Friday, December 12, 2014

Seed Stories, Semester 1: Grace Euerle

Grace has learned a number of things about gardening what is involved in plant growth, like biotic and abiotic factors and reproduction and the process of meiosis. She was suprised about how big the Kolrabi got, considering how small it was at first and thought it was crazy how fast it grew, and how so many types of Brassica Oleracea occured from the origial. She thought deeper about what effect the enviroment had on out plant and what effect our plant has on the enviroment. She looked forward to gardening because she hadn't experienced it in a while, and enjoyed taking care of our very own plant and watching it grow.

How Does Our Garden Grow?

Our plants continue to get larger everyday, which leads to increasing biomass. This growth can be caused be mitosis, the division of cells. This happens in reproduction, which adds to the population. Photosynthesis also adds to plant growth because the plants can make their own food through that process. Reperation adds to increase as well. This turns sugars into energy.

One of a Kind: The Wonders of Biodiversity

My group's plant is Kolrabi, which is a plant in the broccoli family that has broad leaves, purple stems, and a large purple bulb in the center. I can tell that the parent plants probably had large leaves and were larger plants.You could probably predict what the offspring will look like based on the parents; it will inherit many of the same traits. The plants aquire traits from the process of meiosis, which mixes chromosomes of each parent cell and passes it down to the off spring. This will happen again and again, from generation to generation. However, none of the offspring will look exactly like its parent or any of its relatives because it is a combonation of both, not an exact replication of one parent. Some plants in the same family can look very different becuase of mutations and adaptations. The original Brassica Oleracea has passed down many traits to its offspring, which eventually spread to create many types of plants related to it.



Living or Not

Our little kolrabi plant has come a long way since the beginning of the semester. Anyone could see that it has been healthy and growing well, from a small seedling with only a root growing out of it to a full-fledged leafy purple and green Kolrabi plant. It doesn't have dead leaves or any signs of illness, so it is obviously living healthily.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Ecological Analysis of the Garden and Our Plants

           Our plants depend on abiotic, like certain weather, and biotic factors, like living creatures, to survive. A plant needs sun and warmth to grow and other animals in the ecosystem are need to help reproduce. However, not all animals are good for the plants; some are competition. You can tell the some animals have been eating the plants. The other plants are also competition because they all want to get as much nutrients as possible. The winner in these situations would be the plants that grow to their full potential, but sometimes it is hard to tell because a plant may not seem like it is failing to survive at first when it really is. Animals, like insects for example, help plants reproduce by spreading pollen from one plant to another. Secondary succession is occurring in our garden because new plants are growing in the soil where old plants once were.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Our plants depend on a number of factors to survive. Some abiotic factors are the temperature, water, and weather. Some biotic factors are animals, bacteria, and other plants. I know that our plants are in competition because there are other plants all around it. When other plants are around a plant they all will be in competition for sunlight, water, and space. The "losing" plants will failing to survive. Plants also interact with insects by providing food for the insects and the insects spread the plants pollen by flying from one plants to another. The way we know that succession is occurring is that the plants are growing and it is secondary succession.
Our plants have gotten bigger and grown more leaves in the past week. Our plants take in water through their roots and use it to make energy. They also take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen. The plants also take nitrogen from the soil and the animals that eat that plant get the nitrogen.

How Does Your Garden Grow?

Our plants are getting bigger and bigger and increasing biomass. They are creating new cells in a process called mitosis where the cells divide. They get the energy for this process with photosynthesis. In photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen into the air. 

Is It Alive?

          In this project, our group is growing Kohlrabi, which is a vegetable that is part of the Brassica Oleracea family. Kohlrabi is a purple turnip looking plant that kinda tastes like broccoli. We will water and take care the plant, and harvest it when it is done growing.
  Our plants started as tiny little seeds before we planted them, and they have grown into large plants. Their stems are thick and purple and their leaves are broad and green. We can tell that our plant is living, because is has grown from a tiny seed into an almost fully grown Kohlrabi plant.
Kohlrabi     

About Page Link

Here is a link to a page explaining our project -->  About Page Link