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  2. Dormancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dormancy

    Many plants and seeds recognize this and enter a dormant period in the fall to stop growing. The grain is a popular example in this aspect, where they would die above ground during the winter, so dormancy is favorable to its seedlings but extensive domestication and crossbreeding has removed most dormancy mechanisms that their ancestors had.

  3. Can You Keep Mums Indoors? Here's How to Overwinter Them - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-mums-indoors-heres-overwinter...

    Keeping mums indoors longer term over the winter is possible but requires more care. Mums can be kept “awake” as houseplants or, more commonly, allowed to go dormant and brought back out in ...

  4. Winter rest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_rest

    Winter rest (from the German term Winterruhe) is a state of reduced activity of plants and warm-blooded animals living in extratropical regions of the world during the more hostile environmental conditions of winter. In this state, they save energy during cold weather while they have limited access to food sources.

  5. How To Keep Your Plants Warm In The Winter When Cold Weather ...

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  6. As plants go dormant for winter, it’s an ideal time to prune ...

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  7. Abscission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abscission

    A plant will abscise a part either to discard a member that is no longer necessary, such as a leaf during autumn, or a flower following fertilisation, or for the purposes of reproduction. Most deciduous plants drop their leaves by abscission before winter, whereas evergreen plants continuously abscise their leaves. Another form of abscission is ...

  8. Cold hardening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_hardening

    Plants that originated in the tropics, like tomato or maize, don't go through cold hardening and are unable to survive freezing temperatures. [3] The plant starts the adaptation by exposure to cold yet still not freezing temperatures. The process can be divided into three steps.

  9. Kicked to the curb? Mums are perennials you can hold onto

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