enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pyrophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrophyte

    Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) is a pyrophile, depending on fire to clear the ground for seed germination. [4] The passage of fire, by increasing temperature and releasing smoke, is necessary to raise seeds dormancy of pyrophile plants such as Cistus and Byblis an Australian passive carnivorous plant. Imperata cylindrica is a plant of Papua ...

  3. List of beneficial weeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_beneficial_weeds

    Horsetail—primeval plant that is high in silica; tops are very similar to and may be eaten like asparagus. Lamb's quarters—leaves and shoots, raw, also prevents erosion, also distracts leaf miners from nearby crops. Nettle—young leaves collected before flowering used as a tea or spinach substitute. Plants have use as compost material or ...

  4. List of pest-repelling plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pest-repelling_plants

    repel aphids and wireworms [3] Common lantana: repels mosquitoes [1] Coriander: repels aphids, Colorado potato beetle, and spider mites [3] Cosmos: repel the corn earworm: Crown imperial: repel rabbits, mice, moles, voles and ground squirrels [6] Dahlias: repel nematodes [2] Dill: repels aphids, squash bugs, spider mites, [2] the cabbage looper ...

  5. Diphasiastrum digitatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diphasiastrum_digitatum

    The largest leaves are lateral, the free portion appressed to spreading, and the leaves on the upper surface are appressed and are more narrow. The stems spread horizontally above ground or just below the surface of the duff layer. The erect shoots each contain two or more branches near the base.

  6. Claytonia perfoliata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claytonia_perfoliata

    Miner's lettuce served as a salad. The common name of miner's lettuce refers to how the plant was used by miners during the California Gold Rush, who ate it to prevent scurvy. [13] [14] [15] It is in season in April and May, and can be eaten as a leaf vegetable. [16] The entire plant is edible, except the roots, and it provides vitamin C. [17]

  7. Phytomyza ilicis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phytomyza_ilicis

    In one study, comparing P. ilicis to P. ilicicola on Ilex plants it was demonstrated that there were an average of 0.23 mines per leaf (or one mine for every four or five leaves on a plant). [8] Up to three mines may occur on a leaf – often much less than the number of oviposition scars, suggesting that intra-leaf competition has taken place ...

  8. Plant defense against herbivory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_defense_against_herb...

    Viburnum lesquereuxii leaf with insect damage; Dakota Sandstone (Cretaceous) of Ellsworth County, Kansas. Scale bar is 10 mm. Knowledge of herbivory in geological time comes from three sources: fossilized plants, which may preserve evidence of defense (such as spines) or herbivory-related damage; the observation of plant debris in fossilised animal feces; and the structure of herbivore mouthparts.

  9. Leaf miner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaf_miner

    A leaf miner is any one of numerous species of insects in which the larval stage lives in, and eats, the leaf tissue of plants. The vast majority of leaf-mining insects are moths ( Lepidoptera ), sawflies ( Symphyta , a paraphyletic group which Apocrita ( wasps , bees and ants ) evolved from), and flies ( Diptera ).