Unlike animals, plants don’t need a male and a female because their flowers have both male parts and female parts. Pollen in plants is like sperm in animals. It comes from the male part of the ...
Staines, Martin vH Sassoon, Kathy L. and Lambers, Hans 2022. Phosphorus and potassium nutrition of a tropical waterlily (Nymphaea) used for commercial flower production. Plant and Soil, Vol. 476, ...
Scientists think they have the answer to a puzzle that baffled even Charles Darwin: How flowers evolved and spread to become the dominant plants on Earth. Flowering plants, or angiosperms ...
studying translational regulation of chloroplast gene expression in algae and flowering plants, respectively. Although his main expertise is chloroplast biology, his interest is and always was to ...