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Budding Botanist Activity
Budding Botanist Activity

... to another branch, or prune a branch from the trunk, you are thinning. This can actually encourage growth throughout the tree and can help with better air circulation, improved sunlight penetration, and less wind resistance. Never remove several branches from a single plant (unless you are an experi ...
ANGIOSPERMS “flowering plants”
ANGIOSPERMS “flowering plants”

... -grow in moist, shady areas • Explain how guard cells function and regulate the size of a stoma. - by opening and closing stoma they regulate water loss ...
Plant parts
Plant parts

...  An onion is a bulb – a special underground stem surrounded by modified leaves. It is for vegetative reproduction.  Ginger is an underground stem called a rhizome, used for vegetative reproduction.  A leek looks like a white stem with green leaves at the top, but everything that you see is leaves ...
PLANTS
PLANTS

... • The two sperm in each pollen grain go down pollen tube that grows from stigma to ovary. • One sperm fertilizes egg which develops into embryo (becomes new plant). • Other sperm fertilizes two polar nuclei to form endosperm, which supplies energy and nutrients to embryo. ...
Roots and Shoots: Plant Part Yoga JK/SK Facilitator Notes Objective
Roots and Shoots: Plant Part Yoga JK/SK Facilitator Notes Objective

... Use the “Call and Repeat” method where you sing the line first, and then the students copy. You know that trees have branches, (arms up like branches) to show the sun their leaves, (fingers waving like leaves) You know that trees have flowers, (palms together, fingers out like a flower) ‘cause they ...
AP Biology, Chapter 38 Angiosperm Reproduction and
AP Biology, Chapter 38 Angiosperm Reproduction and

... 10. From a diagram, identify the following structures of a seed and recall a function for each: seed coat, embryo, hypocotyl, radicle, epicotyl, plumule, endosperm, and cotyledon. See diagram, 9th edition, page 808 Functions Seed coat: protects and maintains dormancy Embryo: the dormant young sporop ...
Manitoba Poison Centre - Plant Safety
Manitoba Poison Centre - Plant Safety

... Poisonous and non poisonous mushrooms grow side by side. Only a mushroom expert, called a mycologist, can tell the difference. It is dangerous to eat any mushroom that you have found outdoors. Cooking outdoor mushrooms does NOT make them safe to eat. Please note: • Eating even small parts of some mu ...
Topic 1 Plant parts: roots and stems
Topic 1 Plant parts: roots and stems

... stem _________ the branches and leaves. The roots take _________ from the soil. Water travels through _________ in leaves. A 2 Label the roots and stem of this plant. 3 Which arrow shows the way water moves through the plant, A or B? ...
Structure of Plants
Structure of Plants

... 1. Root Hairs • Increase surface area of absorption ...
Structures of Life - BPS Science Weebly
Structures of Life - BPS Science Weebly

... Standard: 1 - Classify plants and animals according to the physical characteristics that they share. Standard: 2 - Identify the structures in plants (leaves, roots, flowers, stem, bark, wood) that are responsible for food production, support, water transport, reproduction, growth, and protection. St ...
Phylum Ginkgophyta
Phylum Ginkgophyta

... • In North America male plants are preferred because the seed flesh (females) has a nauseating odour and is irritating to the skin. ...
1 Plant Characteristics Booklet Student Name
1 Plant Characteristics Booklet Student Name

... Scavenger Hunt! Find an example of a plant that reproduces with spores and glue it in the box below. Find an example of a plant that reproduces with seeds and glue it in the box below. ...
plant - Ontario Poison Centre
plant - Ontario Poison Centre

... Poisonous and non poisonous mushrooms grow side by side. Only a mushroom expert, called a mycologist, can tell the difference. It is dangerous to eat any mushroom that you have found outdoors. Cooking outdoor mushrooms does NOT make them safe to eat. Please note: • Eating even small parts of some mu ...
Plants
Plants

... The male cone is smaller than the female cone and grows in a cluster at the end of a branch. Pollen from these cones can sometimes be seen blowing through the air during the summer. If this pollen reaches the female cone, it will take a full year until the seeds are ripe. When they are ready, the fe ...
Angiosperms - HCC Learning Web
Angiosperms - HCC Learning Web

... BIOL 1407 Review Sheet Plants 1) All plants have apical meristems. These are regions of cells that divide producing longitudinal growth. This allows the plant structures (roots, stems, leaves, etc.) to elongate (primary growth). Increasing the girth of a structure is called secondary growth. p576 2) ...
10B Plant System Interactions
10B Plant System Interactions

... another flower of the same species, that pollen can land on the stigma. From that point, one haploid male nucleus combines with a female nucleus and the other haploid male nucleus combines with a polar nucleus. If successful, an embryo and seed/fruit develop respectively. ...
Care of Holiday Plants  Amaryllis:
Care of Holiday Plants Amaryllis:

... -When watering resumes, place in cool window -As new leaves develop, place in sunny location; water and fertilize regularly ...
Plant Classification Notes
Plant Classification Notes

... A few plants do not have these vessels. These small plants depend on diffusion to carry water from one part to another. ...
Medicinal Wildflowers
Medicinal Wildflowers

... Self Heal is one of the many common wildflowers that traveled to North America from Europe as weeds in the crop seed sacks of early colonists. The whole plant is used as alterative, antibacterial, antiseptic. Weak infusion of the plant is an excellent medicinal eye wash for sties and pinkeye. ...
Horticulture
Horticulture

... varieties of one plant type, which possesses certain traits of each plant type. ...
document
document

... between water molecules. Carbohydrates, produced in leaves by photosynthesis, travel downward in plants in specialized tissue, phloem. • This involves active transport of sugars into phloem cells and water pressure to force substances from cell to cell. ...
Parts of a Plant - China Spring FFA
Parts of a Plant - China Spring FFA

... and water loss • Epidermis – cell layer on the upper and lower sides of a leaf that protects the inner cell layers and contains the guard cells to regulate stomatal opening and closing • Mesophyll – innermost cell layers that contain the palisade parenchyma cells for photosynthesis and the spongy pa ...
Temperate Woodlands and Shrublands
Temperate Woodlands and Shrublands

... more rain than grasslands and deserts, but less than a forested area. There is an average rainfall between 2001000mm per year. Most of it coming in the wet season. ...
Liriope Evergreen Giant
Liriope Evergreen Giant

... shade groundcover gardens, or planted in a group to make a statement in an empty area of the garden. It looks particularly good when planted in rows or used as edging. It can also be grown as a feature plant in a ...
Botanical Adaptations
Botanical Adaptations

... •  allows recombination of gametes (pollen and ovule) to create seeds/fruits and increase variation. •  contains vascular system (tissues) for water and food transport •  xylem – takes water up through plant (like veins) •  phloem – takes food down through plant (like arteries) ...
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Plant morphology



Plant morphology or phytomorphology is the study of the physical form and external structure of plants. This is usually considered distinct from plant anatomy, which is the study of the internal structure of plants, especially at the microscopic level. Plant morphology is useful in the visual identification of plants.
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