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Botany

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Botany

If you take seeds from a white snapdragon, will the flowers that follow be white also?

2007-06-22 17:13:36 · 2 answers · asked by portiaraylee 2

i have to write a paper over this, can anyone help me??

2007-06-22 15:21:04 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

Just wondered, on a tree, does it grow on the outside (making the outside of the tree the newest) or from the middle of the trunk (making the middle newest).

It's just the outside looks the oldest but that would mean that it would continuously be being stretched.

Thanks!

2007-06-22 11:40:45 · 12 answers · asked by Oliver B 1

is itpossible for a woman to reproduce asexually????? this isnt a joke. is it possible??

2007-06-22 09:43:08 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-06-22 02:14:39 · 5 answers · asked by Deepak 1

pictures of kinds of
leafs and their classification

2007-06-22 00:48:41 · 1 answers · asked by ngel 1

Is there a website where I can find the thickness of a plant stem? Like its diameter. It's for something I plan to do. I've tried googling, wikiing etc and I still can't find the information I need.
I need to know the thickness of the stem of a tomato plant, pepper, eggplant, cucumber, squash, and watermelon.

2007-06-21 17:18:06 · 1 answers · asked by christigmc 5

2007-06-21 14:29:06 · 6 answers · asked by Octavio 1

just like darwin's origins of species is there any theory how plants originated and gradually changed in to different plants how and why thanks.

2007-06-21 12:40:57 · 4 answers · asked by rpandit108 3

its research for a project so any and all answers are appreciated!

2007-06-21 11:21:10 · 2 answers · asked by ~*These Blue Eyes Tell No Lies*~ 5

I read online 1 bug a week but i don't know if that is one bug per "trap" or 1 bug for the whole plant.I didn't see anything about the watering though.Help!

2007-06-21 10:49:45 · 8 answers · asked by ilikegeckos 1

at least a third of the questions in this section aren't about plants

2007-06-21 07:48:59 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

You know when you look at flowers and the colors are naturally put together beatifully? Or the pattern of an animals fur? Or the combination of colors on a tropical bird or fish? Everything seems to be naturlly put together in good taste.

Where did the concept of tacky come from?
Is it seen in nature?

2007-06-21 07:39:32 · 3 answers · asked by mikey 3

2007-06-21 04:34:45 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous

During the 90 days of spring it grows from a seed to about 1 or 2 feet tall. The leaves are kite-shaped, with the stem attached to the head point of the kite. Each leaf is around 1 or 2 inches long. The main stem has branches, and the leaf stems branch from the branches. They seem randomly spaced, mostly alternating. The leaf edges tend to be concave and serrated, but seem a little random. There have not been any flowers yet, not even buds, so they probably bloom in mid to late summer. It's almost sure to be the kind of plant someone would want in a garden, because the seeds came from garden seeds, but the person who planted them forgot what they were, and says "thought they were marigolds, or maybe tomatoes".

They definitely don't look like marigold plants. They do vaguely resemble tomato plants, but have enough differences to make it clear that they aren't ordinary tomatoes, and probably not tomatoes at all.

2007-06-21 00:02:15 · 5 answers · asked by x4294967296 6

God, said let there be light and there was light
Let's not even pretend we are smart enough to know prehistoric times.
I just took your king, queen and all your pawns.

2007-06-20 15:53:30 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

I'm an Anthurium Leafy (folliage) hobiest, one of my favourite plant had been torn on one of its newly grown leaf, but did not chiped away.
Need to find a special glue which will make the torn parts of the leaf biologically attach and can grow along again. This logically like the latest surgery technology on bonding a patient flesh after having an operation, without sewing them like the old way. The glued flesh will slowly attach and recover like before.
If I can get this some kind of glue that applicable to plantation it surely will help much to repair damaged plants, especially to repair or even re-construct damaged rare plant species.
If someone out there can help, please inform: name of product, place and contact detail of seller, unit price..etc.

Thank you!

2007-06-20 15:36:56 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-06-20 15:23:07 · 5 answers · asked by bergie1963 1

2007-06-20 15:21:16 · 12 answers · asked by reneee! ;] 1

Please give me everything you know about Venus' Flytraps. Even website links work for me. I just need stuff like its habitat, endangrered species level and graphs or something please.

2007-06-20 12:57:50 · 1 answers · asked by cameraman21222 2

and how much does it grow in a day?

2007-06-20 07:37:11 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

Do you think the judgement [1893] that tomato is vegetable is still valid today?

2007-06-20 04:15:12 · 18 answers · asked by sadfd s 1

2007-06-19 18:47:13 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

The green leaves look ordinary. Egg shaped but with the end being pointed instead of round. Each leaf is a few inches long, and is shiny, like a lot of other tree leaves are. The distinctive characteristic of this tree is the flowers. The petals seem to have their own little red stems. Each petal is a color between pink and purple. A lot closer to pink than purple. The middle of the flower has a green neck with six points on it. Like a six-pointed star. The petals seem to hang around the flower at random, and aren't very neat. Each petal looks a little shabby. There are lots of petals, in big bunches of flowers, to give the tree a look of green with pink blobs, from a distance.

It's not a crabapple tree, because the leaves aren't serrated, and the flowers don't have five neat petals. The petals on stems are only loosely associated with the flowers, such that you have to look closely to count how many one flower has, in a big bunch of flowers and petals. Half-inch petals.

2007-06-19 15:28:20 · 2 answers · asked by x4294967296 6

2007-06-19 13:37:13 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous

Looking at pictures of the leaves of red mulberry trees, some show leaves that are notched at the base, to make them more of a heart shape, and others show them without the notch.

My question is when are the leaves notched and when not? Are they two different species or what?

To clarify what I mean by the notch, consider a heart shape, such as in a valentine or a playing card. At the top of the heart, it curves inward. That's the notch. The stem of the leaf of the red mulberry tree is attached to the notch. so the leaf is like a heart on a stem. But my question is about the ones that aren't notched, and why not, and when not, etc.

2007-06-19 12:58:20 · 3 answers · asked by x4294967296 6

Give an overview of 3 major theories
Explain biological and physiological reason of at least 1 theory
Cite evolution evidence that supports this one theory
Note all references

2007-06-19 12:38:57 · 4 answers · asked by jasonanthonybau 1

http://img515.imageshack.us/img515/2835/55843204hb2.jpg

http://img515.imageshack.us/img515/7761/13189200wi6.jpg

2007-06-19 11:17:00 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

Link to photo here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/60721674@N00/571568867/
or
http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1396/571568867_21665650ce_o.jpg

What plant produces this small flower? I saw them lying on the ground while hiking at Cunningham Falls State Park in Maryland. They are about the size of my finger tip.

Thanks!

2007-06-19 10:13:42 · 5 answers · asked by swampitoho 1

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