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Life of Plants
Life of Plants

... _____ A seed develops. _____ The pollinator flies to another flower and brushes against the pistil, leaving pollen on it. _____ A new plant begins to grow. _____ A pollinator flies to a flower to taste its ...
Erigenia bulbosa
Erigenia bulbosa

... Height: Its height is 2-10 inches. Its height increases after flowering. Stem: Its stem is hollow, stout, smooth, longitudinally ridged, erect or reclining, and purplish or red-brown with a light green base. There may be more than 1 stem. Leaves: The leaves do not fully unfold until after the flower ...
wireweed - PGG Wrightson
wireweed - PGG Wrightson

... it tends to be still quite fleshy but once it has gone to seed it dies and dries back into a clump of tough wire-like stems. Wireweed germinates in early spring to early summer. It can easily establish itself in paddocks when the soil is too wet for anything else to grow so it is commonly found in g ...
Section II. 5 Characteristics of Plants
Section II. 5 Characteristics of Plants

... enclosed in a covering called the seed coat, usually with some stored food. • It is the product of the ripened ovule of which occurs after fertilization and some growth within the mother plant. ...
POWER_AND_TECH_files/Unit 11
POWER_AND_TECH_files/Unit 11

...  Asexual propagation is like cloning plants  Having an appropriate rooting medium is ...
Mendel`s Work
Mendel`s Work

... who enjoyed gardening ...
Class IX EXPERIMENT No: 9
Class IX EXPERIMENT No: 9

... The monocot plants can be differentiated from dicot plants by the presence of parallel venation in leaf, narrow leaves, fibrous roots, floral parts in the multiple of 3 and one cotyledon in their seeds. Precautions : ...
Lab 7 - De Anza
Lab 7 - De Anza

... become the seed STAMEN: male parts of the flower: filament and anther Filament: the stalk of the anther Anther: contain pollen sacs that release pollen to the outside of the anthers that brush against insects when they enter the flower. Insects transfer this pollen to the stigma of another flower. T ...
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1357752890.

... B. Cassava C. Mango D.Morning glory ...
SR 49(6) 53-56
SR 49(6) 53-56

... However, the soil needs to be light and airy. The plant likes to grow as a climbing or scrambling vine. The long foliage leaves radiate out in a rosette fashion from a central climbing stem. N. khasiana has two types of pitchers – the lower and the upper. The lower pitchers are up to 12 cm tall and ...
Manitoba Poison Centre - Plant Safety
Manitoba Poison Centre - Plant Safety

... • Some of these plants will not cause serious poisoning unless a large amount is eaten. • Seeds or pits from apples, apricots, cherries, nectarines and peaches are poisonous, but only if eaten in large amounts. Accidentally swallowing a few seeds will not cause illness. ...
BotanyBasics
BotanyBasics

... nutrients inside a protective coat. Seed plants can be divided into two groups. Angiosperms and Gymnosperms. ...
How Catalina Plants Have Adapted to Survive Drought Conditions
How Catalina Plants Have Adapted to Survive Drought Conditions

... (Dudleya hassei) is a great example of a drought tolerant species. It can be found on the Island’s sea-bluffs. Cacti adapted spines, rather than broad leaves, to reduce surface area and, therefore, reduce transpiration. Spines also provide shade and dissipate heat. These adaptations have allowed coa ...
Plant Unit Interactive Notes
Plant Unit Interactive Notes

... is an undeveloped baby plant, or embryo. The embryo is surrounded by food for the new plant to use that that it can begin to grow its first root, stem, and leaves. Seeds can grow into small plants, with roots, stems, leaves, and flowers, when given water and light. ...
Upside Down Fern
Upside Down Fern

... ideal conditions can be expected to live for approximately 15 years. ...
Plant form and function, Powerpoint for March 27.
Plant form and function, Powerpoint for March 27.

... • Usually the meristematic activity causing the elongation of the internodes is most intense at the base of the developing internodes - if elongation of the internodes occurs over a long period, the meristematic base of the internode may be called an intercalary meristem (a meristematic region betwe ...
Smor gas bord, August 10 2010 Ferns Ficus Aloe
Smor gas bord, August 10 2010 Ferns Ficus Aloe

... FERNS, FICUS and ALOE . . . Oh My! Can filling your house with plants make you happier and healthier? Here are some benefits of adding “greens” to your home or office . . . Plants can absorb toxins by increasing humidity which dampens down dust which can help reduce irritation to the eyes and skin. ...
Classifying Plants: Plant Types Teacher`s Guide
Classifying Plants: Plant Types Teacher`s Guide

... tissue? Why do plants need vascular tissue? What types of plants do not have vascular tissue? If we are looking to see if a plant has flowers and do not find any what else can we look for on the plant? (Fruit) What does parallel mean? What does a branching network look like? Clarify any misconceptio ...
HB-23 and 28_plants - Capital High School
HB-23 and 28_plants - Capital High School

... exchange can occur for photosynthesis but not so much that they lose too much water When water is abundant water flows into the leaf. This increases water pressure in the guard cells and opens them. When water is scarce, pressure decreases and the stomata close ...
1 of 20: Name the waxy layer of many leaves to
1 of 20: Name the waxy layer of many leaves to

... Plant Challenge • As a group, quietly discuss each question and agree upon one correct answer. The group with the most correct answers will win. ...
plant - Ontario Poison Centre
plant - Ontario Poison Centre

... • After eating a poisonous mushroom, a person may not become ill for many hours. • Do not wait until the person feels sick to call the Ontario Poison Centre. Helpful hints to prevent mushroom poisoning: • Remove and throw away all mushrooms growing near your home. • Check your lawn for mushrooms bef ...
planting and growing guide - Roberta`s Gardens
planting and growing guide - Roberta`s Gardens

... Roberta’s is a 4th generation family owned business and has been one of the leading commercial exhibitors at flower and garden shows for over 50 years in the U.S. and abroad. We search the globe to find easy-to-grow plants that are unique in themselves or their variety making them nearly impossible ...
Classifying Plants: Plant Types Teacher`s Guide
Classifying Plants: Plant Types Teacher`s Guide

... tissue? Why do plants need vascular tissue? What types of plants do not have vascular tissue? If we are looking to see if a plant has flowers and do not find any what else can we look for on the plant? (Fruit) What does parallel mean? What does a branching network look like? Clarify any misconceptio ...
Dutchman`s Pipe - Sydney Weeds Committees
Dutchman`s Pipe - Sydney Weeds Committees

... on  top  and  paler  bluish  green  underneath,  broad  and  somewhat  heart-­‐shaped  (3-­‐10  cm  long  and  3-­‐ 12  cm  wide).     The  showy  flowers  (about  7.5  cm  long  and  10  cm  across)  are  borne  singly  in  the   ...
Lecture 12 - plant diversity 1
Lecture 12 - plant diversity 1

... 1. Both charophyceans and land plants are • multi-cellular, • eukaryotic, • photoautotrophs. 2. Both have “rosette cellulose-synthesizing complexes” – rose-shaped arrays of proteins that synthesize the cellulose components that make up plant cell walls.  Because all these features are shared betwee ...
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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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