected to the stem through a narrowed portion called the petiole, or stalk, which consists mostly of vascular tissue. Appendages called stipules are often present at the base of the petiole. Many specialized forms of ...
Bio13 Plant Kingdom
Bio13 Plant Kingdom

... • Each moss plant is composed of a central stalk less than 5 centimeters tall. • The gametophytes of liverworts and hornworts are flat sheets on a few layers of cells thick. ...
1 0 . A Rose by Any Other Name
1 0 . A Rose by Any Other Name

... When scientists discover a plant that has not been described before, they get to name the plant. Sometimes they name the plant for themselves or for people they admire. Sometimes they name the plant for some unique features that the plant has. Often the location where the first plant of that species ...
IMPORTANT TREE AND SHRUB DISEASES CC Powell Ohio State
IMPORTANT TREE AND SHRUB DISEASES CC Powell Ohio State

... Bacteria comprise a diverse group of single-celled microbes, which cause many diseases of ornamental crops. Common diseases of trees and shrubs include fireblight of crabapples, pears, and other Rosaceous plants; soft rot of cuttings, corms, bulbs, etc.; bacterial leaf spots of English ivy; or crown ...
Sweet Alyssum, Lobularia maritima
Sweet Alyssum, Lobularia maritima

... in partial shade in hot climates. It needs average, well-drained soil with medium moisture. Although it may reseed, it is best to transplant starts in spring for the best flower display (especially in short growing seasons).It is very easy to grow from seed, either sown directly in the garden or ind ...
Biology 101 Flower parts Fall, 2008 Week 3 – Flowers
Biology 101 Flower parts Fall, 2008 Week 3 – Flowers

... Originally isolated from the fungus Gibberrella fujikuroi, there are >110 known gibberellins. GA stimulates extensive growth of intact plants, and influences the transition from juvenile to adult growth, the bolting of biennials, fruit formation, and germination of some cereal grains. Has many remar ...
Aquarium Plants - Ward`s Science
Aquarium Plants - Ward`s Science

... Always wash your hands thoroughly before and after you handle your aquatic plants, or anything it has touched. ...
Aquarium Plants
Aquarium Plants

... Always wash your hands thoroughly before and after you handle your aquatic plants, or anything it has touched. ...
Filicophyta
Filicophyta

... •They comprise the vascular cryptogams. •Cells are organized in real tissues forming the epidermal, conducting (or vascular) and fundamental systems. •Plant are differentiated in a root, serving to anchor and to absorb water and minerals from the soil, a stem, with supporting and conducting function ...
Plant Diversity I
Plant Diversity I

... plants forms a spongy mat that can absorb water Each plant grips the substratum with rhizoids Photosynthesis occurs in the upper parts of plants Cover about 3% of land surface and contain vast amounts of organic carbon ...
Dennstaedtiaceae The Bracken Family
Dennstaedtiaceae The Bracken Family

... Dennstaedtiaceae The Bracken Family Kathy Germann ...
Lab_09_PlantDiversity_Scavenger Hunt
Lab_09_PlantDiversity_Scavenger Hunt

... cells (a relatively slow process), the plant cannot be very thick. Most Bryophytes need to live in moist environments, although they have many adaptations for living in dryer environments. Additionally, the lack of vascular tissue means that Bryophytes do not have the structural support to grow tall ...
Ilex crenata– Japanese Holly (Aquifoliaceae)
Ilex crenata– Japanese Holly (Aquifoliaceae)

... compact form of a rounded or broad rounded outline. -medium to slow growth rate (less than 12" per year) Culture -sun to part shade -prefers light, moist, slightly acid soils, with lots of organic matter. The soil needs to be well-drained, as Japanese Holly does not like overly moist soil. Regular w ...
Classification and Naming of Plants - UNL, Go URL
Classification and Naming of Plants - UNL, Go URL

... names eliminates the potential confusion that occurs when communicating about plants. ...
leaves - SBI3USylviaFall2010
leaves - SBI3USylviaFall2010

... oxygen for carbon dioxide through diffusion. • When stomata are closed the plant conserves water, but can not exchange gases. • Guard cells located on either side of the stomata regulate the opening and closing of the stomata (open in sunlight and high humidity). ...
Citharexylum berlandieri
Citharexylum berlandieri

... small white flower clusters are borne almost throughout summer on short, axillary twigs. Growth is fast in full sun and partial shade is survived. Clay soil is tolerated, as are medium drainage and medium amounts of water. Little maintenance is needed. The shrubs may be pruned or allowed to grow to ...
Ferns and Other Spore-Bearing Plants l 15 14 l The Plant Kingdom
Ferns and Other Spore-Bearing Plants l 15 14 l The Plant Kingdom

... to germinate. Lichens in which the photosynthetic partner is a cyanobacterium bring an additional asset to soil-building because they incorporate or fix atmospheric nitrogen into compounds that plants require for growth (Section 6). Nitrogen fixation by lichens with cyanobacterial symbionts contribu ...
PLANT GROWTH and DEVELOPMENT
PLANT GROWTH and DEVELOPMENT

...  C2H4 – natural product of plant metabolism  Normally in GASEOUS STATE outside plant  DISSOLVED in SOLUTION within plant ...
Gleanings 10-13 - Heart of Jacksonville African Violet Society
Gleanings 10-13 - Heart of Jacksonville African Violet Society

... resemble pine cones and help the plants remain alive during the dry season in the wild. They perform the same function as a tuber or bulb so DO NOT discard the pot if the plant looks dead — it is only resting or dormant. To propagate Eucodonias, I begin by placing a wick in the bottom of the pot, s ...
MONOCOTS versus DICOTS The Two Classes of Flowering Plants
MONOCOTS versus DICOTS The Two Classes of Flowering Plants

... in multiples of four. Other plants have a mix of characters which do not occur together in most other flowering plants. For instance, the Water-lilies (Nymphaeaceae) have reticulate venation in their leaves, and what may be a single cotyledon in the embryo (it is not clear whether it is a single-lo ...
Plant Physiology: Environmental Factors and Photosynthesis
Plant Physiology: Environmental Factors and Photosynthesis

... Photomorphogenesis is defined as the ability of light to regulate plant growth and development, independent of photosynthesis. Plant processes that appear to be photomorphogenic include internode elongation, chlorophyll development, flowering, abscission, lateral bud outgrowth, and root and shoot g ...
Greenhouse Tomato Growers` Glossary
Greenhouse Tomato Growers` Glossary

... alteration for nonprofit educational purposes provided that credit is given to the Mississippi State University Extension Service. Produced by Agricultural Communications. We are an equal opportunity employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to r ...
Growth Pack - Birmingham Botanical Gardens and Glasshouses
Growth Pack - Birmingham Botanical Gardens and Glasshouses

... Find examples of different plant life cycle stages around the glasshouses/grounds and draw them in the correct boxes (Worksheet 4) Find examples of seeds that are dispersed in different ways (Worksheet 5) Link to storytelling e.g. ‘The Tiny Seed’ by Eric Carle Plants Growing in Different Conditions ...
A FLORA OF MANILA nearly white outside, the upper surface of the
A FLORA OF MANILA nearly white outside, the upper surface of the

... 10. S T A U R O G Y N E Wallich Erect herbs with opposite leaves which are entire or nearly so. Inflores­ cence of terminal or axillary spikes or racemes, dense or lax, the bracts leaf­ like, or small and inconspicuous, the bracteoles 2 near the base of the calyx, smaller than the bracts. Sepals 5, ...
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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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