This classification of a leaf is characterized by its parallel lines.
What is Monocot?
Monocots have these structures in the stem scattered while dicots have them arranged in a ring.
What are Vascular bundles?
Roots store this nutrient.
What are Carbohydrates?
This hormone is used to regulate fruit ripening.
What is Ethylene?
The process of change in an ecological community as a result of a forest fire.
What is Primary Succession?
This classification of a leaf is characterized by its branching veins.
What is Dicot?
This type of plant has a stem that is non-woody, flexible and bendy.
What is a Herbaceous plant?
These are two different types of roots, taproots and these.
What are Fibrous roots?
This type of farming increases crop yield but decreases biodiversity.
What is Monoculture?
During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are converted to oxygen and this product.
What is sugar or glucose?
The organelle where photosynthesis takes place.
What is Chloroplast?
A stem is composed of three tissue systems: the epidermis, vascular, and this tissue.
What is Ground tissue?
This is the zone that takes place after the meristematic zone where the cells get larger.
What is Zone of Elongation
A gardener wants to increase the flowering of his plant. He will use this growth hormone.
What are Gibberellins?
This theory explains the process by which water molecules are attracted to each other in order to facilitate water flow up a plant's xylem against gravity.
What is Cohesion-Tension theory?
This plant tissue is involved in the exchange of carbon dioxide & water between plants & the atmosphere.
What is Stomata?
This vascular tissue is primarily responsible for the distribution of sugars and nutrients.
What is Phloem?
This part of a root contains parenchyma cells which store nutrients.
What is the Cortex?
This hormone which is used in large amounts is usually defined as the "weed killer".
What is Cytokinin?
The process of water movement through a plant and its evaporation from aerial parts, such as leaves, stems and flowers.
What is Transpiration?
The guard cell is located in this part of the plant.
What is the leaf epidermis?
The primary growth of stems is a result of rapidly dividing cells in this part of the shoot tips.
What is the apical meristem?
In dicot roots, this part of a root produces secondary xylem and phloem.
What is Cambium?
A gardener wants to control the directional growth of a plant. He will remove this end of a stem.
What is the apical meristem?
The majority of photosynthesis takes place in this specific layer of a leaf filled with chloroplasts.
What is Palisade Mesophyll?