Criado por Olivia Gniadek
quase 6 anos atrás
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what are the benefits of seeds
what is the formation from ovule to seed
what is the microgametophyte development process
how do we identify sporophyte and gametophyte in this diagram
what is the formation of an ovule
what is the formation of pollen
what are gymnosperms
what are the names of the 4 gymnosperm phyla
what is an angiosperm
what is the difference between monocots and eudicots
how is an embryo protected in an angiosperm
what are the different fruit types of different plants
what is the floral structure
what is pollination
what are the reproductive features of plants
what is the angiosperm life cycle
how is pollen formed
what is the formation of microgametophytes
what is the formation of the megagametophyte
what is the concept of double fertilisation in plants
how does the ovary in the female stigma attract the pollen tube
how does the endosperm form
in gymnosperms does the food reserve develop regardless whether the egg is fertilised or not? what happens in angiosperms? why is this an advantage
what is a plant organ and what are the three main organs of plants
what is the purpose of the shoots and roots
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what is the purpose of roots
what is the difference between monocot and eudicot roots
where do root hairs occur and what is their purpose?
what are some examples of root modifications
what are stems
what is an example of a stem modification
what are leaves
how can you determine if a leaf is compound or simple
what are some examples of leaf modifications
what are plant cells
plant cell diagram
what are plant cell walls made up of
what is the second wall in plants made up of
what is cellulose
what is lignin
what are the three types of plant tissue
what is the function of the dermal tissues
what is the function of the epidermal cells
what is the guard cell function
what is the function of the trichomes
what is ground tissue
what are vascular tissues
what is the difference between a vessel member and tracheid
What are the three main cell types
what are parenchyma cells
what are collenchyma cells
what are sclerenchyma cells
what is the purpose of a meristem
what how long can plants live for
how can membranes move across membranes
what role does diffusion have in plants
what is passive transport
what is active transport
what role do proton pumps have in plants
what role does water balance have in plants
what is water potential
what is the impact of solutes and cell walls on water potential
what are the two components of water potential
why can't cell walls expand if water enters the cell resulting in the increase in cell pressure
what is transmembrane transport
what is symplastic transport
what is apoplastic transport
how are nutrients transported from soil to roots
how are water and nutrients transported in the epidermis and cortex
how are nutrients delivered into the xylem
what is transpiration
what is root pressure
what is guttation
what is the transpiration-cohesion-tension principle
how do plants regulate transpiration
How does the stomata open and close
how are nutrients transported in the phloem
what is a source
what is a sink
what are plants composed of
where do the nutrients come from
What are the essential elements of plants
What are the most vital macronutrients for plants
where does nitrogen deficiency first show up in plants
where will iron deficiency first show up
what is nitrogen used for
what is the function of nitrogen and plant symbioses
Where does N2 fixing bacteria reside
how do legumes aid in crop rotation
what do carnivorous plants do
what do parasitic plants do
where do carnivorous plants grow
what does the amount of light reaching the plant vary with
what is greening
what is etiolation
what is de-etiolation
how do plants respond to environmental signals
what is the signal transduction pathway
how do plant hormones influence growth
what is tropism
what is phototropism
what is the purpose of auxin
What is gravitropism
what is thigmotropism
what are the major plant hormones
what do auxins and cytokines promote
what is senescence
What do gibberellins do
what are brassinosteroids
what is abscisic acid (ABA)
What is ethylene
what is a phytochrome
what is heat stress
what happens to a plant when it becomes heat stressed
what is the temperature compensation point
what causes photorespiration
what is reradiating
what is conduction
what is convection
what is evaporative cooling
what are the plant adaptations to avoid heat stress
What is HSP
why are the blue mountains of NSW blue