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Botany

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who make their own food and do not depend upon others

2006-10-11 06:10:58 · 6 answers · asked by rozi g 1

2006-10-11 05:43:29 · 7 answers · asked by bibe1998 1

this weed lookes like a mini palm tree leaf. it's spiny and will close when it is touched. filipinos call it "shy" in tagalog. others say it's amor seco, but is saw a picture and it doesn't look familiar. others say it's touchme nots. i do not think thats it either. others say its a weed, which is probably true.

2006-10-10 16:36:05 · 7 answers · asked by J.D. 1

2006-10-10 12:46:58 · 11 answers · asked by barbara c 1

Its for a science project and I'm trying to make them grow faster.

2006-10-10 11:57:14 · 8 answers · asked by hoopla 2

There was some ancient botanist who cultivate a certain plant that would release a certin toxin into the atmosphere and also into the soil that had a chane reaction and would race its chemistry over the entire earth he used it as a warning system for all others of his kind on earth.

2006-10-10 11:26:46 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-10 07:09:17 · 6 answers · asked by prettyqbee07 1

2006-10-10 04:22:35 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

And if they are the same, when should each name be used? Also, for some inexplicable reason I used to think milk thistle belongs to Compositae familiy and just now found it in Wikidepia as Asteraceae. What's right?

2006-10-10 03:25:06 · 5 answers · asked by ignivia 1

Tell me something about it.

2006-10-10 02:23:48 · 21 answers · asked by cucumis_sativus 5

2006-10-09 20:15:30 · 6 answers · asked by Barbara Doll to you 7

2006-10-09 19:56:29 · 28 answers · asked by shail c 1

2006-10-09 17:08:09 · 8 answers · asked by Dan 1

2006-10-09 12:58:14 · 6 answers · asked by bobross509 1

2006-10-09 12:51:50 · 4 answers · asked by juju6479 1

2006-10-09 12:19:20 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

Tried every site I could think of and am out of ideas.

Thanks for any possible help.

2006-10-09 11:10:48 · 2 answers · asked by sensfan19 1

In species that exist as separate male- and female plants, presumably the pollen will come from the male plant, while the seed will develop in the female plant. How can this seed coming from the same female plant develop in separate male- and female plants?
I can see 2 possibilties:
1.
The female flower produces both male- and female seeds. If so, what causes the differentiation between those two kinds of seed, when they develop in the female plant?
2.
The female plant makes only one type of seed that differentiates in male- and female plants only after germination. If so, what causes this differentiation?

Which of these 2 is the right answer?

Louis Harmsen

2006-10-09 08:01:26 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

I posed a question last week regarding a large moth as I presumed. The answers came back that moths can't close their wings as I had stated this one had. On checking further sites I realise that closed wings may mean together in a vertical position. This is not what I meant as this one layed its wings down its back. Since then I have found another slightly smaller one, which I have photographed ( against a rule) and it is between 2.5 and 3 inches long (head to wingtip layed down its back). I am no nearer solving what it is and wonder with this clarified info if there are any further answers. The latest one was found on the grass where the previous one was on a car tyre. I put it into a hanging basket where it buried itself deeper and then disappeared overnight.

2006-10-09 07:32:47 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-09 02:34:38 · 6 answers · asked by ishtiaq h 1

Tell me in a way that I never confuse the two again. No copy-pasting please.

2006-10-09 01:31:56 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-09 00:33:25 · 3 answers · asked by lithopman 1

In tropical India

2006-10-09 00:02:15 · 5 answers · asked by kapilbansalagra 4

Tell me please.

2006-10-08 21:33:36 · 5 answers · asked by cucumis_sativus 5

2006-10-08 15:08:27 · 3 answers · asked by dszvxc d 1

2006-10-08 15:07:26 · 5 answers · asked by morgaine3691 2

2006-10-08 09:47:40 · 3 answers · asked by DeborahDel 6

I have to create humus very fast in a vast area of land in tropical INDIA with 1000s of mud hillocks and very highly eroded badlands. I plan to plug water gullies to trap rain water, thus getting shortlived shallow water bodies and grow 'THICK' algae/plankton/reed. Can u suggest strains of these or other plants i can grow here at low cost- for creating humus and making the lands fertile? This is a community project.

2006-10-08 02:00:59 · 1 answers · asked by kapilbansalagra 4

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