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Oakleaf Hydrangea by Mark Hutchinson
Oakleaf Hydrangea by Mark Hutchinson

... There is no known method of effectively collecting the very small seeds of Hydrangea quercifolia. Softwood cuttings can be rooted by dusting the cutting with root hormone, then removing most of the fully developed leaves, cutting the remaining developed leaves in half. Place the cutting in a potting ...
Link Here
Link Here

... The purpose of this report is to point out some rather interesting variations in characteristics of the Penstemon barrettiae plants from colonies at different sites. Whether the differences are due to the fact that these colonies are separated by a thousand feet in elevation, or because of a touch o ...
Hula Girl Hibiscus
Hula Girl Hibiscus

... Hula Girl Hibiscus will grow to be about 8 feet tall at maturity, with a spread of 5 feet. Although it's not a true annual, this fast-growing plant can be expected to behave as an annual in our climate if left outdoors over the winter, usually needing replacement the following year. This annual bedd ...
A General Appraisal of Leonotis nepetifolia
A General Appraisal of Leonotis nepetifolia

... The plant has been reported to posses the qualities that can regulate periods and can control diarrhoea [32]. Workers have reported the febrifuge properties of L. nepetifolia [33]. The role of paste from plant in controlling the body swelling has also been described by some workers [34]. The decocti ...
Section 1-Maggie-final_AM
Section 1-Maggie-final_AM

... This shrub has flaky bark on the buttressed or flanged trunk. The leathery leaves are yellowish green. The 5-6 recurved sepals resemble spurs, petals white. Propagules ribbed in Ceriops tagal, smooth in Ceriops australis. Flowering June. Sonneratia alba (White-flowered Apple Mangrove, Pornupan – Lyt ...
Purple Pampas Grass Fact Sheet
Purple Pampas Grass Fact Sheet

... Why is Purple Pampas a Pest Plant? Purple Pampas is a hardy, highly invasive grass which can form dense stands of large tussocks and replace native vegetation over a range of habitats, particularly in coastal areas. It favours disturbed ground along streams and road/rail corridors where it can estab ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... – is an innate biological cycle of about 24 hours and – may persist even when an organism is sheltered from environmental cues. ...
Priority weeds for the Tasman Peninsula
Priority weeds for the Tasman Peninsula

... This plant is much smaller and less chunky than blackberry, and bears fruit that are orange/red when ripe. Also, look at the leaves: - blackberry has leaves in groups of 3 or 5 which are palmately divided (ie; all leaf stalks meet at the same place, like fingers on a hand) - native raspberry leaves ...
Word Document - MCHS Science
Word Document - MCHS Science

... Once you've selected the right medium, your first priority is to get roots produced as quickly as possible. The consequences of slow rooting may be death because the cutting must rely on its limited water reserves. Water is required for major chemical reactions in plants which will be shut down in i ...
Mosses and alternative adaptation to life on land
Mosses and alternative adaptation to life on land

... cushion-forming mosses must take place during long, more-or-less continuous moist periods – autumn and winter in western Europe and the wet season at whatever time of year it occurs in other climates. It also underlines why mature cushions of such mosses can survive when transplanted outside the ran ...
Blueberries
Blueberries

... Thyme ~ Very aromatic, minty, tea-like. Uses: Fish, meats, poultry, soups, stocks, vegetables (eggplants, mushrooms, potatoes and summer squash) ...
What does a stem do? Parts of the stem
What does a stem do? Parts of the stem

... Answer: The epidermis is the top and bottom layer of cells on a leaf ...
1 Plantae Life on Earth depends on the ability of plants to capture
1 Plantae Life on Earth depends on the ability of plants to capture

... anchoring structures called rhizoids, they lack true roots, leaves and stems. They are also non-vascular, lacking well-developed structures for conducting water and nutrients. Since they must rely upon slow diffusion or poorly developed tissues for distribution of water and nutrients, their body siz ...
Washingtonia robusta H. Wendl., MEXICAN FAN PALM, SONORAN
Washingtonia robusta H. Wendl., MEXICAN FAN PALM, SONORAN

... Leaves: helically alternate, regularly pleated from a short, stout rachis (costapalmate), deeply palmately split, long-petiolate with an encircling leaf sheath; sheath to 550 mm wide (= stem circumference when leaf developed), reddish brown, fibrous, tapered to petiole, blade splitting from midpoint ...
DROSERA PRAEFOLIA TEPPER: A SPECIES ENDEMIC TO
DROSERA PRAEFOLIA TEPPER: A SPECIES ENDEMIC TO

... The flowers of D. praefolia emerge from the ground one to two weeks after the first cold showers of the autumn. Heavy rain is not required; flowers have appeared after as little as 10 mm in the six weeks prior to their emergence. The.extreme dry conditions of December June 1990 did not appear to aff ...
Growing Lilacs - Cornell Cooperative Extension
Growing Lilacs - Cornell Cooperative Extension

... layers, prune one-third of their original length from all side branches of these rooted layers as soon as you plant them in the nursery bed. As a further measure to prevent water loss, screen the new plants to shade them from the sun. A makeshift screen will do—burlap or other porous material on a s ...
Bridal Veil Astilbe
Bridal Veil Astilbe

... facer plants in front. It grows at a medium rate, and under ideal conditions can be expected to live for approximately 10 years. This perennial does best in partial shade to shade. It requires an evenly moist well-drained soil for optimal growth. It is very fussy about its soil conditions and must h ...
Fungi
Fungi

... translocated from their source location (usually leaves) to the root tissues and then to the fungal partners. In return, the plant gains the use of themycelium's very large surface area to absorb water and mineral nutrients from the soil, thus improving the mineral absorption capabilities of the pla ...
LIfeBootCamp_5.10A_Part 1 - ScienceWilmeth5
LIfeBootCamp_5.10A_Part 1 - ScienceWilmeth5

... Rather slowly over about fifty years Very slowly, taking generations to occur ...
Key to most of the Wisconsin species of Galium (Rubiaceae)
Key to most of the Wisconsin species of Galium (Rubiaceae)

... 11. Corolla not over 2 mm broad (i.e., less than 1 mm long), usually 3-lobed (some flowers sometimes 4lobed), the lobes no longer than wide; nodes glabrous; leaf margins smooth or usually scabrous with short retrorse deltoid barbs. The little retrorse barbules that make the leaf margins scabrous are ...
Plant Sale 2014 Pics - Texas Master Gardeners Association
Plant Sale 2014 Pics - Texas Master Gardeners Association

... The irregular, bright creamy white edges of this succulent tender perennial mint really stand out in hot, summer gardens and containers. It withstands high heat and considerable drought. A member of the mint family (Lamiaceae), it is favored as both a culinary herb and an attractive ornamental. The ...
Plants - OnMyCalendar
Plants - OnMyCalendar

... of tissue that carries water upward from the roots to every part of a plant Phloem transports solutions of nutrients and carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis Lignin is a substance produced by plants that ...
Plant Super Scientist Awards
Plant Super Scientist Awards

... The structure inside the seed that contains the tiny leaves and root ...
Plant Reproduction Bingo
Plant Reproduction Bingo

... Plant Reproduction Bingo • Which objects • Fronds perform photosynthesis in ferns and holds the sporangia on their backside? ...
S L (S )
S L (S )

... Successful seed set defines plant fitness, and as a consequence botanists and plant ecologists have an enduring interest in determining limits to plant reproductive success (see reviews in Bierzychudek, 1981; Willson and Burley, 1983; Wiens, 1984; Haig and Westoby, 1988; Burd, 1994; Larson and Barre ...
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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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