Life Cycle
Plant Parts
Flowers/Fruits
Plant Needs
Seeds
100
All plants begin their life this way.
What is a seed?
100
A straw like structure that brings water up from the roots.
What is the stem?
100
The yellow powdery material in flowers.
What is pollen?
100
A plant needs this liquid just like animals and humans.
What is water?
100
Most seeds need to be surrounded by this for germination to begin.
What is soil?
200
The term for a baby plant.
What is a seedling or sprout?
200
The colorful leaf of a flower that attracts insects.
What is a petal?
200
A structure that once pollinated will develop into fruit and seeds.
What is a flower?
200
It holds a plant upright and gathers nutrients and water from the soil.
What are the roots?
200
The outer protective layer that covers the seed.
What is the seed coat?
300
As a seedling grows and becomes stronger, the young plant develops many of these.
What are leaves?
300
Flattened structures attached to the stem where plants convert sunlight into food.
What are leaves?
300
The best growing season for plants.
What is summer?
300
A process where the leaves gather sunlight and convert it to food for the plant.
What is photosynthesis?
300
A term a farmer uses for planting seeds.
What is sowing?
400
The life cycle ends for annual plants during this season.
What is winter?
400
The stuff that makes plant leaves green.
What is chlorophyll?
400
The flower will do this when the seeds mature and ripen.
What is die?
400
A plant shoot grows upward to meet this need.
What is sunlight?
400
A globular seed that is an underground stem with fleshy leaves emerging from the top and roots out of the bottom. Examples include tulips and onions.
What is a bulb?
500
The plant makes many of these once a flower is pollinated.
What are seeds?
500
The reproductive part of a plant is found here.
What is the flower?
500
Strawberries carry their seeds on this part of the fruit (inside or outside).
What is outside?
500
A term for a plants breathing.
What is transpiration?
500
The movement of seeds away from its parent by sticking to a passing animal, being eaten or blown by the wind.
What is seed dispersal?