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Monday, June 6, 2011

Fact File: Oak Leaf Roller Moth

The Oak Leaf Roller Moth lays small groups of eggs on oak twigs. In spring, the caterpillar feeds an oak leaves, which they roll up silk.

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Fact File: Reed Grass

In many wetland areas, reeds spread rapidly, crowding out other types of marsh grass. For this reason it has to be regularly cut down. Reed grass has been used in the production of paper.


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Sunday, June 5, 2011

Fact File: Stinkhorn

Flies and other insects ate attracted to the stinking, slimy spore mass of the common stinkhorn. When they fly off after feeding, they carry away spores stuck on to their bodies. This is the way in ehich the stinkhorn spreads to new locations.

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Fact File: Chanterelles

The term tooth-fungi covers a range of unrelated species all of unrelated species all of which have spines or teeth on which spores are produced. Because of pollution, many of these are becoming rare.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011

Fact File: Clover



Clover flowers are very rich in nectar and so attract many insects. The white base of the flower has a lovely taste like fresh honey.


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Fact File: Wine Grapes


 Most wine grapes are picked by machine. However, special grapes for making rare wines are carefully picked by hand.

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Fact File: Dandelion

 

When the flowers of the dandelion mature, they form feathered, cottony seeds that the wind carries far and wide.



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Fact File: Bindweed

 

If a gardener were to turn the bindweed in another direction and the bindweed could  not untangle itself and assume its natural direction from right to left, it would eventually die.



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Fact File: Poinsettia

 


 The poinsettia is a popular houseplant also used as a Christmas decoration. What look like the bright red petals are actually a kind of leaf. The ral flowers are tiny green dots in the middle.


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Fact File: King Charles V

 


King Charles V of France adopted three golden fluers-de-lis on a blue field as his coat of arms in the 14th century. The design is also a symbol for north on the compass.


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Fact File: Yellow Water Lilies

Yellow water lilies are found in lakes, ponds and rivers. Bulrushes grow in marsehs or in shallow water. They have tough stems which are round or triangular and up to 3.7 m (12 feet) tall. Their tiny flowers are clustered into small brownish spikelets at or near the tops of the stems.

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Fact File: Plants Feel





Some plants have sensitive hairs on their leaves. If an unsuspecting insect lands on these sticky hairs, it will quickly find its legs hopelessly entangled.

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Fact File: Dodder




Once dodder has established itself, it produces a mass of pink threads which cover the host plant and weaken it severely.


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