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DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003640 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | parts_leaf_1125.png | 1 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003617 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1121.png | parts_leaf_1121.png | 0.816805 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003624 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1122.png | parts_leaf_1122.png | 0.73515 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003545 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1094.png | parts_leaf_1094.png | 0.705875 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003716 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3149.png | parts_leaf_3149.png | 0.69651 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003331 | image | abc_question_images/parts_leaf_11094.png | parts_leaf_11094.png | 0.687707 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003629 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1123.png | parts_leaf_1123.png | 0.686747 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003588 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1115.png | parts_leaf_1115.png | 0.684415 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_003758 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3979.png | parts_leaf_3979.png | 0.679987 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | DQ_004051 | image | question_images/types_leaves_1023.png | types_leaves_1023.png | 0.670749 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_2527 | text | null | Budding occurs when a parent cell forms a bubble-like bud. The bud stays attached to the parent while it grows and develops. It breaks away from the parent only after it is fully formed. Yeasts can reproduce this way. You can see two yeast cells budding in Figure 5.11. | 0.496613 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_3351 | text | null | Cigarette smoking can cause serious diseases, so not smoking or quitting now are the most effective ways to reduce your risk of developing chronic respiratory diseases, such as lung cancer. Avoiding (or stopping) smoking is the single best way to prevent many respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. Also, do your best to avoid secondhand smoke. | 0.457267 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_2534 | text | null | Both types of reproduction have certain advantages. | 0.450509 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_1598 | text | null | Plants and animals depend on water to live. They also play a role in the water cycle. Plants take up water from the soil and release large amounts of water vapor into the air through their leaves (Figure 1.3), a process known as transpiration. | 0.425958 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_3385 | text | null | Plants seem to grow wherever they can. How? Plants cant move on their own. So how does a plant start growing in a new area? | 0.425867 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_1106 | text | null | Despite these problems, there is a rich fossil record. How does an organism become fossilized? | 0.418975 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_1954 | text | null | Instead of fleeing, a plants primary way of responding is to change how it is growing. One way is by tropisms. | 0.416109 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_1797 | text | null | The two types of air pollutants are primary pollutants, which enter the atmosphere directly, and secondary pollutants, which form from a chemical reaction. | 0.415205 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_1458 | text | null | Color may be the first feature you notice about a mineral, but color is not often important for mineral identification. For example, quartz can be colorless, purple (amethyst), or a variety of other colors depending on chemical impurities Figure 1.1. | 0.414971 |
DQ_003645 | How would remove a leaflet affect the bud? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. It would not, b. The bud would grow a new leaflet, c. The bud would die, d. The bud would grow faster | a | T_3065 | text | null | Many insects are considered to be pests by humans. However, insects are also very important for numerous reasons. | 0.413541 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003640 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | parts_leaf_1125.png | 1 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003617 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1121.png | parts_leaf_1121.png | 0.816805 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003624 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1122.png | parts_leaf_1122.png | 0.73515 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003545 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1094.png | parts_leaf_1094.png | 0.705875 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003716 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3149.png | parts_leaf_3149.png | 0.69651 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003331 | image | abc_question_images/parts_leaf_11094.png | parts_leaf_11094.png | 0.687707 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003629 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1123.png | parts_leaf_1123.png | 0.686747 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003588 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1115.png | parts_leaf_1115.png | 0.684415 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_003758 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3979.png | parts_leaf_3979.png | 0.679987 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | DQ_004051 | image | question_images/types_leaves_1023.png | types_leaves_1023.png | 0.670749 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_1598 | text | null | Plants and animals depend on water to live. They also play a role in the water cycle. Plants take up water from the soil and release large amounts of water vapor into the air through their leaves (Figure 1.3), a process known as transpiration. | 0.702636 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_3434 | text | null | Water also moves through the living organisms in an ecosystem. Plants soak up large amounts of water through their roots. The water then moves up the plant and evaporates from the leaves in a process called transpiration. The process of transpiration, like evaporation, returns water back into the atmosphere. | 0.698656 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_0024 | text | null | Flowing water slows down when it reaches flatter land or flows into a body of still water. What do you think happens then? The water starts dropping the particles it was carrying. As the water slows, it drops the largest particles first. The smallest particles settle out last. | 0.648811 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_0141 | text | null | Ponds and lakes may get their water from several sources. Some falls directly into them as precipitation. Some enters as runoff and some from streams and rivers. Water leaves ponds and lakes through evaporation and also as outflow. | 0.624318 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_3385 | text | null | Plants seem to grow wherever they can. How? Plants cant move on their own. So how does a plant start growing in a new area? | 0.62384 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_1314 | text | null | As part of the hydrologic cycle, water spends a lot of time in the atmosphere, mostly as water vapor. The atmosphere is an important reservoir for water. Chlorophyll indicates the presence of photosynthesizing plants as does the veg- etation index. | 0.62082 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_0147 | text | null | Freshwater below Earths surface is called groundwater. The water infiltrates, or seeps down into, the ground from the surface. How does this happen? And where does the water go? | 0.620286 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_0025 | text | null | Water that flows over Earths surface includes runoff, streams, and rivers. All these types of flowing water can cause erosion and deposition. | 0.617141 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_4018 | text | null | Water (H2 O) is an example of a chemical compound. Water molecules always consist of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. Like water, all other chemical compounds consist of a fixed ratio of elements. It doesnt matter how much or how little of a compound there is. It always has the same composition. | 0.606874 |
DQ_003646 | Which part of the leaf transports water around? | question_images/parts_leaf_1125.png | a. Leaflet, b. The bud, c. The vein, d. Roots | c | T_0250 | text | null | The water cycle plays an important role in weather. When liquid water evaporates, it causes humidity. When water vapor condenses, it forms clouds and precipitation. Humidity, clouds, and precipitation are all important weather factors. | 0.604376 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003647 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | parts_leaf_3106.png | 1 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003347 | image | abc_question_images/parts_leaf_13106.png | parts_leaf_13106.png | 0.936561 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003573 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1112.png | parts_leaf_1112.png | 0.879342 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003751 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3860.png | parts_leaf_3860.png | 0.86616 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003522 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1085.png | parts_leaf_1085.png | 0.863152 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003993 | image | question_images/parts_plant_6271.png | parts_plant_6271.png | 0.860953 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003892 | image | question_images/parts_plant_3201.png | parts_plant_3201.png | 0.839265 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003565 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1106.png | parts_leaf_1106.png | 0.822373 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_003414 | image | abc_question_images/parts_plant_13201.png | parts_plant_13201.png | 0.809666 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | DQ_004335 | image | question_images/types_leaves_4746.png | types_leaves_4746.png | 0.807146 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_3385 | text | null | Plants seem to grow wherever they can. How? Plants cant move on their own. So how does a plant start growing in a new area? | 0.653344 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_1598 | text | null | Plants and animals depend on water to live. They also play a role in the water cycle. Plants take up water from the soil and release large amounts of water vapor into the air through their leaves (Figure 1.3), a process known as transpiration. | 0.649649 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_3434 | text | null | Water also moves through the living organisms in an ecosystem. Plants soak up large amounts of water through their roots. The water then moves up the plant and evaporates from the leaves in a process called transpiration. The process of transpiration, like evaporation, returns water back into the atmosphere. | 0.644639 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_3234 | text | null | Your heart pumps blood around your body. But how does your heart get blood to and from every cell in your body? Your heart is connected to blood vessels such as veins and arteries. Organs that work together form an organ system. Together, your heart, blood, and blood vessels form your cardiovascular system. What other organ systems can you think of? | 0.635101 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_2956 | text | null | Scientists used to think that fungi were members of the plant kingdom. They thought this because fungi had several similarities to plants. For example: Fungi and plants have similar structures. Plants and fungi live in the same kinds of habitats, such as growing in soil. Plants and fungi cells both have a cell wall, which animals do not have. | 0.633798 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_1950 | text | null | The most basic division of modern plants is between nonvascular and vascular plants. Vascular plants are further divided into those that reproduce without seeds and those that reproduce with seeds. Seed plants, in turn, are divided into those that produce naked seeds in cones and those that produce seeds in the ovaries of flowers. | 0.624048 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_1312 | text | null | In photosynthesis, plants use CO2 and create O2 . Photosynthesis is responsible for nearly all of the oxygen currently found in the atmosphere. The chemical reaction for photosynthesis is: 6CO2 + 6H2 O + solar energy C6 H12 O6 (sugar) + 6O2 | 0.620145 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_1106 | text | null | Despite these problems, there is a rich fossil record. How does an organism become fossilized? | 0.616868 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_0638 | text | null | To understand minerals, we must first understand matter. Matter is the substance that physical objects are made of. | 0.608761 |
DQ_003647 | What is the part that connects a leaf to a stem? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. midrib, b. leafstalk, c. blade, d. vein | b | T_3941 | text | null | Why do different states of matter have different properties? Its because of differences in energy at the level of atoms and molecules, the tiny particles that make up matter. | 0.605506 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003647 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | parts_leaf_3106.png | 1 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003347 | image | abc_question_images/parts_leaf_13106.png | parts_leaf_13106.png | 0.936561 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003573 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1112.png | parts_leaf_1112.png | 0.879342 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003751 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3860.png | parts_leaf_3860.png | 0.86616 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003522 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1085.png | parts_leaf_1085.png | 0.863152 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003993 | image | question_images/parts_plant_6271.png | parts_plant_6271.png | 0.860953 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003892 | image | question_images/parts_plant_3201.png | parts_plant_3201.png | 0.839265 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003565 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1106.png | parts_leaf_1106.png | 0.822373 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_003414 | image | abc_question_images/parts_plant_13201.png | parts_plant_13201.png | 0.809666 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | DQ_004335 | image | question_images/types_leaves_4746.png | types_leaves_4746.png | 0.807146 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1927 | text | null | An organ is a structure composed of two or more types of tissues that work together to do a specific task. Most modern plants have several organs that help them survive and reproduce in a variety of habitats. Major organs of most plants include roots, stems, and leaves. These and other plant organs generally contain all three major tissue types. | 0.718562 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1950 | text | null | The most basic division of modern plants is between nonvascular and vascular plants. Vascular plants are further divided into those that reproduce without seeds and those that reproduce with seeds. Seed plants, in turn, are divided into those that produce naked seeds in cones and those that produce seeds in the ovaries of flowers. | 0.666781 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_3385 | text | null | Plants seem to grow wherever they can. How? Plants cant move on their own. So how does a plant start growing in a new area? | 0.665338 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1598 | text | null | Plants and animals depend on water to live. They also play a role in the water cycle. Plants take up water from the soil and release large amounts of water vapor into the air through their leaves (Figure 1.3), a process known as transpiration. | 0.624335 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1925 | text | null | Ground tissue makes up much of the inside of a plant. The cells of ground tissue carry out basic metabolic functions and other biochemical reactions. Ground tissue may also store food or water. | 0.618435 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_3434 | text | null | Water also moves through the living organisms in an ecosystem. Plants soak up large amounts of water through their roots. The water then moves up the plant and evaporates from the leaves in a process called transpiration. The process of transpiration, like evaporation, returns water back into the atmosphere. | 0.615378 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1936 | text | null | By the time the earliest plants evolved, animals were already the dominant living things in the water. Plants were also limited to the upper layer of water. Only near the top of the water column is there enough sunlight for photosynthesis. So plants never became dominant aquatic organisms. | 0.614649 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1947 | text | null | Some seed plants evolved another major adaptation. This was the formation of seeds in flowers. Flowers are plant structures that contain male and/or female reproductive organs. | 0.612106 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1958 | text | null | Plants live just about everywhere on Earth. To live in so many different habitats, they have evolved adaptations that allow them to survive and reproduce under a diversity of conditions. Some plants have evolved special adaptations that let them live in extreme environments. | 0.611549 |
DQ_003648 | What organ holds the plant upright? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. Stem, b. Stipules, c. Sheath, d. Petiole | a | T_1942 | text | null | With all these adaptations, its easy to see why vascular plants were very successful. They spread quickly and widely on land. As vascular plants spread, many nonvascular plants went extinct. Vascular plants became and remain the dominant land plants on Earth. | 0.608984 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003647 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | parts_leaf_3106.png | 1 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003347 | image | abc_question_images/parts_leaf_13106.png | parts_leaf_13106.png | 0.936561 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003573 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1112.png | parts_leaf_1112.png | 0.879342 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003751 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_3860.png | parts_leaf_3860.png | 0.86616 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003522 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1085.png | parts_leaf_1085.png | 0.863152 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003993 | image | question_images/parts_plant_6271.png | parts_plant_6271.png | 0.860953 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003892 | image | question_images/parts_plant_3201.png | parts_plant_3201.png | 0.839265 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003565 | image | question_images/parts_leaf_1106.png | parts_leaf_1106.png | 0.822373 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_003414 | image | abc_question_images/parts_plant_13201.png | parts_plant_13201.png | 0.809666 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | DQ_004335 | image | question_images/types_leaves_4746.png | types_leaves_4746.png | 0.807146 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_1598 | text | null | Plants and animals depend on water to live. They also play a role in the water cycle. Plants take up water from the soil and release large amounts of water vapor into the air through their leaves (Figure 1.3), a process known as transpiration. | 0.648206 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_3434 | text | null | Water also moves through the living organisms in an ecosystem. Plants soak up large amounts of water through their roots. The water then moves up the plant and evaporates from the leaves in a process called transpiration. The process of transpiration, like evaporation, returns water back into the atmosphere. | 0.616454 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_1950 | text | null | The most basic division of modern plants is between nonvascular and vascular plants. Vascular plants are further divided into those that reproduce without seeds and those that reproduce with seeds. Seed plants, in turn, are divided into those that produce naked seeds in cones and those that produce seeds in the ovaries of flowers. | 0.615373 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_1698 | text | null | How well soil forms and what type of soil forms depends on several different factors, which are described below. | 0.614616 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_1312 | text | null | In photosynthesis, plants use CO2 and create O2 . Photosynthesis is responsible for nearly all of the oxygen currently found in the atmosphere. The chemical reaction for photosynthesis is: 6CO2 + 6H2 O + solar energy C6 H12 O6 (sugar) + 6O2 | 0.608974 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_1106 | text | null | Despite these problems, there is a rich fossil record. How does an organism become fossilized? | 0.604175 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_2508 | text | null | Cellular respiration and photosynthesis are like two sides of the same coin. This is clear from the diagram in Figure needed for photosynthesis. Together, the two processes store and release energy in virtually all living things. | 0.601387 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_3385 | text | null | Plants seem to grow wherever they can. How? Plants cant move on their own. So how does a plant start growing in a new area? | 0.600269 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_2956 | text | null | Scientists used to think that fungi were members of the plant kingdom. They thought this because fungi had several similarities to plants. For example: Fungi and plants have similar structures. Plants and fungi live in the same kinds of habitats, such as growing in soil. Plants and fungi cells both have a cell wall, which animals do not have. | 0.598832 |
DQ_003649 | How many parts of a leaf are identified in the diagram? | question_images/parts_leaf_3106.png | a. 4, b. 6, c. 5, d. 3 | b | T_2385 | text | null | Two important concepts associated with the ecosystem are niche and habitat. | 0.596869 |
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