The Alaskan state flower.
What are forget-me-nots?
This wildly popular vegetable is grown underground.
What are potatoes?
This flower shares its name with a part of the eye.
What is an iris?
In this children's book, this insect with a large appetite eats plenty of fruits and vegetables.
What is The Very Hungry Caterpillar?
This part of the plant absorbs water.
What are the roots?
These royal colored berries are found in shrubs all over Alaska.
What are Alaskan/Wild blueberries?
Oranges, lemons, and limes, are all examples of this category of fruit.
What is citrus?
This plant is known for being carnivorous.
When gathering nectar, bees also gather this substance, which they carry over to other plants.
What is pollen?
This part of the plant takes in sunlight energy.
What are leaves?
These white trees, in the Betulaceae family, are one of the Alaskan interior's most populous trees.
What are Birch trees?
There are two round, watery fruits with hard exteriors, but only one of them grows on trees.
A category of animals that only eats plants.
What is a herbivore?
What is three?
Some plants have sharp spikes on their stems, called this.
What are thorns?
This fishy plant is not only edible, but also very delicious!
What are Salmonberries?
This vegetable is also known as an aubergine.
What are Giant Sequoias?
These spotted red insects, despite their name, are beetles, not bugs.
What are ladybugs?
This squash is commonly carved during fall.
What are pumpkins?
This tall Alaska plant has pink flowers, and is named for its rapid colonization of burned areas.
Brussels Sprouts got their name from a city in this country.
What is Belgium?
What is photosynthesis?
Stickbugs, for example, have adapted to blending in to their envoirnment to hide from predators. This tactic is also known as this.
What is camouflage?
This substance is what gives plants their green color.
What is chlorophyll?