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I. Plants in Our Lives Objectives: • Summarize how plants are
I. Plants in Our Lives Objectives: • Summarize how plants are

... d. A pair of specialized cells called guard cells border each stoma. e. Stomata open and close as the guard cells change shape. 4. Reproducing on Land a. In most plants, sperm are enclosed in a structure that keeps them from drying out. b. The structures that contain sperm make up pollen. c. Pollen ...
Hort II 6.0 Plant ID
Hort II 6.0 Plant ID

... especially in winter if room is heated. • Repotting: Repot in spring every year. • Propagation: Divide plants at any time of the year. Sow seeds in spring. ...
Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Kristin Spitz, Amanda Munoz, Caity Graham,
Plant Structure, Growth, and Development Kristin Spitz, Amanda Munoz, Caity Graham,

... A thick, tough covering that consists mainly of cork cells is produced by the cork cambium. The vascular cambium increases in circumference and also lays down successive layers of secondary xylem to its interior and secondary phloem to its exterior. The vascular cambium is developed from undifferent ...
SR 47(2) 29-33
SR 47(2) 29-33

... genetically controlled adaptive characteristics. Such characteristics do not allow the physiological properties of plants to be influenced by certain environmental parameters like temperature, light or water, etc. Consequently no biochemical processes of colour change take place in these plant organ ...
ch17
ch17

... superficially similar zosterophylls from the same time period,. ...
Laboratory Exercises
Laboratory Exercises

... and CAM competitors, creating an ecological imbalance. Following this assumption, important conclusions could be drawn, such as that essential C4 crops like corn and sugarcane may suffer stiffer competition from ”C3 weeds” worsening the already stressed situation for an ever increasing world-nutriti ...
utf8:Main text Part A.tif
utf8:Main text Part A.tif

... Individual species have their own individual optimal temperatures. Seeds of woody plants in temperate climates often follow a process of stratification. This is a situation where the seed must be subjected to a wet period that is followed by a cold period of several weeks before the seed will germin ...
BSBI 3, 22-27 - BSBI Archive
BSBI 3, 22-27 - BSBI Archive

... The genus Callitriche falls into t,wo sections, Callitriche (EuCaUitriche) and Pseudo~Callitriche, the latter being readily distinguishable by the leaves on each plant, being all of one form, thin and transparent in texture, and lacking stomata, by the flowers arising directly in the leafaxils, with ...
CRESSLEAF GROUNDSEL
CRESSLEAF GROUNDSEL

... compounds that are toxic, primarily to the liver cells. Senecio glabellus is considered nearly as toxic as some of the more troublesome plants in this genus, but fortunately, it does not appear to be very palatable to grazing livestock. The PAs are found in the plant throughout the growing season bu ...
Pseudoscleropodium purum
Pseudoscleropodium purum

... Identification This is one of the easiest mosses to recognize in the field. It is a robust, green or yellow-green plant with more or less regularly pinnate shoots to 10 cm or more long, and relatively short branches (the shoots are therefore feather-like). The leaves are erect, loosely appressed and ...
Investigations and Experiments with Wisconsin Fast Plants™
Investigations and Experiments with Wisconsin Fast Plants™

... influence this number? Does position in the pod confer any advantages or disadvantages on a seed? ...
Plant Winged bean 100(12001) Primary essential character No
Plant Winged bean 100(12001) Primary essential character No

... Record using flower on the day of flowering 1:White 2:Light blue 3:Dark blue 4:Light blue purple 5:Dark blue purple 6:Light purple 7:Dark purple ...
Research Article Journal of  Advances in Developmental Research
Research Article Journal of Advances in Developmental Research

... of flowers, called a ‘cyathium’. Cythia clustered in dense, crowded cymes. Involucres stalked, cup shaped, each involucre containing one female flower surrounded by many male flowers, female flowers with pedicel, male flowers sessile, perianth absent, capsule is acutely 3-lobed. This plant is common ...
Botany basics
Botany basics

... envelop a central bud at the tip of the stem. In November, you can cut a tulip or daffodil bulb in half and see all of the flower parts in miniature. After a bulb-producing plant flowers, its phloem transports food reserves from its leaves to the bulb’s scales. When the bulb begins growing in the s ...
Characteristics of Native Plants
Characteristics of Native Plants

... control erosion, such as by limiting soil movement or landslides, by holding the ground in place with their roots. Plants also help clean and filter the water we drink and the air we breathe. Native plants are plants that grow naturally in a place that is best suited for them and not brought in from ...
mycorrhizae-study material-2012
mycorrhizae-study material-2012

... grows into the plant cell, invinating the cell membrane and forming hyphal coils with in the cell. These coils are active for only a few days, after which they lose turgor and degenerate and the nutrient contents are absorbed by the developing Orchid. The fungi participating in the symbiosis are bas ...
Traits shared by charophyceans and land plants The first land plants
Traits shared by charophyceans and land plants The first land plants

... (“non-vascular” plants) 1. Traits shared by land plants, and lacking in the charophyceans 2. The earliest land plants: bryophytes (mosses, liverworts, hornworts) ...
Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
Kalanchoe blossfeldiana

... orange & red cultivars • Now there is also pink, yellow and white • Current cultivars may be hybrids of K. blossfeldiana X K. flammea and other species ...
Culinary Herbs for Illinois Gardens
Culinary Herbs for Illinois Gardens

... cilantro, and coriander. It grows 1 to 2 feet tall and has young leaves that are oval and toothed, while the mature leaves are feathery. The leaves are pungent, combining the flavors of sage and citrus. The small, pinkish-white flowers occur in flat, umbrella-like clusters at the stem ends. Actually ...
A Review on Euphorbia neriifolia (Sehund)
A Review on Euphorbia neriifolia (Sehund)

... acrid, milky juice is internally a purgative and externally it has rubefacient properties. As drastic purgative it is given in combination with other medicines such as chebulic myrobalan, longpepper, trivrit root and which are kept steeped in it in cases of ascites, anasarca and tympanitis. The juic ...
Key for Identifying Common Species of Nightshades
Key for Identifying Common Species of Nightshades

... and deeply lobed which are oblong to long with stalks 1/3 to 2/3 as long as the leaf triangular and widely angled. blades. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Flowers: Star shaped; white or faint purple with ...
D. Rosa majalis (Cinnamon Rose)
D. Rosa majalis (Cinnamon Rose)

... E Glands 14. These structures are present in all plant parts, they vary in form (may be branchy, sack- and tube-like), can contain balsams, resins, crystals and so on. What are these structures? A *secretory cells B nectaries C hidatodes D receptacles E laticifers 15. While plants of Lamiaceae famil ...
Medicinal Plants
Medicinal Plants

... Need of Conservation & Cultivation of Medicinal Plants by everyone ...
lecture notes - Fountain University, Osogbo
lecture notes - Fountain University, Osogbo

... Further, the spices with the most potent antimicrobial activity tend to be selected In all cultures vegetables are spiced less than meat, presumably because they are more resistant to spoilage. Angiosperms (flowering plants) were the original source of most plant medicines. Many of the common weeds ...
Photosynthesis - Sylmar High School
Photosynthesis - Sylmar High School

... Nonvascular Plants - Advent of nourishment of a multicellular embryo within the body of the female plant ...
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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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