The Study of Plants
What is Botany
A large coniferous tree from California
What is a Redwood Tree?
This fruit comes from a climbing cactus
What is Dragon Fruit?
An insect that is responsible for pollinating most everything!
What are Bees?
Purposely creating a new variety by cross-pollinating.
What is Hyredizing?
Plants need these 3 things to live.
Water, Light and Nutrients
I live in the GMS Parking Lot
What is a Sycamore?
This is the standard Dragon fruit found at stores.
What is Vietnamese White?
Flying Mamals
What are Bats?
This is a way of growing plants without using any soil at all. The plants are fed nutrients.
What is hydroponics?
These organizations connect most living plants together
What is Microizal Fungi?
A giant coniferous tree that grows in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
What is a Giant Sequoia?
This Dragon fruit is very sweet and helps vastly speed up digestion.
What is Palora?
This insect ryhmes with Goth
What is a Moth?
What one thing did they grow in Ireland that when it stopped growing caused a famine.
What is a potato?
This is where the "Plant Brains" are thought to be.
What are the root tips?
A largetreeg grown from seed in Kauai and living at GMS.
What is a China Doll Tree?
Dragon fruit flowers are open for ?
What is 12 hours?
These things get in my pants.
What are Ants?
A food production system that couples aquaculture (raising aquatic animals such as fish, crayfish, snails or prawns in tanks) with hydroponics (cultivating plants in water) whereby the nutrient-rich aquaculture water is fed to hydroponically grown plants.
What is Aquaponics?
This plant often called the sensitive or shy plant moves when touched.
What is the mimosa pudica?
This part of the tree produces new wood and bark.
What is the cambium?
Most Dragon fruit plant branches have ? sides?
What is 3?
These pollinators work in large groups but don't fly.
What are Ants?
This underground network of fungi connects trees. This symbiotic system allows for resource sharing, early warning signals, and even interspecies cooperation among trees.
What is the Wood Wide Web?