A plant that develops flowers and enclosed seeds, in either fruit or a nut.
What is an angiosperm?
What is Botany?
The process of a seed being moved by gravity, air, water, explosion or by animals.
What is seed dispersal?
The process of a plant turning the energy from the sun into sugar.
What is photosynthesis?
This type of garden that very common amongst farmers.
What is in-ground gardening?
A plant without flowers or protected seeds.
What is a gymnosperm?
The first leaf after a seed germinates.
What is a cotyledon?
This pinecone is found in the top of the tree.
What is a female pinecone?
The transport system that brings food and water to the rest of the plant.
What is the phloem?
The type of garden which uses a light mist to water and feed the plants in a tube system.
What is aeroponics?
A plant that has a phloem and xylem.
What is a vascular plant?
The process of a plant from germination to death.
What is the plant life cycle?
This pinecone is found on the bottom of the pine tree, is usually green and thin which spreads pollen.
The two things plants need for photosynthesis.
What are water and Carbon Dioxide?
The type of garden that uses little to no soil and a lot of water.
What is hydroponics?
A plant that has neither a phloem or xylem.
What is a non-vascular plant?
The part of the plant that uptakes water and nutrients beneath the soil.
What are roots?
The endoplasmic that has bumps on it.
What is rough endoplasmic reticulum?
The type of garden we worked on in school.
What are raised beds?
A tree that does not turn brown and keeps its leaves in the winter.
What is an evergreen?
The term used for when the plant first emerges out of the seed.
What is germination?
The part of the plant cell that holds the water and is the biggest organelle in a plant cell.
What is a vacuole?
The man who classified plants and animals by its differences and similarities.
The process of changing crops in the soil from one year to the other.
What is crop rotation?