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Topic 9 - Plant Science IB Biology HL
Topic 9 - Plant Science IB Biology HL

... (most extant specimens small—some extinct species very large) • Most living plant species are in this group • Seeds contain an embryo, a supply of nutrients, and a protective outer coat • Have extensive vascular tissue and include some of the world’s largest and oldest organisms ...
Life Science – Grade 3 Plant Structure and Function
Life Science – Grade 3 Plant Structure and Function

... of it is that plants use sunlight to make sugar from Carbon dioxide and Water. Plants use sunlight for energy in a similar way that we use heat to change a cake batter into a cake (or sugar cookie batter into a sugar cookie) Leaves contain structures in their cells called chloroplasts. Chloroplasts ...
Tuning In To Living Organisms
Tuning In To Living Organisms

... The archaea are no different in macroscopic views than bacteria. And while both are only possibly visible en masse, the bacteria are unlikely to be observed even if we took samples and tried to culture them. These organisms have a metabolism evolved for extreme temperatures, salinity, or oxygen depr ...
identification of injurious weeds
identification of injurious weeds

... Adult plant: This dock which has a perennial rootstock produces a basal rosette of large, broad, oval to oblong leaves up to 25cm long with a strong central vein and rounded, backward pointing lobes at the base. Flowering is from late June onwards with the stems typically up to 100cm tall but someti ...
Fortissimo Daffodil
Fortissimo Daffodil

... Fortissimo Daffodil will grow to be about 12 inches tall at maturity extending to 18 inches tall with the flowers, with a spread of 8 inches. When grown in masses or used as a bedding plant, individual plants should be spaced approximately 4 inches apart. It grows at a medium rate, and under ideal c ...
Fortissimo Daffodil
Fortissimo Daffodil

... Fortissimo Daffodil will grow to be about 12 inches tall at maturity extending to 18 inches tall with the flowers, with a spread of 8 inches. When grown in masses or used as a bedding plant, individual plants should be spaced approximately 4 inches apart. It grows at a medium rate, and under ideal c ...
Plants We Eat - bowlerschool.net
Plants We Eat - bowlerschool.net

... plants were used to make the crust. How about the toppings? Have an adult help you find the answers online. Were your guesses correct? ...
Plant tissue testing for boron
Plant tissue testing for boron

... • Knowledge of the normal boron sufficiency range in a given crop helps to interpret the analytical results and to diagnose a possible boron deficiency. Plant analysis can be a useful tool in determining the general nutritional status of crops during the growing season. It is used along with soil t ...
October Ariocarpus Terrestrial Bromeliads
October Ariocarpus Terrestrial Bromeliads

... Bromelioideae, Tillandsioideae, and Pitcairnioideae.  The great majority of the terrestrial species are in  the last­named subfamily, though a few are in the other two.  I will mention three from the  Bromelioideae: Acanthostachys strobilacea, which grows on rocks in middling elevations of Brazil,  ...
Seeds to Seedling PowerPoint
Seeds to Seedling PowerPoint

... Shoots will bend and grow upwards, or away, from the surface of the Earth. ...
Name: Form: Date: Teacher: INSTRUCTIONS This workbook forms
Name: Form: Date: Teacher: INSTRUCTIONS This workbook forms

... Native plants prefer soils that are low in phosphorus so be careful not to add too much fertilizer containing this. ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION - 1. PROPAGATION BY RUNNERS (OR STOLONS) The main stem of a plant grows straight up. It gives the plant support. Some plants have other kinds of stems too. They ar ...
White Snakeroot (Eupatorium rugosum Houtt.)
White Snakeroot (Eupatorium rugosum Houtt.)

... Minor, who is said to have discovered an antidote to a commonly used poison in one of the species. Species: rugosum (roo-GO-sum) Means wrinkled. ...
File
File

...  The hypocotyl emerges from the seed coats and pushes its way up through the soil. It is bent in a hairpin shape - the hypocotyl arch - as it grows up. The two cotyledons protect the epicotyl structures - the plumule - from mechanical damage.  Once the hypocotyl arch emerges from the soil, it stra ...
The Bryophytes comprise three groups of plants, the Hepaticae or
The Bryophytes comprise three groups of plants, the Hepaticae or

... They are small (a few centimeters tall) herbaceous (non-woody) plants that absorb water and nutrients mainly through their leaves and harvest carbon dioxide and sunlight to create food by photosynthesis. They differ from vascular plants in lacking waterbearing xylem tracheids or vessels. However the ...
NVCplant labF2016 - Napa Valley College
NVCplant labF2016 - Napa Valley College

... • They are multicellular, having various specialized tissues. • They photosynthesize, using a cell organelle called a chloroplast. • They have adaptations to living on land and have evolved as terrestrial organisms. • Their leaves and other above-ground parts have a cuticle of wax that protects them ...
The Parts of a Plant - Indianapolis Public Schools
The Parts of a Plant - Indianapolis Public Schools

... 2. 3-5.LS.21 Identify the structures in plants (leaves, roots, flowers, stem, bark, wood) that are responsible for food production, support, water transport, reproduction, growth, and protection. Additional Learning Objectives ...
Click here to the file.
Click here to the file.

... a square, woody stem and opposite or whorled leaves. Leaves are lance-shaped, stalkless, and heartshaped or rounded at the base. Plants are usually covered by a downy pubescence. Loosestrife plants grow from four to ten feet high, depending upon conditions, and produce a showy display of magentacolo ...
Standard 3
Standard 3

... A class observes an unknown plant and discovers that the plant’s seeds have only one cotyledon. When the class examines the leaves and the stem, what will they MOST LIKELY find? A parallel veins and a ring of vascular bundles B parallel veins and scattered vascular bundles C a netted arrangement of ...
What`s Wrong with My Peonies? - Johnson County Extension Office
What`s Wrong with My Peonies? - Johnson County Extension Office

... Small, circular, red or purple spots on upper leaf surfaces just before bloom. Later, spots appear on leaf undersides. Spots enlarge and join into irregular blotches that are glossy dark purple on the upper side of the leaf, chestnut brown underneath. This condition is sometimes called “red spot,” “ ...
LESSON 1 – What is a plant? • Know what chlorophyll is. o The
LESSON 1 – What is a plant? • Know what chlorophyll is. o The

... Other seeds are enclosed in a barblike structure that hooks onto fur or clothing and deposited elsewhere.  Water and wind can also disperse seeds. The white part of dandelions contain seeds are are dispersed by the wind when the white portion blows through the air.  Other plants eject their seeds ...
Unit C 4-10 Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science
Unit C 4-10 Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science

... WHST.9-12.7 Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question (including a self-generated question) or solve a problem; narrow or broaden the inquiry when appropriate; synthesize multiple sources on the subject, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigat ...
The Language of the Green Industry (manual E, chapter 1)
The Language of the Green Industry (manual E, chapter 1)

... – Phosphorous—is important for root growth, flowering, and plant vigor. – Potassium—is important for protein production (synthesis), metabolic functions, water relations. ...
Chelone glabra
Chelone glabra

... blossoms  end  with  an  upper  lip  having  two  lobes  and  a  lower  lip  with  three  lobes.     The  lower  lip  protrudes  beyond  the  upper  lip  creating  a  landing  platform  for   bumblebees.    Only  bees  with  long ...
Plant Disorders Reference guide
Plant Disorders Reference guide

... For larger trees or trees that have several nests, a spray may be needed. Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) and a number of chemical insecticides are effective against these caterpillars. If an insecticide application is made, it should be made when the larvae are small and easiest to control, not when th ...
Unit 14 Plants Introduction and Evolution Notes
Unit 14 Plants Introduction and Evolution Notes

... Life on land has advantages as well as challenges A filamentous Green Alga floating in a pond doesn’t need to conserve water. The alga is completely immersed in a bath of water and dissolved nutrients. It can absorb these directly into its cells. For most land plants, the only available supply of wa ...
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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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