Hormone Havoc
The Chop Shop
Post Harvest-Party
Pest & IPM Patrol
Baby Plants
100

This hormone is responsible for "Apical Dominance," meaning it keeps side-buds from growing while the main tip is present

What is Auxin?

100

This is the maximum percentage of a plant’s canopy that should be removed in a single growing season.

What is 1/3 (or 33%)?

100

According to the "Rule of 10," if the temperature increases by 10°C, the rate of deterioration increases by this much.

What is 2 to 3 times?

100

This group of microscopic organisms is the most common cause of plant diseases.

What are Fungi?

100

This propagation method is successful because the "baby" remains attached to the parent plant's water supply.

What is Layering?

200

This gaseous hormone is responsible for fruit ripening and is why "one rotten apple spoils the whole barrel."

What is Ethylene?

200

This 3-step pruning method is used for large limbs to prevent the weight from stripping bark down the trunk.

What is the 3-Cut Method?

200

While most crops need high humidity, these two specific bulb crops require LOW humidity during storage to prevent rot.

What are Onions and Garlic?

200

An insect, such as an aphid or leafhopper, that carries a virus from an infected plant to a healthy one.

What is a Vector?

200

Cuttings planted upside down fail to root because they violate this principle of one-way hormone movement.

What is Polarity?

300

This hormone acts as the "Stress Manager"—it closes stomata during drought and maintains seed dormancy.

What is Abscisic Acid (ABA)?

300

This specific term describes removing the new, immature growth (candles) on pines and spruces to control size.

What is Cinching?

300

This chemical is used commercially to "loosen" fruit from trees to make mechanical harvesting easier.

What is Ethephon?

300

In the Integrated Pest Management (IPM) pyramid, this is the very first and most crucial step to take.

What is Prevention?

300

This chemical test is used to check the viability of dormant seeds by staining respiring tissue red.

What is the TZ (Tetrazolium) Test?

400

This hormone is often sprayed on seedless grapes to increase the size of the fruit and elongate the cluster stems.

What is Gibberellic Acid (GA)?

400

Pruning a formal hedge into a "V-shape" (wider at the top) causes this specific problem at the base of the plant.

What is Shading (causing lower branches to die)?

400

This is the main reason produce is cooled immediately after harvest: to slow down this specific biological process.

What is Respiration?

400

This type of infection occurs when a pathogen attacks plant tissue that is already weakened by another stressor.

What is a Secondary Infection?

400

These are the two ideal storage conditions (temperature and moisture) for ensuring most seeds stay viable.

What are Cool and Dry?

500

Explain the biological mechanism of how "Sucker Punch" prevents water sprouts on a pruned tree.

It provides a synthetic source of Auxin to the wound, mimicking the apical meristem to "trick" lateral buds into staying dormant.

500

Define Rejuvenation Pruning and explain the intended physiological response from the plant.

Cutting a shrub to within 12 inches of the ground to break all apical dominance and force a massive flush of new, juvenile growth.

500

Explain the trade-off between "Shipping Maturity" and "Eating Quality" for commercial fruit growers.

Shipping requires picking fruit immature (firm and durable); however, peak eating quality only occurs at full vine/tree maturity.

500

Why is "treating" a virus in a greenhouse usually impossible, and what is the standard IPM protocol for an infected plant?

There are no curative chemicals for viruses; the protocol is to remove/destroy the infected plant and kill the insect vectors.

500

For a Leaf Cutting to grow into a complete new plant, it must be capable of forming these two adventitious structures.

What are Adventitious Roots and Adventitious Shoots?

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