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PLANT REPRODUCTION AND HOW IT WORKS!
PLANT REPRODUCTION AND HOW IT WORKS!

... mitosis and meiosis. • What type of cells does mitosis create? And meiosis? • Where do you think each process would occur in a flower? ...
Plant Structure and function
Plant Structure and function

... Stigma: Sticky part of the pistil that is receptive to pollen. ...
Plants Study Guide
Plants Study Guide

...  ovary: bottom part of the pistil where seeds form and grow  Describe the different ways plants are pollinated (self-pollination, wind, water, insects, and animals) ...
14.3 Reproduction in flowering plants
14.3 Reproduction in flowering plants

... Investigation 14B Flower Dissection • How does the design of flower help in its pollination? ...
Bullet points regarding Pollinators
Bullet points regarding Pollinators

... pollinated by the wind About 130 million years ago, in what is now SW China, something amazing happened – leaves became flowers! Biodiversity of plants, and new animals appeared also; flowers depended on the animals to distribute their pollen, and animals depended on flowers for food, creating new s ...
EUPHORBIACEAE (Spurge family)
EUPHORBIACEAE (Spurge family)

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cuckooflower fact sheet
cuckooflower fact sheet

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... site of photosynthesis, which produces food for the entire plant. ...
Flowering Rush *Established in Michigan*
Flowering Rush *Established in Michigan*

... Flowering rush out-competes native species for resources and can hinder recreational activities like ...
6 th Grade Science Ms. Koennecke Growing and
6 th Grade Science Ms. Koennecke Growing and

... include the stigma (which is the sticky pollenreceptive part of the pistil) the style (which is the stalk of the pistil down which the pollen tube grows) and the ovary (which contain the ovules and becomes the fruit). The ovule becomes the seeds when sperm cells fertilize the egg cells ...
Plants
Plants

... mitosis and meiosis. • What type of cells does mitosis create? And meiosis? ...
1. Roystonea regia (Kunth) O. F. Cook 大王椰子(王棕) S
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... 1. Roystonea regia (Kunth) O. F. Cook 大王椰子(王棕)                                                                              (Photo 43) Science, II, 12: 479. 1900; FGD 2: 463, fig. 326. 1991; FRPS 13(1): 129. 1991. Large tree, to 30 m tall, dioecious. Stems solitary, to 50 cm in diam., grey-white, sm ...
Chapter h THE AGE OF REPTILES h2 Angiosperms - e
Chapter h THE AGE OF REPTILES h2 Angiosperms - e

... stamens in the third whorl, and carpels in the forth whorl. How the four types of floral organs develop from what would otherwise be leaves, is not fully understood. However, genetic studies using floral homeotic mutants have led to the ABC model of flower development in which: class A genes specify ...
Cymbidium devonianum
Cymbidium devonianum

... Habitat: High altitude 1500 to 2000 meters, The plants grow on trees rocks and steep banks in seasonally wet forest. Description: A medium sized plant with 50cm leaves and up to 20 flowers on a pendulous spike. It can flower from both old and new psuedobulbs and makes an excellent specimen plant. Cu ...
National Flower: Lotus Botanical Name: Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn
National Flower: Lotus Botanical Name: Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn

... Pampos (Punjabi); Ambuja, Kamala, Padma, Pankaja (Sanskrit); Ambal, Tamarai (Tamil); Erra-tamara (Telugu); Nilufer (Urdu). Family: Nelumbonaceae Etymology: The genus name is derived from the Tamil word Nelum, which means blue, and the specific epithet ‘nucifera’ derived from the Latin words, nux (= ...
Emberglow Crocosmia
Emberglow Crocosmia

... Emberglow Crocosmia features showy nodding orange trumpet-shaped flowers with red overtones rising above the foliage from mid to late summer, which emerge from distinctive orange flower buds. The flowers are excellent for cutting. It's attractive textured sword-like leaves remain emerald green in co ...
Flower Reproductive Structures
Flower Reproductive Structures

... Sepals are leaf like structures that surround and protect the flower before it blooms. Color the sepals(F) green. Petals are the colorful part of the flower attracts insects and even other small animals, such as mice, birds, and bats. Color the petals a bright color of your choice. All angiosperms h ...
Flowers
Flowers

... Daisies • Daisy - a name for several common wildflowers of the Asteraceae or Compositae family with bright white petals and darker yellow tubular middle. This is a low European plant, cultivated in the United States mostly in the double form, with heads of white, pink, or red flowers. The English d ...
BRAKELIGHTS RED YUCCA
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... – _____________ spores produced in male ______________ – male spores develop into ______________ _______________, the male ____________________________ – female _________________ develop into female _________________________ that produce ___________________ – sperm from ________________ travel down ...
PARTRIDGEBERRY
PARTRIDGEBERRY

... PARTRIDGEBERRY Mitchella repens This is a low-growing, evergreen plant with creeping stems. The stems root as they grow along the ground so a single plant will grow over a large area. The dark green leaves may have a white pattern of veins. The small flowers are white and produced in pairs. The two ...
Parts of the Flower
Parts of the Flower

... o Some are covered with a protective wall  some spores can wait a long time for the right conditions before they start to grow ...
Busy Bees - Text Complexity Information
Busy Bees - Text Complexity Information

... A scout bee leaves its hive to find food. It needs to find flowers and nectar. A scout looks for a place with lots of flowers. It can visit more than 1,000 flowers in one day! The scout takes nectar and pollen back to the hive. Then it does a dance. This dance is like a map. It tells where the flowe ...
Incomplete - Watermelon.org
Incomplete - Watermelon.org

... a flower. Plants with incomplete flowers are divided into two groups, dioecious or monoecious. Dioecious plants have only male or only female flowers on a single plant. The watermelon is part of the botanical family called Cucurbitaceae. These plants are monoecious – producing both male (staminate) ...
Coryanthes macrantha
Coryanthes macrantha

... Description: Medium sized plant with 45cm leaves and pendant flower stems with 1 to 3 large flowers. This is the famous bucket orchid, a very interesting and scented flower. Cultivation Guidance: This is a challenging plant to grow. At school we grow this species warm (min.150C) in a hanging basket ...
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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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