Term
|
Definition
Kingdom - Division - Class - Order - Family - Genus - Species - Sub species
Mneomic: King David Came Over For Good Spaghetti Sauce |
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Term
BOTANY
Classifications of Plants
Natural
Artificial
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Definition
Classification of Plants
Natural - Classification based on the genetic relationships
Artificial - Classification based on habitat, flower color, growth pattern |
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Term
BOTANY Plant Growth and Development |
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Definition
Photosynthesis - plant makes food chlorophyll, carbon dioxide in the air and water in the soil during sunlight Respiration - Plant exchanges gases carbon dioxide and oxygen move from higher concentrations to lower (diffusion when moves through gradients) Transpiration - loss of water (through stomates) |
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Term
Botany
Buds
What are they and where are they located? |
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Definition
Buds are the undeveloped shoots with embryonic leaves or flower parts
Terminal buds - at apex of stem
Lateral buds - born on sides of the stem
Adventitious - arise at other parts like along the internode, the edge of a leaf blade, or at roots
Some buds are food, like a cabbage.
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Term
Botany
Define Monocot and Dicot |
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Definition
All plants have a vascular system
Monoctot - Xylem and Phloem are paired in bundles
Dicot -Xylem and Phloem are continuous and form a ring inside the stem. Phloem is an outer ring, xylem is the inner)
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Term
Botany
Define staminate and pistillate?
What is dioecious and monecious? |
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Definition
Plants that bear only male flowers are staminate
Plants that bear only female flowers are pistillate
These plants are considered dioecious
If a plant has both parts on one plant it is monecious |
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Term
Botany
Flower
What does complete, incomplete, perfect and imperfect mean when describing flowers |
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Definition
If a flower contains pistil, petals, stamens and sepals it is COMPLETE
If a flower is missing any one of those it is INCOMPLETE
If a flower contains functional male and female parts it is PERFECT
If a flower lacks either part it is IMPERFECT
Note: a petunia is COMPLETE and PERFECT
a dogwood is incomplete
a holly is imperfect |
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Term
|
Definition
If a plant that produces a single flower per stem, the flower is called solitary.
If a plant produces clusters, the flower is called inflorescence. The arrangements can be various (raceme or spike) |
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Term
Botany
Fruit
What are the types? |
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Definition
Fruit types are:
Simple - fuits formed from one ovary (like cherry, pear, tomato) including dry (peanut, legume)
Aggregate - single flower with many ovaries (strawberry, raspberry)
Multiple - single flowers clustered (pinapple) |
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Term
Botany
Leaf cross section parts and functions |
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Definition
Cutin - waxy, protects hydration
Epidermis - protects leaf tissue and determines leaf texture
Mesophyll - photosynthesis area
Palisade layer
Spongy parenchymas
Stoma/stomata - with guard cells regulates passage of air and water
[image]
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Term
Botany
Leaf identification
Shape of blade and type of margin |
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Definition
Simple leaf - blade in a single continuous unit
Compound leaf = several separate leaflets arising from the same petiole
Types of compound = palmate, pinnate |
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Term
Botany
Leaves
Specialized |
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Definition
Distinct leaves are usually referred to as foliage
Scale leaves - cataphylls - like on rhizomes to protect the buds
Spines/tendrils - help support the plant like peas
Cotyledon - modified leaf on embryonic plant
storage - like on bulbs for food
Bracts - like a showy support (like dogwoods, poinsettias)
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Term
Botany
Leaves
Venation (Veins) |
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Definition
Vascular bundle in stem contains xylem and phloem
Extends up the petiole and spreads out to blade
Two types:
Parrallel - like grasses (monocot where veins run base to apex and banana where they run laterally from mid-rib)
Net-veined, intricate network in dicots |
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Term
Botany
Major parts of the stem and its function |
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Definition
major parts: xylem, phloem, cambium
Xylem and Phloem are vascular, transport food, water and minerals
Xylem from the root to shoot.
Phloem from the roots to leaves and terminal buds.
Cambium is the site of cell division for both of the above |
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Term
Botany
Name the parts of a flower |
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Definition
Female:
Pistil (contains stigma, style, ovary)
Male:
Stamen (pollen sac, anthers, filaments) |
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Term
Botany
Name the parts of the seed and what purpose it has |
|
Definition
Radicle - develops into the root and root hairs
Hypocotyl - stem of a germinating plant found below the cotyledon leaves and above the radicle (root)
Cotyledon - The embryonic part of the seed that will develop the first leaves (monocots develop one leaf, dicots develop two) |
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Term
Botany
Nomenclature
Botanist who provided the classification system and identified Genus species format |
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Definition
Carle Linne, Swedish botanist
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Linnaeus |
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Term
Botany
Parts of Plants
What are the two groups?
What do they include?
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Definition
Two groups are
Vegetative
Based on leaves, buds, roots, stems, shoots (used in asexual propagation)
Sexual
Based on flowers, fruits, seeds, flower buds (used in sexual propagation)
Dicots
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Botany
Roots
Name the types of roots |
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Definition
Primary
Originates at lower end of embryonic seedling
Tap root
Formed when the primary root continues to elongate
Lateral
Also called secondary it is a side or branch root
Fibrous
Primary root stops elongating and numerous laterals develop (think clump of grass) |
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Term
Botany
Roots
Where do they originate
Name the parts |
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Definition
Roots originate from the lower portion of a plant or from a cutting.
Root cap - has three major interior parts: Meristem (tip), zone of elongation, maturation zone
Root hairs. |
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Term
Botany
What are the types of stems |
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Definition
Above ground
includes node/runner, branch/spur and stolon
Below ground
includes tuber, rhizome, corm, bulb, tuberous begonia |
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Term
Botany
What is leaf arrangement? |
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Definition
The manner in which leaves are arranged along the stem.
Examples:
Rosulate - basal leaves from a rosette at the base of the stem
Opposit - leaves appear across from each other with 2 leaves at each noce
Alternate or spiral - leaves appear at alternate steps with one leaf at each node
Whorled - more than two leaves arranged in a circle
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Term
|
Definition
Plants that usually have distinctive colorful flowers |
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Term
Botany
Cornus florida 'Cherokee Chief'... the first two words designate what? |
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Definition
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Term
Botany Flowers Describe Perfect and imperfect |
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Definition
If a flower has functional stamens and pistils it is complete If a flower lacks either of these parts it is imperfect |
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Term
Botany Flowers Describe dioecious and monecious |
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Definition
Dioecious are species that are separated into pistillate and staminate plants (different plants: "di" as in "di"fferent or "di" for two; Monecious plants have male and female parts on the same plant (corn and oak) |
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Term
Botany Flowers Describe distinguishing factor on flowers of dicots |
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Definition
Usually have sepals and/or petals in numbers of four, five or multiples |
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Term
Botany Flowers Describe distinguishing factor on flowers of monocots |
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Definition
Usually have sepals/petals in threes or multiples of three |
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Term
Botany Flowers Describe the types of flowers: complete vs incomplete |
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Definition
Complete flower has sepals, petals, stamen and pistil If a flower is missing any one of these parts it is incomplete |
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Term
Botany Flowers Flowers containing stamens but no pistils are called? |
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Definition
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Term
Botany Flowers Flowers possessing a functional pistil(s) are called? |
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Definition
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Term
Botany Flowers Give examples of racemes and cymes |
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Definition
Racemes: spike=gladiolus raceme=snapdragon corymb=yarrow umbel = dill head=daisy cyme=baby's breath, statice, freesia |
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Term
Botany Flowers Male and Female parts |
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Definition
Male pollen Female ovule plus accessory parts such as petals. sepals, nectar glands |
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Term
Botany Flowers Name the female parts of the flower |
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Definition
Pistil located in the center. Contains the sigma, style and ovary |
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Term
Botany Flowers Name the male parts of the flower |
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Definition
The stamen is the male reproductive organ. It contains the anthers, filament and pollen sac |
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Term
Botany Flowers Plants bearing flowers as a cluster which is called |
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Definition
Inflorescences. There are two groups: racemes and cymes |
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Term
Botany Flowers What are petals |
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Definition
Petals are highly colored parts of the flower, may contain perfume as well as nectar, number is used in identifying plant families and genera. Petals as a unit are called the corolla |
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Term
Botany Flowers what are sepals |
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Definition
Outermost series of floral parts. usually green, leaf-like structures at the base of the flower, collectively forming a calyx |
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Term
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Definition
Pome - simple or stone, surrounded by flesh berry- aggregate - raspberry or strawberry Multiple - fig, pinecone cone, pineapple |
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Term
|
Definition
Conifers and most monocotyledons like corn and grasses |
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Term
Botany
Life cycles of plants |
|
Definition
Plants are classified by the number of growing seasons required to complete their life cycle from seed-to germination - to seed production.
Annual - 1 growing season
Perennial - lives for many years (herbaceous or woody)
Biennial - flowers produce seed from the second year |
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Term
Botany
Name the parts of a leaf
Describe the function of the leaf |
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Definition
Functins of the leaf: to absorb sunlight to manufacture plant sugars - photsynthesis
Parts of the leaf:
Broadleaf = Stem -petiole - blade - midrib[image]
Conifer= Sheath - needles[image] |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Environmental Factors - Light - describe |
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Definition
Light: quantity, quality, duration Blue best for seedlings. The ability of many plants to flower is controlled by their photoperiod(the effect s of day length on plant development) |
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Term
Botany
Plant Growth
Light intesity influences |
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Definition
Manufacturing of plant food, stem length, leaf color and size and flowering |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Photosynthesis |
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Definition
Makes food from the energy in sunlight in the presence of chlorophyll |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Plant Nutrition How does the plant extract the nutrition |
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Definition
Plants extract the nutrition from the soil in the form of ions. |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Plant nutrition What does the term nutrition refer to? |
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Definition
Nutrition is the plant's needs and uses of basic chemical elements. This is different from fertilization which is when these materials are applied to the plant's environment. |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Repiration |
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Definition
The reverse of photosynthesis: breaking down the food stored into energy and releasing gases (through stomates) |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Temperature |
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Definition
Temperature affects a plant's productivity and growth. Thermoperiod refers to a daily temperature change |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Temperature Plants respond to and produce maximum growth when exposed to a day temperature that is what? |
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Definition
10 to 15 degrees higher than the night temperature |
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Term
Botany Plant Growth Transpiration |
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Definition
Loss of water through the leaves throught the stomates (openings in leaves bordered by guard cells) Amount of water lost depends upon temperature, air circulation, humidity, |
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|
Term
Botany Plant Growth Water What is one of the most critical roles for water |
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Definition
As a solvent for minerals moving into the plant and carbohydrates moving to their site for use or storage. |
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|
Term
Botany
Plant Growth
What wavelength or color of light is better for starting seedlings? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Botany Plant Growth what are three processes for plant growth |
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Definition
Photosynthesis Respiration Transpiration |
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|
Term
Botany Plant Growth Light Describe flowering response to duration of light or darkness: |
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Definition
Short day are long night plants like crysanthemum Long day are short night, long daylight needed like summer flowers and many vegetables Day-neutral for flowers regardless of day length like petunias |
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Term
Botany
Plants that have leaves and stems that die back to the ground each winter but produce new shoots from the crown of the plant in spring are called |
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Definition
Perennial (herbaceous of the top dies back to the ground each winter and new stems grow from the crown each spring. They are woody if the top persists as in shrubs or trees |
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Term
Botany
Plants which form flowers only when the day length exceeds 12 hours are |
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Definition
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Term
Botany Seeds Describe the parts of the embryo seed and what they become |
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Definition
Cotyledons become leaves(one or two leaves) Hypocotyl or meristem becomes stem Radeicle becomes the root and emerges first Plumule becomes the leaves |
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Term
Botany
The principle tissue involved in moving water and minerals from the roots to the shoots? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
|
Definition
Above ground: Node-runner, spur-branch, stolon Below ground: Tuber, rhizome, bulb (with scaly leaves), corm, tuberous begonia |
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Term
Botany
Vegetative parts of the plant include: |
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Definition
Leaves, stems, roots, shoots |
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Term
Botany
What are leaf margins? |
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Definition
The edges of the leaves, useful in plant identification.
Just three examples of many:
Entire - smooth
Crenate - rounded teeth
Parted - incisions almost to mid-rib |
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Term
Botany
What tissue is the site of cell division? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Botany
What type of venation do monocots exhibit? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Botany
Where is the phloem located inside a mature oak tree? |
|
Definition
Immediately under the bark |
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Term
Botany
Woody Stems
Name the parts |
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Definition
Shoot = young stem with leaves
Twig = stem one year old or less and without leaves
Branch = stem over one year old and has lateral stems
Trunk = main stem
Shrubs = woody perrenials
Vines = plants with long trailing tendrils supported by something else
Cane = tall, perennial grass |
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|
Term
Botany Plant Growth
The process of gradually reducing tor increasing the amount of light that a plant is exposed to is called |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Compost Are pesticide treated weeds OK in compost |
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Definition
Generally yes, although you should check the life of the chemical in soils. |
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Term
Compost Describe types of enclosures for composting |
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Definition
You can make any type with different materials for holding in the materials. Can buy units |
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Term
Compost How are organic mulches useful |
|
Definition
Reduce raifall runoff decrase water evaporation under the surface keep soil cooler in summer, keep soil frozen in winter to reduce heaving prevent erosion prevent soil spattering help control weeds make soil easier to cultivate attractive |
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Term
Compost How is compost made |
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Definition
Done inpiles, with effective layering of materials to encourage exchange of oxygen water, soil organisms to produce carbon dioxide, water , heat, compost. Particle size important |
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Term
Compost How is it used in the garden |
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Definition
Incorporated into the garden soil, spread over surface 1/2-3/4 inch layer mixed into top 6-8 inches soil. |
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Term
Compost What can be composted, what should be avoided |
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Definition
Practically any plant material Best not to use diseased plants Not to add cat or dog manure noxious weeds (morning glory, bindweed), no bones, or cooked kitchen scraps, or grease, some paper ok |
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Term
Compost What is composting? |
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Definition
Composting is a natural process od organic materials broken down by microorganisms to for a rich, soil-like substance |
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|
Term
Compost Why should you compost? |
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Definition
Environmental value Soul-building value |
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Term
Entomology
Metamorphosis
Describe life stages |
|
Definition
Insects may do damage to plants at each stage of their life cycle
Egg-Young-Adult=incomplete cycle
Egg-Larvae-Adult=incomplete cycle
Egg-Nymph-Adult=incomplete cycle
Egg-Larvae-Pupa-Adult=complete cycle |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name Top 10 Insect Orders of interest to gardeners |
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Definition
Coleoptera
beetles, scarabs
chewing mouth parts
compete metamorphosis |
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Term
Entomology
What are insect orders and what are some examples.
Incude type of mouth parts and type of metamorphosis |
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Definition
There are many insect orders, but there are 10 major ones that are of interest to gardeners as they can be pests or beneficials:
Coleoptera - beetles/scarabs - sucking - complete
Dermaptera - earwigs - chewing - incomplete
Diptera - flies/mosquitos - sucking/sponging - complete
Hemioptera - stinkbugs/box elder - piercing - incomplete
Homoptera - cicadas/mealybugs/aphids - sucking - incomplete
Hymenoptera - bees/wasps/ants - piercing/sucking - complete
Lepidoptera - butterflies/moths - piercing/sucking - complete
Neuroptera - Lacewings - aquatic - complete
Orthoptera - grasshoppers/crickets -
Thysanoptera - thrips
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|
Term
Entomology
Describe the classification of insects |
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Definition
Kingdom=Animal
Pylum=Arthropoda
Class=Insecta
Order=10 major ones of interest to gardeners
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Dermaptera
Earwigs
Chewing mouthparts
Incomplete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
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Definition
Diptera
flies, mosquitos,
sponging, sucking mouthparts
complete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Hemiptera
stinkbugs, box elder
piercing mouth parts
complete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Homoptera
Mealy bugs, cicadas, aphids
incomplete metamorphosis
carry pathogens |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Hymenoptera
Bees, wasps, ants
Sucking mouth parts
Complete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Lepidoptera
Butterflies, moths
sucking mouth parts
Complete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Entomology
Name 10 orders of interest to gardeners |
|
Definition
Neuroptera
Lacewings
Aquatic
Complete metamorphosis |
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|
Term
Give examples of types of stems |
|
Definition
Above ground:
node/runner = strawberry
branch/spur = fruit tree
stolon = spider plant Chlorophytum comosum
Below Ground:
tuber - dahlias
rhizome - iris
bulb - daffodil
corm - gladiolas
tuberous begonia - begonia, cyclamen
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|
Term
HERBACEOUS Why do you deadhead |
|
Definition
Remove spent bloom encourage rebloom - longer bloom period neater appearance |
|
|
Term
HERBACEOUS propagation of perennials |
|
Definition
Includes root division during plant division, by seed (don't deadhead) |
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|
Term
HERBACEOUS PLANTS Why and how to stake a perennial |
|
Definition
Stake when setting out the plant Perennials can be top heavy and plant stem can break, letting in disease. Stakes should be shorter than the plant by 6-12" so that they don't interfere with the view of the plant. Plant should be tied loosely to the stake with a series of loops. |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants Environmental needs Why is light important? |
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Definition
Light intensity influences the manufacture of plant food, stem length, leaf color and flowering |
|
|
Term
Indoor Plants Fertilization - general rule for houseplants |
|
Definition
Fertilize every two weeks from March to September. Do not fertilize during winter months as reduced light and temperature mean reduced growth. |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants How do you acclimatize plants moving from indoors to outdoors |
|
Definition
gradually increase light intensity/ reverse the process for bringing them in. |
|
|
Term
Indoor Plants Humidity How can you increase it for plants |
|
Definition
Humidifier Gravel trays under plants Group plants close together mist early in the day |
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|
Term
|
Definition
healthy foliage Look for new leaves and flower buds check the undersides of foliage and axils of leaves for disease or insects |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants Termperature General temperature where plants grow best |
|
Definition
70-80 day, 60-68 night. Good rule of thumb: night temperatures 10-15 degrees lower than day temperature |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants Transporting Plants |
|
Definition
Avoid high heat, cold, excessive wind. Wrap plants thoroughly in winter, |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants Ventilation What are indoor plants sensitive to |
|
Definition
Drafts, forced air, gases (even from furnace areas) |
|
|
Term
Indoor Plants Water - what are biggest problems? |
|
Definition
Overwatering and underwatering Do not water until the bottom two thirds of the plant dry out. |
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|
Term
Indoor Plants Watering technique |
|
Definition
Water til it runs out the bottom of the pot which flushes out the excess salts. This guarantees that bottom 2/3 are watered. Don't let pot sit in water though |
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|
Term
Landscape design Principles of design |
|
Definition
Scale Balance Unity Rhythym Harmony simplicity Accent Repetition Space dividers, accents, transitions Dominance and Contrast |
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|
Term
NATIVE PLANTS Pennsylvania State Flower |
|
Definition
Mountain Laurel (Kalmia latifolia) |
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|
Term
NATIVE PLANTS Types of Barrens in PA |
|
Definition
Serpentine, shale and limestone |
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|
Term
PESTICIDES what is systemic use |
|
Definition
Chemicals applied to the soil and then taken up within the plant |
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|
Term
PLANT PROPAGATION What do seedlings need |
|
Definition
Mnemonic: HOWL Heat, Oxygen,, water, Light |
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|
Term
PLANT PROPAGATION What is Scarification |
|
Definition
Cutting, breaking or splitting the hard seed coat so water can get to it. Also done with softening (water or acid) |
|
|
Term
PLANT PROPAGATION What is Stratification |
|
Definition
Seeds that need to be overwintered - Covering seeds with mixture and refrigerating them |
|
|
Term
Plant Disease
Define phototoxicity |
|
Definition
May be a result of applying chemicals to a plant to control disease, fertilize a flant, or to regulate plant growth. |
|
|
Term
Plant Disease
Environmental Stress |
|
Definition
repeated stress will cause the decline |
|
|
Term
Plant Disease
How do you recognize symptoms? |
|
Definition
Compare to healthy plants in same area
If all are infecdted it may be in soil
Roots may be weak
You may have to cut open a par tof the plant |
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|
Term
Plant Disease
If the movement of water up the plant through the xylem or the movement of food produced by the leaves and moving down to the roots is disturbed what can happen, and what are causes? |
|
Definition
Leaf wilt, leaf tips and margin burn...caused by cankers, galls, mechanical girdling |
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|
Term
Plant Disease
The green plant manufactures its food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. If disease reduces the amount of light reaching a leaf, or if part of the leaf falls off it will fail to perform photosynthesis. What are some diseases that reduce photosynthesis? |
|
Definition
leaf spots,
powdery mildew, anthracnoses, air pollition damage, pesiticde toxicity, twig blights |
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|
Term
Plant Disease
What are some ways to manage plant disease? |
|
Definition
Regulatory methods - inspections and quarantine
cultural methods - closed season, dry fallow, crop rotation, sanitation,manipulating the environment (increasing humidity, light), improving plant vigor with fertilizers
Resistant Varieties
Biological Controls-introduce another organism known to inhibit the disease
Physical Controls - heat or refrigeration of soils
Chemical Controls |
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|
Term
Plant Disease
What are two types of disease? |
|
Definition
Living (Biotic): fungi, bacteria, nematodes, viruses, mycoplasms, spiroplasms, vascular plants that parasitize other plants
Abiotic (nononcectious: insufficient or excessive moisture, poor soil aeration, excessive salts or over fertilization, nutrient deficiencies, excessive temperatures of light conditions, air pollution
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|
|
Term
Plant Diseases
What are some indications of plant disease |
|
Definition
smaller leaves
fewer leaves
smaller roots
shorter internodes
smaller annual ring width
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|
|
Term
Plant disease
Factors that influence disease |
|
Definition
Pathogen
Host plant
Environment
Timing
All factors interact with each other
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|
|
Term
SOIL AND FERTILIZER Symptoms of a poorly growing plant |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
SOIL AND FERTILIZERS Macro nutrients and what they do |
|
Definition
Nitrogen for foliage Phosphorus for roots Potassium for water and salt balance Calcium Magnesium Sulfur |
|
|
Term
SOIL AND FERTILIZERS Micronutrients |
|
Definition
Iron, manganese, boron, molybdenum, copper, zinc, chlorine, and cobalt |
|
|
Term
SOILS AND FERTILIZERS Mnemonic for Macro nutrients |
|
Definition
Holy Macro! Never Punch Kittens, they'll call Aunt Mag and then you're screwed |
|
|
Term
SOILS AND FERTILIZERS Mnemonic for Micro nutrients |
|
Definition
"C. Hopkins Cafe closing; mob comes with machine guns" or in symbolic form - C HOPKNS CaFe ClZn; MoB CuMn Mg |
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|
Term
Soils and Fertilizers
The soil potting substrate (medium) provides |
|
Definition
Oxygen, nutrients, water. |
|
|
Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What affects soil structure and how can it be improved? |
|
Definition
Soil compaction can be improved by amending the soil with sand, vermiculate, perlite, organic material, compost. Cover crops or green manures add nutrients and organic material |
|
|
Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What is a complete fertilizer? |
|
Definition
A complete fertilizer contains each of the three major plant nutrients: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, potassium
10-10-10 or 16-8-8 are complete fertilizers. 0-25-25 or 20-0-10 represent incomplete fertilizers |
|
|
Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What is fertilizer analysis?
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Definition
How much of an element is in a formulation based on percentage by weight. This will not add up to 100% because the nutrients are compounds |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What is soil pH? |
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Definition
It is the measure of hydrogen (acid-forming) ion activity in the soil
Reading expresses the acidity or alkalinity of the soil
lower number are more acidic
Measured on a logarithmic scale (10 times more)
Neutral pH is 6.5-7-7.5
Major impact on plant is the availability of nutrients to the plant. |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
How is fertilizer analysis expressed? |
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Definition
NPK
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Potassium
N - P2O5 - K2O |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
Name the micronutrients |
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Definition
Iron
Boron
Zinc
Copper
Manganese
Molybdenum
Chlorine
Cobalt |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
Plant Nutrients
Name the macronutrients |
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Definition
Nirogen
Phosphorus
Potassium
Magnesium
Calcium
Sulfur |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What are physical properties of soil? |
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Definition
Color
Texture
Structure
Internal Drainage
Depth
Susceptibilty to erosion |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What are plant nutrients and why are they important? |
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Definition
Plants need 17 nutrients for growth
Water, Carbon, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Calcium, Magnesium, SUlfur plus the micronutrients. Some are mobile and can be moved within the plant to satisfy deficiencies and some are fixed. |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What are soil layers called and which contains the most organic material? |
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Definition
Most soils have three distinct, principal layers, or horizons. Each of those may have sub-layers or subhorizons.
At the top is leaf litter, then a mineral horizon, and a subsurface. The sum of all these layers is called the soil profile |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What are soil surface classifications in PA? |
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Definition
Generally 5 in PA:
Silty loam
Loam
Silty Clay loam
Sandy loam
Clay loam
Other textural designations include sands and clays
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What are the components of soil? |
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Definition
Mineral materials
Organic materials
water
Air |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What dominates Pennsylvania's landscapes? |
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Definition
Alluvium, colluvium and glacial till |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What is soil formed from? |
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Definition
Soil is formed from parent materials such as bedrock and rock debris as they are acted upon by climate and vegetation over time |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
What types of soils are in Pennsylvania? |
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Definition
Pennsylvania is dominated by mineral soils although organic soils are in bogs , marshes and swamps.
Sandstone, shale and limestone sedimentary rock is biggest influence |
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Term
Soils and Fertilizers
describe mineral and organic soils |
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Definition
Mineral soils contain less than 20% organic material
Surface soils contain 1-5%
Organic soils have 30% or more organic material
Peat and Much are organic soil types |
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Term
TURFGRASS Best time to seed lawns |
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Definition
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Term
TURFGRASS Kentucky bluegrass facts |
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Definition
Cool season used in PA Underground stems - rhizomesgood sod forming optimum growth spring and fall, may become dormant during heat and drought prefers well drained soils and sun Requires a higher amount of nitrogen produces thatch Mow height 1.5-2.5' Slower emergence than other grasses |
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Term
TURFGRASS Mowing height recommendations |
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Definition
Depends on typeof grass: low crowing (stolon reproducing) can be cut low (bentgrass); Fescues are taller and need more leaf to produce enough mass. Table: Kentucky=1.5 to 2.5"; perennial ryegrass = 1.5-2.0"; Fine fescues=2.0-2.5"' tall fescues=2.0-3.0' |
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Term
TURFGRASS Types of Turfgrass |
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Definition
warm and cool season bunching and non-bunching |
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Term
TURFGRASS What contributes to thatch |
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Definition
over fertilizing types of grass grown resistance to leaf decomposition improper pH |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of Fine Fescue |
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Definition
fine, barrow leaf, good for other public areas low maintenance |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of Perennial Ryegrasses |
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Definition
fine green, good for public sport areas, bunch type growth wear tolerant, heat tolerant |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of Tall Fescue |
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Definition
durable, persistant, good on highways, fairgrounds, bunch type good for open sunny areas |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of bentgrasses |
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Definition
fine to medium texture golf course greens, fairways, tennis courts, spreads through stolons, produces thatch |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of Rough Bluegrass |
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Definition
lighter green than Kentucky and has stolons (above ground) shade tolerant |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Cultural practices Mowing |
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Definition
Cutting frequency and mowing height. Cool season grasses such as the ones recommended for PA must be cut relatively high because they cannot produce enough leaf mass at low heights to sustain growth. |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Sod: What is important after initial installation of sod? |
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Definition
Irrigation wet to a depth of 4-6 inches and regularly during the period of initial rooting. |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Sod: True of False: Freshly laid sod should be rolled |
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Definition
FALSE avoid rolling as it causes sod to move ahead of the roller |
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Term
Turfgrass management
Benefit of Kentucky Bluegrass |
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Definition
nice green with proper fertizing
makes a dense sod due to rhizome growtTolerant - cold, wear and moderate to drought
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Term
Turfgrass management
Turfgrass species used in Pennsylvania: |
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Definition
Cool season - Kentucky bluegrass, rough bluegrass, tall fescue, fine fescue, perennial ryegrass, bentgrasses
warm season - zoysia |
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Term
Turfgrass management Cultural practices Watering - True of False: Water should be applied at a rate faster than it can be absorbed? |
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Definition
False. The ability of soil to absorb water is dependent upon a number of factors primarily related to soil composition. |
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Term
Turfgrass management Insects Control What are some common PA insects for lawns |
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Definition
Japanese beetles, billbugs, chich bug |
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Term
Turfgrass management Insects Control What life cycle stages do damage |
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Definition
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Term
Turfgrass management Insects Control When is the best time to control grubs with insecticide? |
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Definition
late summer and early fall when they are feeding near the surface. |
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Term
Turfgrass management Pest control Disease Management - Pathogens controlled how? |
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Definition
Cultural control, chemical control and disease resistant varieties |
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Term
Turfgrass management Thatch control |
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Definition
Preventative: liming, fertilizing, mechanical de-thatching and aerating important |
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Term
Turfgrass management What is aeration, how does it work, when is the best time? |
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Definition
Aeration corrects soil compaction in established turf. Mechanical removal of plugs, best in spring and fall. Aerators always remove a soil core, so just spikes are not aeration, which actually can add to soil compaction. |
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Term
Turfgrass management What is thatch? |
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Definition
Thatch is a tightly intermingled layer of partly decomposed stems and roots of grasses that develops beneath the actively growing green vegetation and the soil surface |
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Term
Turfgrass management weed control How are summer annual grass weeds controlled |
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Definition
Preemergence herbicides , best applied 10-14 days before emergence of weeds. |
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Term
Turfgrass management weed control What are boradleaved weeds and how are they controlled |
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Definition
Most adapted to avoid mowing cuts by developing rosettes: dandelion, plantain, curled dock, treated with post emergent herbicide. |
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Term
Turfgrass management weed control What are common lawn weeds? |
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Definition
Summer annual grass weeds: crabgrass, goosegrass, foxtails,barnyard grasses |
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Term
WOODY PLANTS Best way to water newly planted woody shrubs/trees |
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Definition
Make a soil reservoir, and check that it is absorbing water when tree is planted, then cover area with `2" loose mulch Don't fertilizeat planting as it can burn the roots |
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Term
WOODY PLANTS Mulching recommendations |
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Definition
~2" loose mulch, never mounded like a "volcano" around the plant or trunk |
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Term
WOODY PLANTS Planting depths |
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Definition
Bare-root: at grade or slightly higher, with hole 1-2 feet wider than roots, and depth the height of the roots Ball and Burlap (BXB)- at grade or slightly higher, with width 2-3 feet of ball, and depth no greater than height of ball |
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Term
WOODY PLANTS Signs of Drought |
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Definition
wilting, scorching, fall foliage colors not at fall |
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Term
WOODY PLANTS Staking basics |
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Definition
Different styles (single, double, triple with guide wires Always loosely so plant can move (and become stronger) Never drive stakes into dirt ball or roots Use protective rubber tubing around wires that attache to stakes |
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