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Chapter 24 All plants have a life cycle in which the diploid
Chapter 24 All plants have a life cycle in which the diploid

... them to glide away from the parent. Coconuts float in the sea for many weeks, allowing it to reach remote islands. Some seeds sprout rapidly (like beans). Others have a period of dormancy during which the embryo is alive, but not growing. The length depends on the plant species. Environmental factor ...
Plants PowerPoint Notes
Plants PowerPoint Notes

... • When plants developed tube-like structures that could transport water, plants were able to live away from the water’s edge. • These plants are called vascular plants. ...
Helichrysum petiolare | Alpine Nurseries
Helichrysum petiolare | Alpine Nurseries

... Helichrysum petiolare Licorice Plant, ...
Kingdom Plantae
Kingdom Plantae

... Plant Terms and Defining Characteristics • Vascular Systems Vascular systems allow plants to transfer nutrients up and down the plant. They are not found in all plants, but are an important evolutionary step. Usually, water and nutrients are carried up from the roots and sugar is carried down from ...
6-3 Thyme - m7science
6-3 Thyme - m7science

... Surprisingly enough, the dark plants seemed to grow taller even though they weren’t exposed to sunlight and not as healthy in appearance. Both plants grew up to 3 cm. We think that there were too many plants for them to grow healthily and get enough water and nutrients form the soil. The data refute ...
Tradescantia spathacea
Tradescantia spathacea

... grown for their handsome foliage and form rather than their small flowers; thick sword-shaped leaves are held tightly on short stout stems that slowly sucker to form colonies over time; the most common cultivars are two-tone with green upper surfaces and purple or reddish lower surfaces, although ot ...
Plants!!! - Fort Bend ISD
Plants!!! - Fort Bend ISD

... Plants are multicellular Eukaryotes that have cell walls made of cellulose and carry out photosynthesis using green pigments called chlorophyll. ...
basicbotany_tanner
basicbotany_tanner

... season. Winter annuals survive the winter, summer annuals survive the summer. Biennial: A plant the requires two growing seasons to complete its lifecycle. Herbaceous perennial: A non-woody plant that lives for several years. It’s shoots die back every winter. Woody perennial: A tree or shrub ...
08 Big Bid Plants - American Hosta Society
08 Big Bid Plants - American Hosta Society

... Ears. Plant: 9.0" diameter, 5" high. Moundlike with moderate growth rate. Leaf: 2.5" long x 2.0" wide with flat margin.. 8-9 pairs of veins. Medium blue-green, with cream colored streaks. Dull on top, glaucous bloom underneath deeply cupped, nearly round with a cordate base. Scape: 6-7.5" long. Flow ...
MSdoc - Stevens County
MSdoc - Stevens County

... poisonous to humans and livestock  It was the liquid extracted from this plant that Socrates reportedly used to kill himself in 399BC ...
Interiorscaping - Metropolitan Community College
Interiorscaping - Metropolitan Community College

... Swedish Ivy Plectranthus australis White or purple variegation type available 6-8 inches tall White flowers Mint family Native to Australia ...
Section 22–5 Angiosperms—Flowering Plants (pages
Section 22–5 Angiosperms—Flowering Plants (pages

... © Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
Kingdom Plantae - Winston Knoll Collegiate
Kingdom Plantae - Winston Knoll Collegiate

... •Non-vascular land plants that have no specialized conducting tissue. •Spores: Tiny reproductive bodies enclosed in a protective capsule until they find the right conditions to break open and grow. ...
Leaves- a plant`s food factory Photosynthesis
Leaves- a plant`s food factory Photosynthesis

... Leaves- a plant’s food factory Animals are Consumers- we have to eat other things to survive. Plants are Producers- they make their own food using Sunlight, Carbon Dioxide and Water to create the sugar (Glucose) they eat. This is called PHOTOSYNTHESIS. ...
plant packet_ans
plant packet_ans

... 12. What are the three basic types of plant cells?  Parenchyma – loosely packed, used for photosynthesis, storage of water and nutrients and healing  Collenchyma – thicker and uneven, provide support  Sclerenchyma - thick and even, used for support and structure where growth is no longer occurrin ...
Vascular tissue
Vascular tissue

... • support leaves • contain vascular tissue • other specialized functions include: – water storage; eg. cactus – sugar / starch storage; eg. onion, white potato ...
Features of Land Plants
Features of Land Plants

...  Photosynthesis, storage and support ...
Catchweed bedstraw Galium aparine L.
Catchweed bedstraw Galium aparine L.

... General description: Mat forming or ascending stems; stems are square with backward turning bristles that allow the plant to cling to other plants and objects. Leaves are narrow, sessile, oval to lanceolate, in whorls of 4 to 8 at each node, with spiny hairs on lower midrib. Flowers are small with 4 ...
Warm-Up
Warm-Up

... relatively rapid & reversible responses  Venus fly trap, mimosa leaves, “sleep” movement ...
2 - Capital High School
2 - Capital High School

...  Parenchyma = thin cell walls, contain a large vacuole, in leaves have chloroplasts  Collenchyma = thicker cell walls (make up “strings” of celery  Sclerenchyma = thickest cell walls – nutshells, seed coats Where do plants grow????  _______________ = regions of cells in which mitosis produces ne ...
Getting to know plants
Getting to know plants

... Q3 Differentiate between Climbers and Creepers A Climbers Creepers Small plants with very soft stem which needs support on neighbouring structures and climb up ...
G
G

... Q3 Differentiate between Climbers and Creepers A Climbers Creepers Small plants with very soft stem which needs support on neighbouring structures and climb up ...
Topic 1 Plant morphology
Topic 1 Plant morphology

... In order to recognise plants, you need to become better acquainted with terminology which will allow you to describe and documents plant parts such as leaves. The words used are part of the universal botanical language that you are starting to learn and these words are understood by all botanists an ...
notes - Southington Public Schools
notes - Southington Public Schools

... Plant Diversity Plants are grouped according to major characteristics. ...
Glossary - Veggie U
Glossary - Veggie U

... sepals- one of the separate green parts that form the calyx of the flower serving size- a portion of food used in reference to a nutrition label silt- fine sand carried by moving water and deposited as sediment ...
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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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