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1) Pollen sticks to animal or released into wind
1) Pollen sticks to animal or released into wind

... • Seed grows and stores food – 2nd year: • grows more… • makes flowers & seeds… • dies ...
Callery Pear (Bradford Pear) - Missouri Department of Conservation
Callery Pear (Bradford Pear) - Missouri Department of Conservation

... broadens and reaches heights of 30–50 feet. The bark is typically light gray. Alternate, simple, oval leaves grow to 3 inches long and 2 inches wide. The Bradford cultivar is without thorns, however, plants that have crossed with other cultivars may develop thorns. The glossy dark green leaves turn ...
Wildflowers Brochure... - South Yuba River State Park
Wildflowers Brochure... - South Yuba River State Park

... Funnel-shaped flower, 6 long flared petals, open cluster, tall stem Numerous white and purple flowers in tiers, pagoda style Daisy-like, many blue lavender to pink rays, yellow disks 5 small blue-violet petals with white, yellow tube, dark center Round head, many tiny white/pale blue-violet flowers, ...
White Licorice Rose
White Licorice Rose

... Planting & Growing White Licorice Rose will grow to be about 3 feet tall at maturity, with a spread of 3 feet. It tends to fill out right to the ground and therefore doesn't necessarily require facer plants in front. It grows at a fast rate, and under ideal conditions can be expected to live for ap ...
Fact Sheet: Giant Hogweed
Fact Sheet: Giant Hogweed

... leaves for the first few years of its life. The large leaves shade out competing vegetation (including other hogweed seedlings) and ‘feed’ the growing taproot. Several years after germination, it produces a flowering stalk and then dies after flowering and seed set (it is monocarpic). It forms a den ...
Plants: An Introduction
Plants: An Introduction

... A cycad’s seed-bearing cone ...
White Licorice Rose - Holcomb Garden Center
White Licorice Rose - Holcomb Garden Center

... Planting & Growing White Licorice Rose will grow to be about 3 feet tall at maturity, with a spread of 3 feet. It tends to fill out right to the ground and therefore doesn't necessarily require facer plants in front. It grows at a fast rate, and under ideal conditions can be expected to live for ap ...
Common foods and plant parts
Common foods and plant parts

... discuss what is meant by ‘fruit’ and ‘vegetable’. To a botanist, a fruit is part of a flower that develops to protect seeds – that includes pumpkins, chillies and cucumbers, but you won’t find those in the fruit section of the supermarket. Botanists classify plant parts by their functions more than ...
SUBGENUS: DASANTHERA
SUBGENUS: DASANTHERA

... Cultivation needs southern desert penstemons, or any penstemon blooming in February, March, or April need warm weather prior to bloom date and order to have enough growth to bloom; thus for those growing these species under cover, the cover should not be removed prematurely Ease of cultivation 2 -fe ...
Answers to Mastering Concepts Questions - McGraw
Answers to Mastering Concepts Questions - McGraw

... Bryophytes such as mosses lack vascular tissue and produce swimming sperm. Seedless vascular plants such as ferns have vascular tissue and produce swimming sperm. Gymnosperms such as pine trees have vascular tissue, pollen grains, and seeds but do not produce flowers or fruits. Angiosperms such as b ...
From Seed to Shining Seed
From Seed to Shining Seed

... and nutrients, and store food rosulate – leaf arrangement in which leaves are attached around the base of the stem seed – the body produced by reproduction in most plants that contains the embryo and produces a new individual sexual reproduction – natural process by which some plants and animals pro ...
Flower beds: getting started - Miami
Flower beds: getting started - Miami

... bedding plant can be expected to last will depend largely on the weather – an unusually cool start to  spring could extend the life of impatiens, kalanchoes and pelargoniums while a late start to the rainy  season could prolong the usefulness of wax begonias, blanket flowers and blue sage.     Color ...
Section 1-Maggie-final_AM
Section 1-Maggie-final_AM

... This species has smooth pale green to mottled bark; numerous thin pencil-like pneumatophores or aerial roots, protrude through the mud. The leaves are opposite, narrowly lanceolate to lanceolate usually with a distinct yellowish tinge. Undersurface appear white or silvery, salt glands present on bot ...
Biology 2201 Unit 2
Biology 2201 Unit 2

... The young tadpoles that hatch look very different from adults. They contain gills for respiring and have a tail for swimming. Older tadpoles start to develop legs. Young frogs have well-developed legs and has ...
species, and suggested it to affinity because peculiar finely (Fig. 2d
species, and suggested it to affinity because peculiar finely (Fig. 2d

... habit, but the type (in L) is in bad and almost sterile condition. It ...
Life of Plants
Life of Plants

... Each group member should empty their pieces on their desk and try to place the steps in the life cycle of a flowering plant in order. Once each group member is finished they should check theirs with other group members. If there are differences use your book to correct the problem as a group. ...
Plants: An Introduction
Plants: An Introduction

... A cycad’s seed-bearing cone ...
# 2 Bissap
# 2 Bissap

... sorrel in the West Indies and bissap in Senegal) are grown in the tropics for their flowers, used for traditional culinary and medicinal purposes, while fibres extracted from the stems can be used as a substitute for jute. It takes around 6 months for the plant to produce flowers and farmers then ha ...
The Life Cycle of Angiosperms
The Life Cycle of Angiosperms

... Each microspore develop into a pollen grain. Immature male gametophytes are contained within pollen grains. ...
Nerve activates contraction
Nerve activates contraction

... • Carpals are female sporophylls that produce megaspores and their products, female gametophytes. • At the tip of the carpal is a sticky stigma that receives pollen. • A style leads to the ovary at the base of the carpal. • Ovules and, later, seeds are protected within the ovary. Copyright © 2002 Pe ...
I. Flower Structure
I. Flower Structure

... sepals of a flower constitute the calyx. Aside from photosynthesis, the major function appears to be protection of the flower parts during early development. Petals are attached above (inside) the sepals on the receptacle. They are usually larger than the sepals, brightly colored, and rather leaf-li ...
Product Information
Product Information

... Perennial plant with a cylindrical rhizome, with ground level leaves that all sprout from the same point on the stalk, in a radial configuration. There are a large number of leaves, they are serrate and spatulate. A 15 cm stalk emerges from the centre of the plant, which holds what is commonly calle ...
Chapter 31
Chapter 31

... • Woody plants usually preceeded the herbs, vines, and climbers • Perennials gave rise to biennials…and annuals have derived from both perennials & biennials • Dicots are considered ______ primitive than monocots ...
Allium neapolitanum Cirillo, NAPLES GARLIC, DAFFODIL GARLIC
Allium neapolitanum Cirillo, NAPLES GARLIC, DAFFODIL GARLIC

... sheathing; sheath closed, barely extending above soil surface, persistent; blade lanceolatelinear, 8−100 mm long, keeled below midpoint, entire to minutely dentate on margins, parallel-veined. Inflorescence: umbel-like, flat-topped, 6–25-flowered, at least 1/2 flowers open at once, bracteate, glabro ...
seed coat
seed coat

... • 3 classes of floral organ identity genes specify 4 organ types 1. Class A genes alone – Sepals 2. Class A and B genes together – Petals 3. Class B and C genes together – Stamens 4. Class C genes alone – Carpels • When any one class is missing, aberrant floral organs occur in predictable positions ...
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Flower



A flower, sometimes known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproductive structure found in flowering plants (plants of the division Magnoliophyta, also called angiosperms). The biological function of a flower is to effect reproduction, usually by providing a mechanism for the union of sperm with eggs. Flowers may facilitate outcrossing (fusion of sperm and eggs from different individuals in a population) or allow selfing (fusion of sperm and egg from the same flower). Some flowers produce diaspores without fertilization (parthenocarpy). Flowers contain sporangia and are the site where gametophytes develop. Flowers give rise to fruit and seeds. Many flowers have evolved to be attractive to animals, so as to cause them to be vectors for the transfer of pollen.In addition to facilitating the reproduction of flowering plants, flowers have long been admired and used by humans to beautify their environment, and also as objects of romance, ritual, religion, medicine and as a source of food.
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