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Plant Class Sp 2010/VIOLACEAE Family Josh T received 25 Feb
Plant Class Sp 2010/VIOLACEAE Family Josh T received 25 Feb

... The Violet Family ...
Plant Cultivation_Fill in the Gaps
Plant Cultivation_Fill in the Gaps

... so plants are able to adapt to their surroundings ...
Fantastic Flowers Pre-visit Package
Fantastic Flowers Pre-visit Package

... spathes (such as skunk cabbage) tubular Tubular, nectaries Large, tough flowers ...
How plants reproduce
How plants reproduce

... fragrant scent, and sweet nectar, all of which attract various insects and birds. They fly from flower to flower and transport sticky pollen on their feet and bodies. The type of reproduction you just learned about is called sexual. It requires female and male parts of plants to reproduce. Some plan ...
Pollination There are two main groups of plants on planet Earth
Pollination There are two main groups of plants on planet Earth

... female part of the flower and it has two main parts; a sticky end called the stigma and a hollow structure called an ovary that holds eggs or ovules. ...
Rosa `Poustinia`
Rosa `Poustinia`

... Leaf colour : shiny, oval and pointy Evergreen : no Leaves : dark green fruits : no ...
Male Parts Anther
Male Parts Anther

... flower, that has the seeds inside and turns into the fruit that we eat. ...
Jacaranda mimosifolia syn. J. acutifolia
Jacaranda mimosifolia syn. J. acutifolia

... ripe, persistent, can cause some litter. CULTURE & USE; Car parks, street tree, parks, gardens, shade, ornamental specimen. PRUNING; Formative pruning when young to develop a strong central leader is required. Lower branches should be removed when young to reduce scarring. If pruned incorrectly once ...
Mimulus ringens
Mimulus ringens

... Wetland Indicator Status: OBL Native ...
HESPERALOE PARVIFLORA RED YUCCA
HESPERALOE PARVIFLORA RED YUCCA

... HESPERALOE PARVIFLORA RED YUCCA ...
vegetative organs - NWIC Blogs
vegetative organs - NWIC Blogs

... stems ...
ppt
ppt

... and advertising the location with large colorful petals, pollinators learn to visit flowers for food – and they “trapline”, going from flower to flower. Pollen transport is much more efficient than wind dispersal; less pollen is needed (but there are additional costs of flower ad nectar production. ...
5 Reproduction in Plants
5 Reproduction in Plants

... stamen. Some grains are blown away by the wind. Some become attached to birds and insects. When pollen grains land on another flower of the same kind they attach to the sticky part of the pistil. Reproduction is about to begin. The pollen grain sprouts a long tube which grows down the pistil into th ...
Plants Power Point
Plants Power Point

... spinach are leaves we eat! ...
Basic Plant Structure
Basic Plant Structure

... Bees/Butterflies: Bright color, nectar, scent. They sip nectar, get pollen on coats, transfer pollen from flower to flower ...
Recommended plants adapted to rain gardens in the Pacific
Recommended plants adapted to rain gardens in the Pacific

... Small deciduous tree with clusters of small white flowers in early spring followed by bright red fruit that attracts birds. Its light gray bark is attractive in winter. ...
Part I: Flower Structure and Function
Part I: Flower Structure and Function

... (1) Fill in the Pre-Assessment Survey form individually. Answer true (T), false (F), or don’t know (DK) for every question. It is fine if you do not know the correct answers; answer each question to the best of your current ability. (2) Check answers at the BI 101 website http://science.oregonstate. ...
Section 16.3 - CPO Science
Section 16.3 - CPO Science

... • Flowers are used by plants for one purpose: sexual reproduction. • The flower parts are usually arranged in a ring around the female parts of the flower, called the pistil. ...
Lecture 17
Lecture 17

... Angiosperm flowers • Floral diversity is the hallmark of the angiosperms: how we recognize them and how they find (or are found) and recognize each other for mating purposes • Selective forces for pollination, protection from predation, and eventual dispersal of seeds or fruits have shaped flowers ...
Organisms can be classified into two major groups
Organisms can be classified into two major groups

... • Organisms can be classified into two major groups-plants and animals • Each plant or animal has a unique pattern of growth and development called a life cycle. •  Plants are divided into flowering and non-flowering •  Animals are divided into vertebrates and invertebrates •  Vertebrates include fi ...
Section 3
Section 3

... • Some germinate and some can stay in resting stage for hundreds of years • Seeds only germinate when conditions are right ...
Plant Growth Jeopardy
Plant Growth Jeopardy

... What is the Queen Bee? ...
Queen`s Tears (Billbergia nutans)
Queen`s Tears (Billbergia nutans)

... This Brazilian bromeliad is easy to grow. In the Bay Area it readily forms clumps of bronzegreen leaf rosettes. The leaves have small teeth along the margins. Arching flower stalks carry pink bracts and pendant flowers that have green petals edged with blue. Though in nature this plant is an epiphyt ...
Seeds & Fruit Chapter 6
Seeds & Fruit Chapter 6

... • Green sepals (6) protect the bud before the flower opens. • Petals (1) white, -are highly visible to the insect pollinators. • Male parts -filament (5) and anther (4). Pollen is produced in its anthers • Female parts: stigma (2), style & ovary (7)). • Pollen land on the stigma, forms a pollen tube ...
34. Spring Beauty - Friess Lake School District
34. Spring Beauty - Friess Lake School District

... Ask the Botanist What are the leaves like? The leaves are long, narrow, thick and very rubbery. Each has a midrib, a smooth edge, and narrows to a point. The plant has a pair of opposite leaves and the rest sprout directly from the ground. What type of flowers bloom on this plant? What do the seedpo ...
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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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