Gamer.Site Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flower

    A flower, also known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproductive structure found in flowering plants (plants of the division Angiospermae ). Flowers consist of a combination of vegetative organs – sepals that enclose and protect the developing flower. These petals attract pollinators, and reproductive organs that produce gametophytes, which in ...

  3. Chicory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicory

    Lam. Botanical illustration (1885) Common chicory ( Cichorium intybus) [ 3] is a somewhat woody, perennial herbaceous plant of the family Asteraceae, usually with bright blue flowers, rarely white or pink. Native to Europe, it has been introduced to the Americas and Australia. [ 4] Many varieties are cultivated for salad leaves, chicons ...

  4. Common sunflower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_sunflower

    The plant flowers in summer. What is often called the "flower" of the sunflower is actually a "flower head" ( pseudanthium ), 7.5–12.5 centimetres (3–5 in) wide, [4] of numerous small individual five-petaled flowers ("florets"). The outer flowers, which resemble petals, are called ray flowers. Each "petal" consists of a ligule composed of ...

  5. List of pollen sources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pollen_sources

    A good predictor for when a plant will bloom and produce pollen is a calculation of the growing degree days. The color of pollen below indicates the color as it appears when the pollen arrives at the beehive. After arriving to the colony with a fresh load of pollen, the honey bee unloads its pollen from the pollen basket located on its hind legs.

  6. Catharanthus roseus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catharanthus_roseus

    Catharanthus roseus is an evergreen subshrub or herbaceous plant growing 1 m (39 in) tall. The leaves are oval to oblong, 2.5–9 cm (1.0–3.5 in) long and 1–3.5 cm (0.4–1.4 in) wide, glossy green, hairless, with a pale midrib and a short petiole 1–1.8 cm (0.4–0.7 in) long; they are arranged in opposite pairs.

  7. Freesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freesia

    Freesia. Anomatheca Ker Gawl. Freesia is a genus of herbaceous perennial flowering plants in the family Iridaceae, first described as a genus in 1866 by Christian Friedrich Ecklon (1886) and named after the German botanist and medical practitioner, Friedrich Freese (1795–1876). It is native to the eastern side of southern Africa, from Kenya ...

  8. Fuchsia (color) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuchsia_(color)

    Fuchsia ( / ˈfjuːʃə /, FEW-shə) is a vivid pinkish-purplish- red color, [1] named after the color of the flower of the fuchsia plant, which was named by a French botanist, Charles Plumier, after the 16th-century German botanist Leonhart Fuchs . The color fuchsia was introduced as the color of a new aniline dye called fuchsine, patented in ...

  9. Cosmos (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmos_(plant)

    Cosmos are herbaceous perennial plants or annual plants growing 0.3–2 m (1 ft 0 in – 6 ft 7 in) tall. The leaves are simple, pinnate, or bipinnate, and arranged in opposite pairs. The flowers are produced in a capitulum with a ring of broad ray florets and a center of disc florets; flower color varies noticeably between the different species.