This plant part anchors the plant and absorbs water and minerals from soil.
The roots!
This is the male part of a flower that produces pollen.
Anther!
This is the basic unit of life.
A cell!
This Aussie city is the capital of Australia.
Canberra!
These two reactants are needed for photosynthesis
CO2 and Water!
These are tiny pores in the leaves that control gas exchange and water loss.
Stomata
After fertilisation, the ovule becomes this:
a Seed!
This organelle controls what enters and leaves the cell.
The Cell Membrane!
You flip a fair coin 6 times and get 6 heads. The chance the next flip is heads is?
1/2 or 50%
This gas is produced during photosynthesis.
Oxygen!
This structure inside a leaf contains chlorophyll and is the main site of photosynthesis.
Chloroplast!
This is an advantage of cross-pollination compared to self-pollination.
More genetic variation!
This structure is found in plant cells but not animal cells and provides support.
Cell Wall
This wizarding sport uses flying broomsticks and has goals, a Quaffle, and a Snitch.
Quidditch!
This vascular tissue carries water and minerals upward from roots to leaves.
Xylem!
This plant organ is specialised for reproduction and usually contains both male and female structures.
Flowers!
The process where pollen is moved from the anther to the stigma.
Pollination!
This structure is found in both plant and animal cells and contains DNA that controls the cell’s activities.
The Nucleus!
This is the name of the rival demon boy band in KPOP Demonhunters
The Saja Boys!
This vascular tissue transports sugars (like glucose) from leaves to the rest of the plant
Phloem!
These are the two main types of transport tubes in vascular plants (name both)
Xylem and Phloem!
This is the name of the sticky tip of the carpel where pollen lands and starts growing a pollen tube.
Stigma!
This is the name of the process cells use to make more cells for growth and repair, producing two identical daughter cells.
Mitosis!
This artist released “bad guy” and “Happier Than Ever.
Billie Eilish
This process moves water from the roots up to the leaves through xylem, mainly because water evaporates from leaf stomata.
Transpiration!