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Plant reproduction

Solubility rules

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Solubility Rules 1. All common salts of the Group 1 elements and ammonium ion are soluble. 2. All common acetates and nitrates are soluble. 3. All binary compounds of Group 17 elements (other than F) with metals are soluble except those of silver, mercury(I), and lead. 4. All sulfates are soluble except those of barium, strontium, lead, calcium, silver and mercury(I). 5. Except for those in Rule 1, carbonates, oxides, sulfides, and phosphates are insoluble. 6. Oxides and peroxides are always written in molecular form. 7. Gases are always written in molecular form. 8. The only strong bases are the hydroxides of Group I & II metals except beryllium. 9. The only strong binary acids are those of chlorine, bromine, and iodine.

Plant Reproduction Notes

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Form & Function in Flowering Plants ? Reproduction: Responses Plant Reproduction: Vegetative reproduction: The process of fragmentation, whereby small pieces of the organism form a complete new organism is common in both lower plants and lower animals. As both plants and animals became more specialized they generally lost the capacity to reproduce by fragmentation. In some plants specialized structures are produced, such as buds, propagules, bulbils, gemmae and others. In flowering plants vegetative multiplication can take place via cuttings from the aerial stem, rhizome, tuber, corm, bulb, stolon, runner, leaves, or in some cases even roots. Small pieces of the structure can, through mitosis and cell

Language

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Animals communicate - using protective coloration - limited communication schemesCommunication scheme: dance by bees in the interior of hives - roving scouts look for sourc of pollen and go back to the hive - dance indicates where the source of food is relative to the sun - speed of the dance relative to the distance of sourceVervet alarm calls - signal by chirping to companions - a non random signal companions with calls specific to a certain predator - deliberate, flexible, and limited

Biology vocab

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alternation of generations autosome chiasmata clone crossing over diploid cell fertilization gametophyte genetics haploid cell heredity homologous chromosomes karyotype locus recombinant chromosome sex chromosome spore sporophyte synapsis tetrad variation zygote allele amniocentesis carrier character codominance complete dominance dihybrid epistasis F1 generation F2 generation genotype heterozygous homozygous hybridization incomplete dominance law of independent assortment law of segregation monohybrid P generation pedigree phenotype pleiotropy polygenic inheritance quantitative character testcross trait

campbell biology chapter 8 and 12

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Exam Name___________________________________ MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The creation of genetically identical offspring by a single parent, without the participation of sperm and egg, is called 1) A) regeneration. B) sexual reproduction. C) spontaneous generation. D) asexual reproduction. 2) Which of the following statements regarding sexual and asexual reproduction is true? 2) A) Only offspring from asexual reproduction inherit traits from two parents. B) Sexual reproduction is more likely to increase genetic variation than is asexual reproduction. C) Sexual reproduction typically includes the development of unfertilized eggs. D) Cell division only occurs after sexual reproduction.
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