nutrition in plants Crossword Puzzles
Greenhouse Management Crossword Puzzle 2022-11-03
Across
- Lower leaves are brown, rotting and drying out
- Changes leaf color to pale green or silver
- Greenhouse that has the most light transmission
- To plant seeds
- Plants that complete their life cycles in two years
- White cottony, sucking insect
- Starting seeds without transplanting
- Compressed peat moss covered in a fine mesh
- Small translucent, sucking insect
- Soil
- Seedlings fall over causing the stem to rot
- Collects/stores sunlight
- Green, soft-bodied, winged or non-wingedm sucking insect
- Larva feed on plant roots and new callused tissue
- Greenhouses that are primarily used for florist crops
- Greenhouses are set on sidewalls
- Brown, hard-shelled, sucking insect
- Several small cell like pots of plastic are molded together
- Plastic tray for planting seeds
- Helps with watering the greenhouse, but not deep watering some plants need.
- At least 6 hours of sun each day
- Greenhouse that has one side of the roof is longer than the other side
Down
- Greenhouse that slopes in only one direction
- Starting seeds and transplanting them
- Plants that live more than two years
- Removal of spent or dead flower
- Provides lighting for plants in cloudy or wintery days
- Provides a fine mist for seeds and cuttings
- Allow fresh air in the greenhouse
- Provides a uniform temperature throughout the greenhouse
- Morning sun and afternoon shade
- Powdery insects with four white wings, sucking insect
- Protection environment for plants
- Tubes with emmitters go to plants to water each, one by one
- Greenhouse that has no sidewalls
- Red body pest with eight legs
- Pots used for peat material
- Slimy brown pests
- Eat plant parts, chewing insects
- Pull hot air from the greenhouse
- Expensive pots made from plants and vegetable pil
- Removal of the top portion of a plant
- A few hours of morning sun, or full shade
- Greenhouse that has curve-shaped roof bars
- Plants that complete their life cycles in one year
- Control temperature
- Chew stems at the soil level
- The roof is equal on both sides of the greenhouse
48 Clues: Soil • To plant seeds • Slimy brown pests • Control temperature • Collects/stores sunlight • Pots used for peat material • Chew stems at the soil level • White cottony, sucking insect • Red body pest with eight legs • Removal of spent or dead flower • Morning sun and afternoon shade • Plastic tray for planting seeds • Greenhouse that has no sidewalls • Eat plant parts, chewing insects • ...
yazireth 2022-10-31
Across
- a compound found in most body tissues important components of cell membranes, but a high amount in the blood is associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease.
- a mechanical process that prevents the cream from rising to the surface of the milk. Breaks globules of milk fat into tiny particles and spreads them throughout the milk.
- fiber: the indigestible portion of food delivered from plants. Also called roughage. Choosing foods high in dietary fiber can make you feel fuller and can help digestion and prevent constipation.
- foods: foods that are purchased in the freezer section of the grocery store and are to be stored in the freezer after getting home.
- a medical condition in which the bones become brittle and fragile from loss of tissue
- milk is heat-treated to destroy harmful bacteria.Albumen: egg white, or the protein contained in it.
- storage: food items stored in a cabinet and do not require refrigeration or freezing.
- a group of plants that have double-seamed pods containing a single row of seeds.Marbling: flecks of fat throughout the lean meat, indicates the tenderness of a cut
- the process of a liquid changing to a solid or semi-solid state
- produce that has lost its crispness and is limp
- date: the last date that a food product should be used before it is considered spoiled or has lost quality and nutritional value, usually specified on the label or package.
- the browning of sugar, a process used in cooking that results in a sweet nutty flavor and brown color
- date: the last date by which a food product should be sold before being removed from grocery shelves.Use by date: the date found on food packaging that indicates when food should be used by for the highest quality and nutrition. Food safety should be considered for highly perishable foods such as lunch meats and ground meats.
Down
- nutrients added in amounts greater than what is naturally there
- a protein forming the main constituent of elastic connective tissue.
- Immediately. Without hesitation or time-lapse.
- fatty acids: an unsaturated fatty acid of a kind occurring chiefly in fish oils.
- storage: a storage area for foods kept at 33-41 degrees for food safety.
- the mixture that forms when combining liquids that ordinarily do not mix; can be temporary or permanent.
- dairy: having had water removed or reduced to result in a higher proportion of other nutrients (fat, carbohydrate, protein, etc.)
- dairy: dairy foods that have been fermented with lactic acid bacteria
21 Clues: Immediately. Without hesitation or time-lapse. • produce that has lost its crispness and is limp • nutrients added in amounts greater than what is naturally there • the process of a liquid changing to a solid or semi-solid state • a protein forming the main constituent of elastic connective tissue. • ...
My six Nutrition crossword 2025-09-16
Across
- - Wrapped and packed, with extras inside.
- - I'm not a meal, yet help you grow A, B, C, I’m in the row. Found in fruits and sometimes pills What am I?
- - Earth’s gift, strong and small, Builds your bones, fuels us all.
- - Sweet or starchy, I give you speed— In pasta and bread, I’m what you need.
- - I'm solid or slick, give food its kick, too much of me might make you sick. What am I?
- - Unprocessed, pure, and real, Nature’s plate, a balanced meal.
- - Tiny snacks with mighty power, Crunchy bites from tree or flower.
- - Not too much, not too little just right.
- - Creamy goods from cow or goat, In your fridge or breakfast oat.
- - Clear, cool, life’s flow, From clouds to taps below
- - Crack the shell, gold inside, Protein-packed and breakfast pride.
Down
- - Sweet to taste, quick to burn, In fruits and treats, they twist and turn.
- - Golden fields, a hearty base, Bread and rice energy’s grace
- - Nature’s elite, packed with might, Boost your health, day or night.
- - Fragrant leaves that spice your plate, Fresh or dried, they elevate.
- - fuel your body, keep illness at bay, In fruits and veggies, I lead the way. Balanced and wise, I’m your daily mission— What am I, in the world of nutrition?"
- - I build your muscles, repair your cells, In eggs and beans, I dwell in shells. I'm not a carb, nor fat you see, But vital for your energy.
- - Beans and peas in humble form.
- - Keeps things moving, plant-based might, In fruits and grains, it fuels your bite
- - From garden beds to salad bowls, They fuel your brain and strengthen souls.
20 Clues: - Beans and peas in humble form. • - Wrapped and packed, with extras inside. • - Not too much, not too little just right. • - Clear, cool, life’s flow, From clouds to taps below • - Golden fields, a hearty base, Bread and rice energy’s grace • - Unprocessed, pure, and real, Nature’s plate, a balanced meal. • ...
Summer Garden 2020-07-08
Across
- Non-green plants such as molds and mushrooms
- Helps with weeding or digging a garden
- The number of pairs of legs insects have
- Garden This garden can be planted in a window box
- A miniature plant in a resting state
- Easy to grow vegetable
- Don't eat the leaves of this vegetable
- The study of plants
- A decoy to discourage birds
- Nutrient necessary to prevent blossom end rot
- Keeps blisters at bay
- Move seedling to the garden
- The end product of flowers
- Microscopic worms that live in the soil
- Plants that complete the entire life cycle in one season
Down
- Added to reduce soil acidity
- Nutrient necessary to prevent blossom end rot
- Where you can find babies or plants
- A fern's main means of propagation
- Benefit of gardening
- Plants that complete life cycles in two seasons
- Corn A variety of maize with a high sugar content
- Flowers name is derived from the Greek word for rainbow
- An example of a warm-season grass
- Its extract is often used as a remedy for sunburns
- This flower is a cousin of a daisy
- Sucking insects common on houseplants
- Soil that becomes slick & sticky when wet
- The age-old question - is it a fruit or a vegetable
29 Clues: The study of plants • Benefit of gardening • Keeps blisters at bay • Easy to grow vegetable • The end product of flowers • A decoy to discourage birds • Move seedling to the garden • Added to reduce soil acidity • An example of a warm-season grass • A fern's main means of propagation • This flower is a cousin of a daisy • Where you can find babies or plants • ...
Dog treats 2022-05-25
Across
- any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth.
- a subset of pet food that are not usually intended to be a source of complete and balanced nutrition, but are primarily for rewarding pets.
- remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o
Down
- a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet.
- the distinctive taste of a food or drink.
5 Clues: the distinctive taste of a food or drink. • remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o • a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet. • any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth. • ...
Dog treats 2022-05-25
Across
- any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth.
- a subset of pet food that are not usually intended to be a source of complete and balanced nutrition, but are primarily for rewarding pets.
- remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o
Down
- a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet.
- the distinctive taste of a food or drink.
5 Clues: the distinctive taste of a food or drink. • remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o • a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet. • any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth. • ...
Dog treats 2022-05-25
Across
- any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth.
- a subset of pet food that are not usually intended to be a source of complete and balanced nutrition, but are primarily for rewarding pets.
- remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o
Down
- a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet.
- the distinctive taste of a food or drink.
5 Clues: the distinctive taste of a food or drink. • remove the from (meat or fish) before cooking, serving, o • a small baked unleavened cake, typically crisp, flat, and sweet. • any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that plants absorb in order to maintain life and growth. • ...
Val's Remarkable SSS Puzzle 2025-01-02
Across
- A long time with very little or no rain.
- A natural shape on Earth's surface, like mountains, valleys, or hills.
- A large, flat area of land.
- A huge, slow-moving chunk of ice on land.
- A way to show how plants and animals get their food, starting with plants.
- When too much water covers land that is usually dry.
- A deep valley with steep sides, often carved by a river.
- The process where wind, water, or ice moves dirt and rocks from one place to another.
- The process plants use to turn sunlight, water, and air into food.
- A high, flat area of land that rises above the land around it.
Down
- The breaking down of rocks into smaller pieces by wind, water, or temperature changes.
- A living thing, like a worm or fungus, that breaks down dead plants and animals into tiny pieces.
- The place where an animal or plant lives and grows.
- A group of the same kind of animals or plants living in one area.
- An animal that eats plants or other animals for food.
- A plant that makes its own food using sunlight, water, and air.
- All the plants, animals, and other living things that live in the same area and depend on each other.
- A group of living and non-living things that work together in one place.
- A low area between mountains or hills.
19 Clues: A large, flat area of land. • A low area between mountains or hills. • A long time with very little or no rain. • A huge, slow-moving chunk of ice on land. • The place where an animal or plant lives and grows. • When too much water covers land that is usually dry. • An animal that eats plants or other animals for food. • ...
Midterm review crossword 2024-10-25
Across
- transports photosynthate
- involved in NADPH synthesis
- occurs at high light
- this trait separates liverworts from mosses and vascular plants
- a CAM crop
- flexible support tissue found in petioles
- where Calvin cycle occurs in the chloroplast
- she developed endosymbiotic theory
- stacks of these make up a granum
- transports water
Down
- stores C4 acid in CAM plants
- tissue type that includes root hairs and stomata
- he first measured CO2 levels at Mauna Loa
- air-vapor void in the xylem
- fixes CO2 with a 5C substrate
- loss of CO2
- responsible for oxygenic photosynthesis 2.5 bya
- a C4 crop plant
- synthesis powered by a proton gradient
- electron transporter
- algal precursor of land plants
21 Clues: a CAM crop • loss of CO2 • a C4 crop plant • transports water • occurs at high light • electron transporter • transports photosynthate • air-vapor void in the xylem • involved in NADPH synthesis • stores C4 acid in CAM plants • fixes CO2 with a 5C substrate • algal precursor of land plants • stacks of these make up a granum • she developed endosymbiotic theory • ...
GUESS WHO 2017-10-22
18 Clues: HOLLYWOOD • LAX GOALIE • KALI KRINGLE • 32 BELOW FAN • YOU'RE SO VAIN • SIRE SCRIBBLES • DANCE PARTY PAL • TELECOM CROONER • NUTRITION NINJA • CODING CARPENTER • MUTANT PROFESSOR • LONE STAR EVEREST • NEXT GEN MOTORIST • BELLE OF THE BALL • CHIROPODIST SELFIE • TRINITROTOLUENE BUMPER • GERARD BUTLER HOMETOWN • FIBRE ARTISTE APPRENTICE
Agricultural Facts 2022-03-29
Across
- manual tool used to break large rock
- fungi that makes spores instead of seeds
- manual tool used to scoop dirt
- the mature flower of a plant
- used to split soil for planting
- used to make paper
- method plants use to obtain nutrients
- used as a type of fertilizer
- adding water to plants for growth
- animal commonly used to pull a plow
Down
- only grows at a certain time in the year
- scientific name for brown seaweed
- a mix of chemicals that keeps bugs off plants
- worlds most common carnivorous plant
- added to soil to help plants grow
- makes up 60% of the human body
- mending two plants together
- fungi meant for human consumption
- tropical marine ecosystem
- part of the plant that sucks water and minerals from the ground
20 Clues: used to make paper • tropical marine ecosystem • mending two plants together • the mature flower of a plant • used as a type of fertilizer • manual tool used to scoop dirt • makes up 60% of the human body • used to split soil for planting • scientific name for brown seaweed • added to soil to help plants grow • fungi meant for human consumption • adding water to plants for growth • ...
sandra 3.01 key terms 2023-03-28
Across
- Bank A warehouse or storehouse for millions of pounds of food and other products that go out to the community.
- Kitchen A meal center or food kitchen where food is offered to the hungry for free or at a below-market price, frequently located in lower-income neighborhoods and often staffed by volunteer organizations, such as a church or community groups.
- School Lunch Program Administered at the state level by the NC Department of Public Instruction to offer free and reduced-priced meals to children from families who qualify.
- Nervosa The condition is marked by cycles of extreme overeating, known as bingeing, followed by purging or other behaviors to compensate for the overeating. It is also associated with feelings of loss of control over eating.
- A food and nutrition service that works with state agencies nutrition educators, and neighborhood and faith-based
Down
- Contamination The process by which bacteria is unintentionally transferred from one food or object to another.
- Danger Zone The temperature range from 35℉ 135℉ in which food-borne bacteria can multiply to unsafe levels.
- Nervosa This is characterized by weight loss often due to excessive dieting and exercise, sometimes to the point of starvation. People with anorexia can never be thin enough and continue to see themselves as “fat” despite extreme weight loss.
- Pantry An organization or group that sorts and packages donated food items for distribution directly to people in need.
- Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children WIC Program that provides federal grants to states for supplemental foods, health care referrals, and nutrition education for low-income pregnant, breastfeeding, and non-breastfeeding postpartum women, and infants and children up to age five who are found to be at nutritional risk.
- Eating Disorder This is characterized by regular episodes of extreme overeating and feelings of loss of control over eating.
- Desert These are geographic areas that lack access to affordable fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat milk, and other foods that make up the full range of a healthy diet, particularly for those without access to an automobile.
- Meal Sites Nutritional programs that provide meals to homebound older adults and persons with disabilities.
13 Clues: Danger Zone The temperature range from 35℉ 135℉ in which food-borne bacteria can multiply to unsafe levels. • Meal Sites Nutritional programs that provide meals to homebound older adults and persons with disabilities. • Contamination The process by which bacteria is unintentionally transferred from one food or object to another. • ...
Medical Nutrition Therapy in Critical Care 2023-04-04
Across
- incorporates early EN to reduce disease severity, duration, morbidity, and mortality
- a steroid hormone that is produced by your 2 adrenal glands, which sit on top of each kidney
- secreted by the anterior pituitary gland, enhances skeletal muscle catabolism and promotes hepatic use of amino acids
- occurring immediately after injury, associated with hypovolemia, shock, and tissue hypoxia
- proinflammatory proteins such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
- occurs with increased intraabdominal pressure, often after major trauma or sepsis
Down
- elevated after injury and sepsis and play a role in muscle and tissue breakdown
- describes the widespread inflammation that can occur in infection, pancreatitis, ischemia, burns, multiple trauma, hemorrhagic shock, or immunologically mediated organ injury
- form the continuous intercellular barrier between epithelial cells
- secretory proteins produced by the liver
- maintenance of airway and breathing, adequate circulating fluid volume and tissue oxidation, and acid-base neutrality
- common complication of SIRS, development of organ dysfunction or failure
- Infection
- epinephrine and norepinephrine released by the adrenal medulla
- characterized by increased cardiac output, oxygen consumption, body temperature, energy expenditure, and total body protein catabolism
- pratical scoring system to define organ dysfunction of a potentially septic patient
- total body surface area
17 Clues: Infection • total body surface area • secretory proteins produced by the liver • epinephrine and norepinephrine released by the adrenal medulla • form the continuous intercellular barrier between epithelial cells • common complication of SIRS, development of organ dysfunction or failure • ...
caesar 3.01 key terms 2024-02-28
Across
- Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC): Program that provides federal grants to states for supplemental foods, health care referrals, and nutrition education for low-income pregnant, breastfeeding, and non-breastfeeding postpartum women, and infants and children up to age five who are found to be at nutritional risk.
- Bank A warehouse or storehouse for millions of pounds of food and other products that go out to the community.
- Meal Sites Nutritional programs that provide meals to homebound older adults and persons with disabilities.
- Pantry An organization or group that sorts and packages donated food items for distribution directly to people in need.
- The temperature range from 35℉ - 135℉ in which food-borne bacteria can multiply to unsafe levels.
- Kitchen A meal center or food kitchen where food is offered to the hungry for free or at a below-market price, frequently located in lower-income neighborhoods and often staffed by volunteer organizations, such as a church or community groups.
- The condition is marked by cycles of extreme overeating, known as bingeing, followed by purging or other behaviors to compensate for the overeating. It is also associated with feelings of loss of control over eating.
- A food and nutrition service that works with state agencies nutrition educators, and neighborhood and faith-based
Down
- This is characterized by regular episodes of extreme overeating and feelings of loss of control over eating.
- Administered at the state level by the NC Department of Public Instruction to offer free and reduced-priced meals to children from families who qualify.
- Desert These are geographic areas that lack access to affordable fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat milk, and other foods that make up the full range of a healthy diet, particularly for those without access to an automobile.
- The process by which bacteria is unintentionally transferred from one food or object to another.
- This is characterized by weight loss often due to excessive dieting and exercise, sometimes to the point of starvation. People with anorexia can never be thin enough and continue to see themselves as “fat” despite extreme weight loss.
13 Clues: The process by which bacteria is unintentionally transferred from one food or object to another. • The temperature range from 35℉ - 135℉ in which food-borne bacteria can multiply to unsafe levels. • Meal Sites Nutritional programs that provide meals to homebound older adults and persons with disabilities. • ...
The Hunger Games 2023-10-25
Across
- to get smaller due to lack of nutrition
- Katniss' hunting partner
- Problem or hard situation
- District that no longer exists
- to bring in
- Prim's cat
- Tributes that train their entire life.
- Actions of a maniac
- To cut or injure badly
- _______ Collins. Author's first name.
- To want something badly
Down
- To allow
- Alone
- Someone who goes against their country
- "Katniss Everdeen. The girl on ______."
- Cut out of Avox
- Peeta's stylist
- District 11's Job
18 Clues: Alone • To allow • Prim's cat • to bring in • Cut out of Avox • Peeta's stylist • District 11's Job • Actions of a maniac • To cut or injure badly • To want something badly • Katniss' hunting partner • Problem or hard situation • District that no longer exists • _______ Collins. Author's first name. • Someone who goes against their country • Tributes that train their entire life. • ...
JRussell Protein 2017-01-23
Across
- Fats produced when oils are turned into solids in food production.
- Amino acids that the boy needs but cannot provide.
- Green pigment in plants.
- Fatty acids in fish oil.
- Unsaturated fatty acids with one hydrogen unit missing.
- Cells that store fat from foods and grow larger as they store additional fat.
- Chemical building blocks of proteins that link together in many arrangements.
- Lipoprotein that takes cholesterol from liver to where needed in the body.
- Fatty acid that contains all the hydrogen it can chemically hold.
- Simple carbs chemically formed from plants.
- Lipoprotein that picks up up cholesterol and takes it back to the liver for excretion.
- Carbs with complicated structures.
- Chemical process that turns vegetable oil into solids.
- Chemical packages that transport fatty acids through the bloodstream.
- Chemical structures that make up fats.
Down
- Nutrients that is a persons main source of energy.
- Type of lipid, commonly called fats.
- Sugars extracted from plants and used to sweeten foods.
- Chemical process by which plants make carbs.
- Protein with globular shape.
- Unsaturated fatty acid with two or more hydrogen units missing.
- Sugars with single unit chemical structure.
- Plant proteins that lack at least one essential amino acid.
- Proteins that contain all essential amino acids.
- Formed when plants combine single glucose units in more complicated chemical structures.
- Fat like substance in all body cells
26 Clues: Green pigment in plants. • Fatty acids in fish oil. • Protein with globular shape. • Carbs with complicated structures. • Type of lipid, commonly called fats. • Fat like substance in all body cells • Chemical structures that make up fats. • Sugars with single unit chemical structure. • Simple carbs chemically formed from plants. • Chemical process by which plants make carbs. • ...
Unit 1 Vocabulary 2023-10-06
Across
- the variety of organisms in an ecosystem
- major site of photosynthesis in most plants
- process by which plants use light energy to convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and glucose
- hair-like extensions that allow the root to absorb more water
- a species that influences the survival of many other species in an ecosystem
- site of photosynthesis in plants
- underground organs that absorb water and minerals
- process that releases energy by breaking down glucose and other food molecules
- level step in a food chain or food web
Down
- dioxide a gas that is expelled by humans and animalso
- main source of energy for an ecosystem
- the location of cellular respiration
- tissue in plants that transports water
- gas created as an outcome of photosynthesis
- part of cell division during which the nucleus divides
- an animal that is hunted for foor
- main energy source that most cells use for their work
- small opening on the underground leaf which allows gas to flow
- the struggle between organisms to survive
- diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane
- tissue in plants that transports glucose
- largest number of individuals of a population that an environment can support
- an animal that hunts other animals for food
- a biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment
- factor any biotic or abiotic factor that restricts growth of a population
25 Clues: site of photosynthesis in plants • an animal that is hunted for foor • the location of cellular respiration • main source of energy for an ecosystem • tissue in plants that transports water • level step in a food chain or food web • the variety of organisms in an ecosystem • tissue in plants that transports glucose • the struggle between organisms to survive • ...
Plants Vocabulary 2025-11-17
Across
- to soak up
- baby plants
- turns to ice
- air-like matter
- gas plants make
- body reacts badly
- things needed for growth
- new plant part that grows up
- no longer alive
Down
- when a seed starts to grow
- Product something the body does not need
- height or amount
- stay alive
- very young plant
- moved from place to place
- droop from no water
16 Clues: to soak up • stay alive • baby plants • turns to ice • air-like matter • gas plants make • no longer alive • height or amount • very young plant • body reacts badly • droop from no water • things needed for growth • moved from place to place • when a seed starts to grow • new plant part that grows up • Product something the body does not need
Flowering Plants 2025-12-12
Across
- Contains the male organs of a flower.
- Contains the female organs of a flower.
- Transfer of pollen from male to female parts of the flower.
- Allows sperm cells to move through the style.
- Houses the female gametes.
- Holds up the anther.
- Protects the maturing flower bud.
- These grains contain male gametes.
Down
- Cup-like structure that holds the flower.
- Surrounds and protects the seeds.
- Stalk that holds up the flower.
- Produces and stores pollen.
- Has a sticky surface to trap pollen grains.
- Colorful structure attracts pollinators to the flower.
- This structure contains female gametes.
- Shaft connecting the stigma to the ovary.
16 Clues: Holds up the anther. • Houses the female gametes. • Produces and stores pollen. • Stalk that holds up the flower. • Surrounds and protects the seeds. • Protects the maturing flower bud. • These grains contain male gametes. • Contains the male organs of a flower. • Contains the female organs of a flower. • This structure contains female gametes. • ...
Chloe's term 4 week 8 crossword 2021-11-30
Across
- Lack of nutrition
- Feeling concern or curiosity about something
- To pass from one to another
- Curiosity or interest in something
- Being able to interact with things
- Situated or extending across something
Down
- Abnormatility of shape and form
- To take or carry
- The condition of being transperent
- To express the sense the words in different language
- Improper,ilegal or negligent professional behavior
- Things that occur between nations
- A fail to function normally in machinery
- An action of interfering
- Abnormal shape or form
15 Clues: To take or carry • Lack of nutrition • Abnormal shape or form • An action of interfering • To pass from one to another • Abnormatility of shape and form • Things that occur between nations • The condition of being transperent • Curiosity or interest in something • Being able to interact with things • Situated or extending across something • A fail to function normally in machinery • ...
Bryce 2016-06-28
Across
- A number of people or things of a similar kind
- Fixes you power
- An undertaker
- Looks after you technical equipment
- A person qualified to practise medicine
- A person who prescribes and dependence glasses
- Makes/plays music
Down
- A doctor having direct contact with a patents
- Involved in politics
- having a chat
- A person actively engaged in a art
- An expert on diet or nutrition
- Existing or coming before in time
- Good at planning
- Does magic
15 Clues: Does magic • having a chat • An undertaker • Fixes you power • Good at planning • Makes/plays music • Involved in politics • An expert on diet or nutrition • Existing or coming before in time • A person actively engaged in a art • Looks after you technical equipment • A person qualified to practise medicine • A doctor having direct contact with a patents • ...
Photosynthesis 2025-01-20
Across
- use sunlight to make food
- source of energy for photosynthesis
- cells that control pores in leaves
- another term for an autotroph
- must eat other organisms for food
- sac in chloroplasts that contains chlorophyll
- type of cell where photosynthesis takes place
- energy storing molecule
- another term for a heterotroph
- organelle that contains chlorophyll
- name given to plants like cacti that close their stomata during the day
Down
- green pigment found in plants
- pores found in leaves
- one of the reactants in photosynthesis
- one of the end products in photosynthesis
- one of the reactants in photosynthesis
- multiple step reaction whereby plants make their own food
- one of the end products in photosynthesis
- cycle found in the light-independent reaction
- what chlorophyll absorbs
- fluid found in chloroplasts
21 Clues: pores found in leaves • energy storing molecule • what chlorophyll absorbs • use sunlight to make food • fluid found in chloroplasts • green pigment found in plants • another term for an autotroph • another term for a heterotroph • must eat other organisms for food • cells that control pores in leaves • source of energy for photosynthesis • organelle that contains chlorophyll • ...
Revision on living things and living systems 2021-09-20
Across
- Plants have _______________ to trap sunlight to make food.
- Plants which produce flowers are called _____________ plants.
- The leaf has ________________, which are tiny openings that help the plant take in and give out air.
- Both _____________ and bacteria do not make their own food
- The young of living things can ________________ into adults.
- There is a great _____________ of things around us.
- Bacteria can only be seen clearly under a __________________.
- Mosquitoes have three body parts, three pairs of legs and a pair of ___________________.
- Non-flowering plants reproduce by __________________.
- Plants which do not produce flowers are called ________________ plants.
- The ____________ anchor the plant firmly to the ground.
Down
- Parrot and ostrich are examples of birds. They are covered with ______________.
- Frog and salamander are examples of ___________________.
- _____________________ are very small living things that cannot be seen with our naked eyes.
- The roots absorb ____________ and mineral salts.
- The ___________ supports the plant so that the plant can remain upright to get more sunlight to make food.
- Living things can _______________ to changes around them.
- Ants and butterfly are examples of ____________________.
- Animals _________________ so that they will not become extinct and will continue to exist.
- Flowering plants reproduce by ________________.
20 Clues: Flowering plants reproduce by ________________. • The roots absorb ____________ and mineral salts. • There is a great _____________ of things around us. • Non-flowering plants reproduce by __________________. • The ____________ anchor the plant firmly to the ground. • Frog and salamander are examples of ___________________. • ...
Agriculture! 2025-08-12
Across
- The process of watering plants
- A name for a baby cow
- The process of growing plants and raising animals
- Farm animal that says "moo"
- Farm animal that lays eggs
- An insect that helps pollinate flowers
- Farm animal that gives us wool
- What you call raising fish for food
- Vegetable that grows underground and is orange
- Tool used to dig in the soil
Down
- The process in which plants make food
- Yellow vegetable that grows on a cob
- A crop used to make bread
- Liquid needed by all plants
- The machine used to plow a field
- Something farmers wear on their feet
- What we plant in the soil to grow crops
- Gas animals and people breathe out
- A fruit that's red or green and grows on trees
19 Clues: A name for a baby cow • A crop used to make bread • Farm animal that lays eggs • Farm animal that says "moo" • Liquid needed by all plants • Tool used to dig in the soil • The process of watering plants • Farm animal that gives us wool • The machine used to plow a field • Gas animals and people breathe out • What you call raising fish for food • ...
CRAIG'S ECOSYSTEM CROSSWORD PUZZLE 2022-10-04
Across
- FEEDS MOSTLY ON PLANTS
- GROUP OF SAME INDIVIDUALS
- CANNOT MAKE ITS OWN FOOD
- COMMUNITY OF ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENT
- PREYS ON OTHERS
- PRESERVING AN ECOSYSTEM
- MEETS NEEDS OF ORGANISM
- CONSUMES ANIMALS, PLANTS AND FUNGI
- GRADUAL CHANGE OF AN ORGANISM
Down
- GETS ENERGY BY BREAKING DOWN WASTE
- GETS NUTRIENTS BY DECOMPOSING OTHER ORGANISMS
- EATS MEAT
- ROLE AN ANIMAL OR PLANT PLAYS
- CHANGES CARBON DIOXIDE AND WATER
- MAKES ITS OWN FOOD
- GREEN PIGMENT IN PLANTS
- ORGANISMS THAT LIVE IN THE SAME PLACE
- NON-LIVING
- LIVING ORGANISM
- SINGLE CELL LIFE FORM
20 Clues: EATS MEAT • NON-LIVING • PREYS ON OTHERS • LIVING ORGANISM • MAKES ITS OWN FOOD • SINGLE CELL LIFE FORM • FEEDS MOSTLY ON PLANTS • GREEN PIGMENT IN PLANTS • PRESERVING AN ECOSYSTEM • MEETS NEEDS OF ORGANISM • CANNOT MAKE ITS OWN FOOD • GROUP OF SAME INDIVIDUALS • ROLE AN ANIMAL OR PLANT PLAYS • GRADUAL CHANGE OF AN ORGANISM • CHANGES CARBON DIOXIDE AND WATER • ...
March 2026 Crossword 3 2026-02-18
Across
- artificial watering of land
- the gathering of crops
- removing unwanted plants
- a leafy non-flowering plant
- material spread over soil
- decayed organic fertilizer
- the top layer of earth for growth
- a limb of a tree
- the underground part of a plant
- a small soft green plant
- placing seeds or plants in soil
Down
- a digging tool
- a tool for gathering leaves
- a small thin branch
- trimming plant growth
- the main plant stalk
- a garden cultivating tool
- a small garden transport cart
- a field of fruit trees
- fluid circulating in plants
20 Clues: a digging tool • a limb of a tree • a small thin branch • the main plant stalk • trimming plant growth • the gathering of crops • a field of fruit trees • removing unwanted plants • a small soft green plant • a garden cultivating tool • material spread over soil • decayed organic fertilizer • artificial watering of land • a tool for gathering leaves • a leafy non-flowering plant • ...
RockBox Fitness 2024-07-11
14 Clues: town • acronym • pillar 2 • pillar 4 • pillar 6 • pillar 3 • pillar 5 • meal plan • left punch • power kick • measurable • right punch • name of gym • second part of circuit
Annual Bedding Plants 2025-03-03
Across
- Planting of seeds
- Term for soil or media
- Refers to the development of lateral branches that contribute to a bushy appearance
- The difference between the day and the night time temperatures
- rate The percentage of seeds capable of germinating
- Herbaceous plants that grow from seed to flower
- Packs Molded plastic containers divided into separate growing compartments used for bedding pants
- Grown to salable size
Down
- A term used to describe procedures used to prepare plants for a post-production environment
- Small plants grown in a small amount of media in divided trays
- The practice of fertilizing while irrigating
- The ability of seeds to germinate under optimum conditions
- The process of moving plants from one container to another or from a container to the ground
- Basket Hanging baskets that contain plants that are propagated by cuttings
- life Refers to the time the plant maintains its health while on display for sale
- The process in which soulable salts are washed from growing medium as water flows through the media
- Baskets Hanging baskets that contain plants that are propagated from seeds
17 Clues: Planting of seeds • Grown to salable size • Term for soil or media • The practice of fertilizing while irrigating • Herbaceous plants that grow from seed to flower • rate The percentage of seeds capable of germinating • The ability of seeds to germinate under optimum conditions • Small plants grown in a small amount of media in divided trays • ...
Module 7 Key Terms 2024-05-01
Across
- A scientist who studies soil management and crop production. Sometimes acting as a liaison between farmers and researchers. They recommend solutions to improve farming productivity.
- A scientist who studies genetics or the science of genes, heredity, and genetic variations of living things. They may specialize in agriculture or biomedicine.
- A scientist who studies Zoology and specializes in the study of insects. They examine insect interactions with plants. They also study the behavior patterns of insects and how they grow and adapt to changes in the environment.
- Scientists who conduct experiments focused on research and development. They also investigate biological interactions of living cells and test new compounds. Research carried out in chemical biology has allowed scientists to discover new genes and explore DNA of plants and animals.
Down
- A specific characteristic in a living organism, using a plant or animal.
- Scientists who work with people to teach them more about nutrition and health. They study vitamins and minerals that people need in order to be healthy.
- Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) is an organic compound made of a sugar (deoxyribose), phosphate, and a nitrogenous base that contains genetic instructions used by cells to make proteins.
- Genes are tiny strands of sequences that carry information about an organism
- The process of creating an identical copy of an original adult species.
- Insulin made outside the human body through gene cloning technology. By cloning the human insulin genes and transforming bacterial cells, biotechnologists are able to produce large quantities of human insulin.
10 Clues: The process of creating an identical copy of an original adult species. • A specific characteristic in a living organism, using a plant or animal. • Genes are tiny strands of sequences that carry information about an organism • ...
Name:____________. Living Systems Vocabulary (Test Date: ___________) 2024-10-29
Across
- part of Earth that includes all living things from plants and animals to fungi and bacteria AND any place you can find life on or around Earth
- a heavy colorless gas that is formed in animal respiration and in the decay of animal and plant matter
- a community of organisms interacting with each other and the nonliving environment
- an organism that feeds on other organisms because it can’t make its own food
- all gases on the planet, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide
- a chemical in food that is essential for an organism to grow, develop, and live
- a carbohydrate, or sugar, that is rich in energy; produced in plants through photosynthesis
- an animal that gets its energy from eating plants
- the NON-living soil, rocks, and minerals that make up the land on Earth (also includes the inner Earth)
- process by which green plants, in the presence of light, make food out of carbon dioxide and water
- microorganisms that act as decomposers in every ecosystem
Down
- all the food chains in a single ecosystem
- any living thing
- organic litter made up of dead organisms, their parts and waste
- an organism that can make its own food through the process of photosynthesis
- a colorless and odorless gas that people and animals need to breath
- an organism that breaks down dead plants and animals into simpler substances (ex. Snail, earthworm, mushroom)
- an animal that gets its energy from eating other animals
- shows how each organism gets food, and how energy is passed from one organism to another
- all water on Earth including rivers, lakes, oceans, and glaciers
- an animal that gets its energy from eating plants and other animals
21 Clues: any living thing • all the food chains in a single ecosystem • an animal that gets its energy from eating plants • an animal that gets its energy from eating other animals • microorganisms that act as decomposers in every ecosystem • organic litter made up of dead organisms, their parts and waste • all water on Earth including rivers, lakes, oceans, and glaciers • ...
Unit 7 Science vocabulary 2025-05-07
Across
- A source of energy that can easily be replenished and there is a large amount of.
- A source of energy that cannot be easily replaced/supplied and that takes a long time to create or replenished.
- A source of supply or an object that you can use in a way.
- A resource that can be used for energy.
- the contamination of water bodies with harmful substances or microorganisms that alter their chemical, physical, or biological properties
- the contamination of soil by harmful substances, including chemicals, waste, and industrial byproducts
- the invisible gaseous substance surrounding the earth, a mixture mainly of oxygen and nitrogen
Down
- when families either lack access to modern energy services or allocate a significant portion of their income to energy bills
- the practice of planning, scheduling, and allocating people, money, and technology to a project or program
- The state or quality of being efficient
- the presence in or introduction into the air of a substance which has harmful or poisonous effects
- Prevention of wasteful use of a resource
- The loose, weathered material on Earth’s surface in which plants can grow.
- lack of proper nutrition, caused by not having enough to eat, not eating enough of the right things, or being unable to use the food that one does eat
14 Clues: The state or quality of being efficient • A resource that can be used for energy. • Prevention of wasteful use of a resource • A source of supply or an object that you can use in a way. • The loose, weathered material on Earth’s surface in which plants can grow. • A source of energy that can easily be replenished and there is a large amount of. • ...
Learning About Plants 2026-04-01
Across
- The green pigment in plants that helps them capture sunlight.
- Nutrients from the soil that plants absorb to help them grow.
- The energy source plants use to power photosynthesis.
- A gas released by plants during photosynthesis that animals need to breathe.
- Flat green structures where most photosynthesis happens.
Down
- Underground structures that anchor a plant and absorb water and minerals.
- What plants produce for themselves during photosynthesis.
- The process plants use to make their own food using sunlight.
- Living things that grow in soil, stay in one place, and make their own food.
- dioxide A gas plants take in from the air to help make food.
- The part of a plant that supports it and carries water and nutrients between roots and leaves.
- A liquid plants absorb through their roots and need for photosynthesis.
12 Clues: The energy source plants use to power photosynthesis. • Flat green structures where most photosynthesis happens. • What plants produce for themselves during photosynthesis. • The process plants use to make their own food using sunlight. • The green pigment in plants that helps them capture sunlight. • dioxide A gas plants take in from the air to help make food. • ...
GMO and Organic Crossword puzzle 2024-04-16
Across
- A genetically modified organism
- A necessary element that humans and animals need that plants produce
- A interaction between 2 different organisms
- The vehicle that is used to apply a foreign trait into a plant
- the process by which organisms combine oxygen with foodstuff molecules
- To set or place apart
- process that uses laboratory-based technology to alter DNA
- The genetic info in an organism or Deoxyribonucleic acid
- occurs when a person's immune system reacts to substances in the environment that are harmless to most people
- A certain quality in a thing that makes it special
- A symbiotic association between plants and roots
- A nutrient that allows growth
- plant cells that convert light energy into relatively stable chemical energy with photosynthesis
- A green house gas Humans produce and plants take in
Down
- The energy that plants produce that is their food
- The job that does the process of altering DNA
- 3rd step in cellular respiration
- A person who chooses what and what to breed or combine
- H2O
- Adenosine Triphosphate
- First step in cellular respiration
- A individual plant, animal or single celled life form
- Second step in cellular respiration
- The process and way plants make food
- A cell that generates most of the chemical energy needed to power the cell's biochemical reactions
25 Clues: H2O • To set or place apart • Adenosine Triphosphate • A nutrient that allows growth • A genetically modified organism • 3rd step in cellular respiration • First step in cellular respiration • Second step in cellular respiration • The process and way plants make food • A interaction between 2 different organisms • The job that does the process of altering DNA • ...
My Dream Job: Healthcare Entrepreneur 2024-05-24
Across
- : A therapeutic practice involving manipulation of muscles
- : A person who starts their own business
- : A traditional Chinese therapy using fine needles
Down
- Plan : A document outlining business goals and strategies
- : The science of diet and nutrition
- : A method of relieving stress through controlled breathing
- : Study of medical herbs
- : The process of attracting customers to your business
- : An alternative treatment using pressure on the feet
- : Practice of healing with hands
10 Clues: : Study of medical herbs • : Practice of healing with hands • : The science of diet and nutrition • : A person who starts their own business • : A traditional Chinese therapy using fine needles • : An alternative treatment using pressure on the feet • : The process of attracting customers to your business • Plan : A document outlining business goals and strategies • ...
Cell Processes Crossword 2025-04-07
Across
- plants "breathe" this in, but plants breathe this out
- this is the name for molecules that will be created from a chemical reaction
- a type of active transport where a cell membrane gets rid of a molecule.
- a type of active transport where the cell membrane "swallows" a molecule
- this is where photosynthesis happens
- In ________ diffusion, proteins in the cell membrane help molecules to pass through
- this is the process by which organisms use food to make energy that cells need
- humans breathe this in, but plants "breathe" this out
Down
- these are the only types of organisms that can make food through photosynthesis
- a type of passive transport where small molecules move directly across the cell membrane
- this is the name for molecules that will react together in a chemical reaction
- this is the diffusion of water molecules
- this is the name of the food that plants make
- this is the process by which plants make food
- this is where cellular energy is made
15 Clues: this is where photosynthesis happens • this is where cellular energy is made • this is the diffusion of water molecules • this is the name of the food that plants make • this is the process by which plants make food • plants "breathe" this in, but plants breathe this out • humans breathe this in, but plants "breathe" this out • ...
KEYWORDS-CO 2023-06-01
Across
- (plants)underground elongated water-absorbing structures
- release of water vapor from plants
- compound with sour taste
- slow
- wet
- long, thin plant part
- bubbles in lung
Down
- transformation into mist
- nonspecific source that inspires motion
- plants growing together
- body muscle partition
- energy process
- place providing something
- something in smoke
- tube that conveys inhaled air form larynx to lungs
- bone
16 Clues: wet • slow • bone • energy process • bubbles in lung • something in smoke • body muscle partition • long, thin plant part • plants growing together • transformation into mist • compound with sour taste • place providing something • release of water vapor from plants • nonspecific source that inspires motion • tube that conveys inhaled air form larynx to lungs • ...
Child Development 2024-11-02
Across
- A vivid bad dream, usually occurring toward morning.
- A system for children to fight off infections and stay healthy.
- A milestone of art development for young children ages 2-4
- A crucial part of the brain that acts as a relay station for sensory and motor signals.
- Ensuring children receive proper nutrition for their growth.
Down
- A serious issue that involves the failure to meet child's basic needs.
- A clear preference for the use of one hand over the other.
- A significant concern and can range from minor cuts
- Crucial for protecting children from various serial diseases.
- A significant health concern that effects children.
- The process whereby certain functions are located more in one hemisphere of brain.
- How children interpret and respond to sensory information from their environment.
12 Clues: A significant concern and can range from minor cuts • A significant health concern that effects children. • A vivid bad dream, usually occurring toward morning. • A clear preference for the use of one hand over the other. • A milestone of art development for young children ages 2-4 • Ensuring children receive proper nutrition for their growth. • ...
chapter six 2021-11-23
Across
- membranes"
- matrix of a chloroplast, in which the grana are embedded.
- is the movement of ions across a semipermeable membrane bound structure, down their electrochemical gradient.
- organism that is able to form nutritional organic substances from simple inorganic substances such as carbon dioxide.
- organism deriving its nutritional requirements from complex organic substances.
- carbon fixation pathway that evolved in some plants as an adaptation to arid conditions that allows a plant to photosynthesize during the day, but only exchange gases at night.
- reaction,the reaction of something, especially the iris of the eye, to different intensities of light.
- green plant cells) a plastid that contains chlorophyll and in which photosynthesis takes place
- biochemical mechanism in plants by which chlorophyll absorbs light energy for photosynthesis. There are two such mechanisms ( photosystems I and II ) involving different chlorophyll-protein complexes.
Down
- stacks of thylakoids embedded in the stroma of a chloroplast
- transport chain,shuttles electrons from NADH and FADH2 to molecular oxygen
- of a number of flattened sacs inside a chloroplast, bounded by pigmented membranes on which the light reactions of photosynthesis take place, and arranged in stacks or grana.
- of a class of mainly yellow, orange, or red fat-soluble pigments, including carotene, which give color to plant parts such as ripe tomatoes and autumn leaves. They are terpenoids based on a structure having the formula C40H56
- process by which green plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water. Photosynthesis in plants generally involves the green pigment chlorophyll and generates oxygen as a byproduct.
- pathway,A metabolic pathway where CO2 is first added to phosphoenolpyruvate by the enzyme, PEP carboxylase,producing the four-carbon compound within mesophyll cells that is later transported to the bundle sheath cells where the CO2 is to be released for use in the Calvin cycle
- pores in the shoot epidermis of plants.
- green pigment, present in all green plants and in cyanobacteria, responsible for the absorption of light to provide energy for photosynthesis. Its molecule contains a magnesium atom held in a porphyrin ring.
- fixation,the process by which plants assimilate carbon from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to form metabolically active compounds.
- natural coloring matter of animal or plant tissue.
- cycle,a process that plants and algae use to turn carbon dioxide from the air into sugar
20 Clues: membranes" • pores in the shoot epidermis of plants. • natural coloring matter of animal or plant tissue. • matrix of a chloroplast, in which the grana are embedded. • stacks of thylakoids embedded in the stroma of a chloroplast • transport chain,shuttles electrons from NADH and FADH2 to molecular oxygen • ...
Photosynthesis and Respiration 2024-09-20
Across
- type of living things that complete cellular respiration
- tubelike cells that carry water up from the ground
- the energy molecule created during respiration
- cell part where photosynthesis takes place
- this substance moves up from the roots of a plant
- type of chemical energy created during cellular respiration; in the form of ATP
- how plants get water
- process that converts chemical energy into ATP
- gas that plants need for photosynthesis and is produced during respiration
- cell part where respiration takes place
- type of living things that complete photosynthesis
Down
- tubelike cells that carry glucose down from the leaves
- sugar that is produced during photosynthesis; moves out of leaf using phloem
- holes in plants leaves through which oxygen exits and carbon dioxide enters
- process that converts light energy into chemical energy
- gas that plants produce during photosynthesis and is needed during respiration
- type of chemical energy created during photosynthesis
- type of energy used in photosynthesis
18 Clues: how plants get water • type of energy used in photosynthesis • cell part where respiration takes place • cell part where photosynthesis takes place • the energy molecule created during respiration • process that converts chemical energy into ATP • this substance moves up from the roots of a plant • tubelike cells that carry water up from the ground • ...
6.1 Plant Food 2021-04-15
Across
- – Ca; a chemical element present in variable amounts in all soils. It is essential for plant and animal growth and is the principal mineral element in bones.
- – Cl; a heavy gas used in very small amounts for the growth of plants.
- – Zn; a metallic chemical element, one of the micronutrient elements in soils, essential for both plant and animal growth.
- – Includes primary plant nutrients N, P, and K; and secondary plant nutrients Ca, Mg, and S.
- the manufacture of ammonia. Legume roots convert nitrogen gas to nitrates by bacteria.
- – Mo; a gray metallic element, essential in very small amounts to the growth of plants, but usually present in sufficient amounts. Deficiencies have been discovered in a few highly acid soils.
- – Fe; a metallic element essential to people, animals, and plants; very common in some minerals, most rocks, and all soils. In plants, iron deficiency results in iron chlorosis.
- – P; a chemical element found in soils in various mineral forms, but only small amounts are
- – Cu; a metallic element found in soils at 1 to 50 parts per million, and in plants up to 100 parts per million. It is necessary for all animal and plant life. High soil phosphorus, zinc, and molybdenum can induce a copper deficiency in plants. Also, high copper can reduce plant uptake of phosphorus, iron, zinc, and molybdenum.
- – A change in color of the lower leaves of green plants usually attributed to a lack of plant nutrients or moisture deficiency.
- – Mg; a white metal, essential for people and animals, and for plant growth because it is a
- humus content and improve soil structure.
- – Produced by plants and animals; of plant or animal origin.
- (tonnage) – Unit of weight equivalent to 2000 pounds.
- – K; the chemical element, an alkali metal, which occurs widely in minerals. Regarded as an
- it is often in forms unavailable to plants. It is regarded as essential to normal plant growth and is often applied, usually as manganous sulfate, to soils deficient in this element.
- of plants and animals.
- – Excreta of animals, dung, and urine (usually with some bedding), used to fertilize the land.
- available to plants at any one time. It stimulates early growth and root development and hastens grain maturity.
- by bacteria and other natural processes. This nutrient is a constituent of proteins and is vital to the plant growth processes. Nitrogen can be added to the soil in any of three fertilizer forms as urea, ammonia, or nitrates.
Down
- fixation – When molecular nitrogen biologically or chemically converts to organic combinations or
- – S; an elementary, yellow mineral, insoluble in water, easily fusible, and inflammable. One of the secondary but important elements in soil fertility and used in relatively large amounts by most plants, it is an important constituent of both protein and protoplasm.
- – For plants: boron, chlorine, cobalt, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, and zinc.
- – Mn; a metallic element found in soils from a mere trace to as much as 15 percent, but when
- available for biological processes. Biological fixation occurs with legumes, whereas chemical fixation
- – Yellowing or whitening of normally green leaves caused by lack of nutrients, air pollution, or diseases.
- – N; a gas that occurs naturally in the air and soil, where it is converted into usable forms for plant
- – An insufficiency in reference to amount, volume, proportion, etc.; a lack; a state of
- of chlorophyll.
- nutrient – Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium.
- – Organic residues or their mixture, such as peat, manure, or discarded plant material and soil, placed in a pit or enclosure, moistened, and allowed to become decomposed. Sometimes lime and chemical fertilizers are also added. Used as a fertilizer.
- – To check or hinder the growth or development of an animal or plant.
- plant nutrient, potassium is present naturally in some form in all soils but in extremely variable amounts and is likely to be in the largest amounts in clay soils and in the least amounts in highly silicious soils and in peats.
- nutrient – Calcium, magnesium, and sulfur are the secondary nutrient elements, so-called because they are essential to plant growth in a lesser quantity than the primary nutrients nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, and in greater quantity than the micronutrients.
- manure – Crops such as legumes or grasses that are grown to be plowed or spaded into the soil to
- element – Any of certain chemical elements necessary in minute quantities for optimum growth and
- – B; an element essential for plant growth. The original source of boron is tourmaline, but available forms are from soil organic matter.
- – Death of plant or animal cells in the tissue, usually in localized areas.
38 Clues: of chlorophyll. • of plants and animals. • humus content and improve soil structure. • nutrient – Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. • (tonnage) – Unit of weight equivalent to 2000 pounds. • – Produced by plants and animals; of plant or animal origin. • – To check or hinder the growth or development of an animal or plant. • ...
Physiology 2022-02-09
MAPEH Rangers: Crossword Puzzle Challenge! 2025-08-10
Summer Garden 2020-07-08
Across
- The age-old question - is it a fruit or a vegetable
- Helps with weeding or digging a garden
- Its extract is often used as a remedy for sunburns
- Keeps blisters at bay
- Plants that complete life cycles in two seasons
- Its name is derived from the Greek word for rainbow
- An example of a warm-season grass
- Easy to grow vegetable
- Nutrient necessary to prevent blossom end rot
- Don't eat the leaves of this vegetable
- The study of plants
- Benefit of gardening
- The number of pairs of legs insects have
- A fern's main means of propagation
Down
- Plants that complete the life cycle in one season
- Move seedling to the garden
- Soil that becomes slick & sticky when wet
- This garden can be planted in a window box
- Added to reduce soil acidity
- Sucking insects common on houseplants
- Nutrient necessary to prevent blossom end rot
- Where you can find babies or plants
- Non-green plants such as molds and mushrooms
- Microscopic worms that live in the soil
- A miniature plant in a resting state
- A decoy to discourage birds
- This flower is a cousin of a daisy
- The end product of flowers
- A variety of maize with a high sugar content
29 Clues: The study of plants • Benefit of gardening • Keeps blisters at bay • Easy to grow vegetable • The end product of flowers • Move seedling to the garden • A decoy to discourage birds • Added to reduce soil acidity • An example of a warm-season grass • This flower is a cousin of a daisy • A fern's main means of propagation • Where you can find babies or plants • ...
vocab crossword 2024-12-03
Across
- A consumer that eats plants.
- Microscopic plant-like organisms that form the base of aquatic food chains.
- A consumer that feeds on dead or decaying matter.
- Organisms that obtain energy from sunlight through photosynthesis, such as plants and algae.
- A group of different populations living and interacting in a particular area.
- A consumer that eats both plants and animals.
- consumer: A consumer that eats producers.
- Organisms that can produce their own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis.
- Organisms that produce their own food, such as plants and algae.
- A consumer that eats other animals.
- Organisms that break down dead organisms and organic matter, such as bacteria and fungi.
Down
- Cycling: The process of nutrients moving through an ecosystem.
- A group of individuals of the same species living in a particular area.
- Non-living factors in an ecosystem, such as sunlight, water, temperature, and soil.
- Organisms that obtain energy by consuming other organisms.
- Organisms that cannot produce their own food and must obtain energy by consuming other organisms.
- The total mass of living matter in a given area.
- A community of living organisms interacting with their non-living environment.
- Living factors in an ecosystem, such as plants, animals, and microorganisms.
- Organisms that obtain energy from inorganic compounds, such as bacteria living near hydrothermal vents.
20 Clues: A consumer that eats plants. • A consumer that eats other animals. • consumer: A consumer that eats producers. • A consumer that eats both plants and animals. • The total mass of living matter in a given area. • A consumer that feeds on dead or decaying matter. • Organisms that obtain energy by consuming other organisms. • ...
IBL CROSSWORD 2026-02-12
Across
- It is a very large herbivore with large ears & a very long nose
- predator They are the top-top consumer, the top-dog
- It is a herbivore commonly found in the Kruger
- It is at the bottom of the food chain
- An individual animal, plant, or single-celled life form
- It eats both plants & animals
- Where living organisms develop traits that improve their chances of survival and reproduction in a specific environment
- web It is an image that shows the different connections between all organsims
- It is a number 2 consumer
- It provides energy to plants
- It is second in the food chain
Down
- This animal only eats plants
- When living organisms rely on one another for survival & essential needs
- The thing that organisms where they rely on each other
- It is a meat-eater
- Fill in the blank: plants & ____
- It is the main term for a mushroom
- It is the first kind of consumer
- This organism breaks down dead matter
- It is a carnivore
- The top kind of consumer
- chain It is an image the shows the energy flow horizontally
- Living things
- The organism that gets energy from the sun
- Non-living things
- flow The arrows show this in a food chain
26 Clues: Living things • It is a carnivore • Non-living things • It is a meat-eater • The top kind of consumer • It is a number 2 consumer • This animal only eats plants • It provides energy to plants • It eats both plants & animals • It is second in the food chain • Fill in the blank: plants & ____ • It is the first kind of consumer • It is the main term for a mushroom • ...
PP_Individual Assignment 2023-10-16
Across
- The first carboxylation is done by PEP carboxylase (PEPC) in the ____ cells in C4 pathways
- Movement of molecules between cells are facilitated by _____
- The attraction of water to solid phase
- During the day, CAM pathway, the CO2 in the organic acids are released back to the ____
- Main product in light independent reaction
- Water and solute that occupies 95% of the total volume of a mature plant cells
- Anatomy that consists the bundle sheath cells form a ring around the vascular tissue
- Nitrogen ____ the acquisition of nitrogen from the atmosphere through several reactions to produce ammonia and nitrate
- Entrance of carbon dioxide in plants
- A form of symbiotic relationship that occurs between a fungal symbiont and the roots of majority forest trees
- Plants develop extensive root systems and form a _____ with mycorrhizal fungi or rhizobium
- Passive transsport (no ATP needed)
- The mutual attraction between molecules
- New cells originate in a dividing tissue
- The movement of two molecules in the opposite direction through a protein channel
- The site of photosynthesis
- Soil particles have predominantly ___ charges
Down
- produces one 3-PGA and one 2-phosphogylcolate (2-PG)
- A polymer of tubulin in plant cytoskeleton
- Symbioses facilitate nutrient uptake by roots
- Facilitate the movement of water across plasma membranes
- Enzymes releases CO2 fixed in malate after being transported to the bundle sheath cells
- Light dependent reaction occurs in ____
- _____ protein contain particular region called gates that open and close in response to signal
- Suppressed in C4 plants, not suppressed in C3 plants
- Active transport (requires ATP)
- The first stable intermediate product in C4 plants; consists of 4 carbon acid
- ____ acid; the first stable intermediate product in C3 plants; consists of 3 carbon acid
- Inorganic compound; colored substances
- Mostly encoded by the chloroplast genome
- The movement of two molecules in the same direction through a protein channel
- ___ strip direct water to xylem through symplast and transmembrane pathway
32 Clues: The site of photosynthesis • Active transport (requires ATP) • Passive transsport (no ATP needed) • Entrance of carbon dioxide in plants • The attraction of water to solid phase • Inorganic compound; colored substances • Light dependent reaction occurs in ____ • The mutual attraction between molecules • Mostly encoded by the chloroplast genome • ...
Ch 8 Soilless Plant Production 2022-10-20
Across
- Cultivation of plants in water.
- (2words) For horticultural soil-plotting mixes, refers to large, inorganic particles used to create large pores in the mix.
- (2words)An instrument used to measure the soluble salts concentration in soil or potting mixes.
- (2words)Clays that expand greatly upon absorption of interlayer water and shrink upon drying.
- The symbiotic cultivation of plants and fish in a recirculating environment. Plants use the waste from the fish and the fish use the water cleaned by the plants.
- Growing plants without soil.
- Growing materials in which plants can be started that are loose, well drained, fine textured, low in nutrients, and free of disease.
- (3words) A hydroponic method of growing plants where a very shallow stream of water containing all the dissolved nutrients required for plant growth is recirculated past the bare roots.
- Inorganic fibrous substance that is produced by steam blasting and cooling molten glass or a similar substance and is used as an insulator and filtering material.
Down
- (2words)Plant growing media made up of some type of course aggregate, organic amendment, and possibly some soil.
- (3words)A zone of saturated soil that is maintained above the normal water table.
- (2words) Chemicals that combine with metal ions and remove them from their sphere of action.
- Fiber obtained from the husk of a coconut.
- (2words) Hydroponic method in which the nutrient solution constantly flows past the roots.
- The process of growing plants in an air or mist environment.
15 Clues: Growing plants without soil. • Cultivation of plants in water. • Fiber obtained from the husk of a coconut. • The process of growing plants in an air or mist environment. • (3words)A zone of saturated soil that is maintained above the normal water table. • (2words) Hydroponic method in which the nutrient solution constantly flows past the roots. • ...
Nutrition for Falls Prevention 2017-07-15
Across
- A Body in Motion tends to stay in
- The type of body tissue that we want to preserve to keep us strong.
- Type of exercise Dr. Storer recommends to build and maintain muscle even in elderly adults.
- What we want to prevent and can cause serious injury or disability and lack of independence if it occurs.
- Method the USDA recommends as a healthy eating pattern.
Down
- A type of food group or fuel our bodies need to maintain their muscle mass.
- A state of poor nutrition
- A medical food that can come in liquid or powder form to boost our nutritional status by delivering vitamins, minerals, healthy carbohydrates and protein.
- A series of questions or tests that a healthcare professional uses to assess an individual’s level of health risk.
- The healthcare professionals that specialize in nutrition.
- 50-75% of the human body is comprised of this
- The act of boosting our fluid consumption.
- The important salts that are dissolved in water that are equally as important to get from our diet as water.
- A clinical condition that fits several criteria describing a weakened and at risk state.
14 Clues: A state of poor nutrition • A Body in Motion tends to stay in • The act of boosting our fluid consumption. • 50-75% of the human body is comprised of this • Method the USDA recommends as a healthy eating pattern. • The healthcare professionals that specialize in nutrition. • The type of body tissue that we want to preserve to keep us strong. • ...
Nutrition Crossword 2019-12-09
Across
- A food group that should make up the second most amount of food in your diet
- This date should be shown on all food labels
- Eating too many foods that are high in sugar can increase your risk of getting this disease.
- There is a list of these on food labels.
- If you eat more sugar than your body needs it will turn into this.
- Dairy foods such as milk yoghurt and cheese are a good source of this mineral.
- These people have a big influence on the foods that you choose to eat.
- This disease is when a person is severely overweight.
Down
- This nutrient keeps our body hydrated
- This fruit is a good source of vitamin C
- This mineral is found in red meat and green leafy vegetables.
- Many Australians eat foods that have too much of this in them.
- Good sources of this nutrient include olive oil, fish an avocado.
- According to the Australian Guide to Healthy Eating we should eat this food group the most.
- Good sources of this nutrient are breads, pasta and rice.
- There are seven of these in the foods we eat
- We need to eat this nutrient to keep our digestive system healthy.
17 Clues: This nutrient keeps our body hydrated • This fruit is a good source of vitamin C • There is a list of these on food labels. • This date should be shown on all food labels • There are seven of these in the foods we eat • This disease is when a person is severely overweight. • Good sources of this nutrient are breads, pasta and rice. • ...
Nutrition Crossword 2020-06-02
Across
- has the right foods in the right amounts
- which comes from milk
- a good source of protein usually caught in the sea
- lettuce, cucumber
- helps food pass through the body easily
- lots of energy but if you eat too much you will be___!
- a good source of protein
- this takes energy
Down
- you eat
- should eat 5 a day
- sweet and gives energy
- disease you can get if you do not eat enough Vitamin C
- sort of food helps build up the body
- 70% of your body is this
- sugar, potatoes and rice
- than overweight
16 Clues: you eat • than overweight • lettuce, cucumber • this takes energy • should eat 5 a day • which comes from milk • sweet and gives energy • 70% of your body is this • sugar, potatoes and rice • a good source of protein • sort of food helps build up the body • helps food pass through the body easily • has the right foods in the right amounts • ...
nutrition basics 2021-09-07
Across
- is the chemical process by which your body breaks down food to release this energy
- the amount of energy released when nutrients are broken down
- For re-hydrating during exercise, when should you rely on
- condition of red blood cells that do not contain enough hemoglobin
- a waxy fatlike substance that is only found in animal products
- when you eat protein you digestive system breaks it down into individual amino acids
- symptom of dehydration
- helps with functioning the hear and water balance
Down
- Which type of vitamins can be stored in the body to be used later
- blood clotting and function of the nervious system
- the process of maintaining a steady state inside your body
- nutrients that occur in rocks and solids
- you need them for red blood cells
- made when manufacturers add hydrogen to the fat mocecules in vegetable oils.
- they regulate ,many processes in your cells
- help protect healthy cells from the damage caused by normal aging process
16 Clues: symptom of dehydration • you need them for red blood cells • nutrients that occur in rocks and solids • they regulate ,many processes in your cells • helps with functioning the hear and water balance • blood clotting and function of the nervious system • For re-hydrating during exercise, when should you rely on • ...
Nutrition Basics 2022-01-27
Across
- type of mineral that maintains the formations of bones and teeth
- type of mineral that is necessary for healthy red blood cells
- the type of fat that is typically a solid at room temperature
- type of mineral that keeps the heart functioning
- a unit of measurment used to measure the amount of energy released when nutrients are broken down
- type of starch that extra glucose is converted into
- maintaining a steady state inside your body
- these vitamis should be consumed on a daily basis
- type of mineral that helps lower blood pressure
Down
- aid in the growth and repair of your body's tissues
- the type of fat that is typically a liquid at room temperature
- a chemical process in which your body breaks down food to release energy
- regulates nervous system and muscular system processes
- supplies energy for your body
- protects healthy cells from the damage caused by the norrmal aging process
- these vitamins can be stored in the body to be used later
16 Clues: supplies energy for your body • maintaining a steady state inside your body • type of mineral that helps lower blood pressure • type of mineral that keeps the heart functioning • these vitamis should be consumed on a daily basis • aid in the growth and repair of your body's tissues • type of starch that extra glucose is converted into • ...
NUTRITION CROSSWORD 2022-01-12
Across
- the body´s main source of energy
- a digestive juice produced by the salivary glands in your mouth
- the body's largest gland, which secretes a liquid called bile that helps to digest fats
- a muscular organ in which some digestion occurs
- the process by which the body breaks food down into smaller components that can be absorbed by the bloodstream and sent to each cell in your body
- a storage tube for solid wastes
- a gland that helps the small intestine by producing pancreatic juice
- sources of energy that also perform other functions, such as vitamin storage and body insulation
- the part of grains, fruits, and vegetables that the body cannot break down
Down
- essential nutrients used to repair body cells and tissues
- the process by which the body gets rid of liquid waste materials
- the starches and sugars that provide the body with most of its energy
- substances that help to regulate the body's functions
- substances that strengthen the muscles, bones, and teeth
- a wax like substance used by the body to build cells and make other substances
- a pair of organs that filter water and waste materials from the blood
16 Clues: a storage tube for solid wastes • the body´s main source of energy • a muscular organ in which some digestion occurs • substances that help to regulate the body's functions • substances that strengthen the muscles, bones, and teeth • essential nutrients used to repair body cells and tissues • a digestive juice produced by the salivary glands in your mouth • ...
Nutrition Vocabulary 2022-04-25
Across
- Protein found in wheat, rye, and barley
- Minerals in body fluids, include sodium, potassium, magnesium, and chloride
- The process the body uses to break down food into nutrients
- A condition that happens when you do not take in enough liquids to replace what you lose
- The building blocks of proteins
- Table salt
- Made up of what you eat and drink
- Also called blood sugar, is the main source of energy for your body
Down
- A waxy, fat-like substance that's found in all cells, excess can put you at risk of heart disease
- Chemical compounds in food that are used by the body to function properly and maintain health, examples include proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals
- Needed to build and maintain bones, muscles, and skin, get from meat, dairy products, nuts, certain grains, and beans
- main type of nutrient, is changed into glucose and used for energy, two types
- Found in plants, helps break down food
- A type of simple carbohydrate, can be found naturally but often added to foods and drinks, types include glucose, fructose, and sucrose
- The process your body uses to get or make energy from the food you eat
- a unit of energy in foods
16 Clues: Table salt • a unit of energy in foods • The building blocks of proteins • Made up of what you eat and drink • Found in plants, helps break down food • Protein found in wheat, rye, and barley • The process the body uses to break down food into nutrients • Also called blood sugar, is the main source of energy for your body • ...
nutrition 2 2018-03-13
Across
- an organic acid essential in feline diets and found in animal sources or chemically synthesized
- complex carbohydrates that are not digested by carnivores
- gross energy
- giving or receiving nutrients
- shortage, less than the normal or necessary amount
- organic molecules composed of chains of amino acids
- maintenance energy requirement
- an animal that consumes both plant and animal food sources
Down
- (2 words) the length of time a product may be stored without deteriorating
- (2 words) a statement on a feed label indicating the minimum or maximum amount of certain componenets
- percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
- Associated of American Feed Control Officials
- pertaining to the intestine
- nasogastric tube
- digestible energy
- failure of collagen synthesis caused by the deficiency of vitamin C in primates and guinea pigs, with signs of weakness and swollen joints
16 Clues: gross energy • nasogastric tube • digestible energy • pertaining to the intestine • giving or receiving nutrients • maintenance energy requirement • percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy • Associated of American Feed Control Officials • shortage, less than the normal or necessary amount • organic molecules composed of chains of amino acids • ...
Nutrition & Pregnancy 2014-04-11
Across
- Sickness, Varying degrees of nausea and vomiting associated with pregnancy, most commonly in the first trimester
- Diabetes, In a pregnant woman, insufficient insulin production or insulin resistance that results in consistency high blood glucose levels; the condition typically resolves after birth occurs
- Human grown and developmental stage lasting from the third week to the end of the eighth after fertilization
- A pregnancy - specific organ formed from both maternal and embryonic tissues. It's responsible for oxygen, nutrient, and waste exchange between mother and fetus.
- The human grown and developmental stage lasting from the beginning of the night week after conception to birth
- Any one of the three stages of pregnancy, each lasting 13 to 14 weeks
- Birth Weight, A weight of less than 5.5 lb at birth
- An Abnormal craving to eat something not fit for food, such as clay, chalk, paint, or other nonfood substances
Down
- Uniting of an ovum (egg) and sperm to create a fertilized egg
- Fluid, The watery fluid contained in the innermost membrane of the sac containing the fetus. It cushions and protects the growing fetus
- A fatal neutral tube defect in which there is a partial absence of brain tissue, most likely caused by failure of the neural tube to close
- Abortion, The natural termination of a pregnancy and expulsion of the fetus and pregnancy tissues because of a genetic, developmental, of physiologic abnormality that is so severe that the pregnancy cannot be maintained: also known as miscarriage
- Bifida, An embryonic neural tube defect that occurs when the spinal vertebrae fails to completely enclose the spinal cord, allowing it to protrude
- Any substance that can cause a birth defect
- Cord, The chord containing arteries and veins that connects the baby (from the naval) to the mother via the placenta
- Tube, Embryonic tissues that forms a tube, which eventually becomes the brain and spinal cord
16 Clues: Any substance that can cause a birth defect • Birth Weight, A weight of less than 5.5 lb at birth • Uniting of an ovum (egg) and sperm to create a fertilized egg • Any one of the three stages of pregnancy, each lasting 13 to 14 weeks • Tube, Embryonic tissues that forms a tube, which eventually becomes the brain and spinal cord • ...
SPORTS NUTRITION 2024-06-05
Across
- fat what type of fat can you not see
- where are carbohydrates stored in the body
- bread, pasta and ice are an example of what
- what is the lifestyle called that lacks physical activity
- we must drink 6-8 glasses of what a day
- what does fluid replace in the body
- what helps to have strong bones and teeth
- an excess amount of protein will convert into
- what is used in the body for growth and repair
- carbohydrates are stored in the body as what
Down
- if we do not drink enough water we will become what
- it is recommended to eat 30 grams of what
- what diagram is used to portray healthy eating
- meat, fish and eggs are examples of what
- when carbohydrates are digested what are they changes into
- fat what type of fat can been seen
- iron stores are needed to transport what around the body
17 Clues: fat what type of fat can been seen • what does fluid replace in the body • fat what type of fat can you not see • we must drink 6-8 glasses of what a day • meat, fish and eggs are examples of what • it is recommended to eat 30 grams of what • what helps to have strong bones and teeth • where are carbohydrates stored in the body • ...
Nutrition Crossword 2022-11-08
Across
- often caused by consuming food contaminated by bacteria and/or their toxins, parasites, viruses, chemicals, or other agents.
- amount of a food you choose to eat — which may be more or less than a serving
- is the one nutrient every living thing must have. It is so important your body can’t live for more than a few days without it. Every cell in the body requires it to stay alive, and it usually makes up 50% to 75% of a person’s body weight
- good source of protein; found in milk, yogurt, cheese, etc
- experts recommend drinking how many glasses of water daily
- example of a good source of complex carbohydrates; one of the MyPlate food groups
Down
- amount of energy in a food
- standardized amount of food
- good source of minerals; foods include oatmeal, bread, wheat
- are made up of amino acids that the body uses to make skin, muscle, and bone
- good source of fat; meat that once lived in a body of water
- is the body’s most important source of fuel because they can be used right away or stored for later and it takes little energy for the body to release their energy
- made by the body through exposure to the sun
- in the diet are important for healthy skin and hair, normal growth and nerve function. This also helps the body make certain types of hormones and absorb vitamins
- are compounds that aren’t created by living things. About 60 different of this nutrient enter the human body, either dissolved in water or from eating plants and animals that contain them. About 25 of these play a specific and important roles in health
- are compounds that help the body turn food into energy and body tissues. They help control digestion, and how fast the body uses food. They help make hormones, heal wounds, and keep nerves growing
16 Clues: amount of energy in a food • standardized amount of food • made by the body through exposure to the sun • good source of protein; found in milk, yogurt, cheese, etc • experts recommend drinking how many glasses of water daily • good source of fat; meat that once lived in a body of water • good source of minerals; foods include oatmeal, bread, wheat • ...
Nutrition Basics 2022-09-01
Across
- helps make cell membranes, nerve tissue, certain hormones, and substances that aid in the digestion of fat.
- most healthy type of fat, in general
- nutrients that naturally occcur in rocks and soil
- neccessary for healthy red blood cells
- Make up proteins
- Makes up 65% of your body
- 20-35% of your Calories should come from this
- complete proteins contain all nine essential amino acids and incomplete proteins lack one or more of these essential amino acids.
- Essential for growth and repair of your body's tissues
Down
- Chemical process by which your body breaks down foods to release energy.
- Important in blood clotting and functioning of the nervous system
- 45-65% of your total daily calorie intake should come from this.
- Process of keeping a state state within your body
- Symptoms are weakness, rapid breathing, and a weak heartbeat
- helps the heart function well and helps water balance
- Amount of energy released when nutrients are broken down.
16 Clues: Make up proteins • Makes up 65% of your body • most healthy type of fat, in general • neccessary for healthy red blood cells • 20-35% of your Calories should come from this • Process of keeping a state state within your body • nutrients that naturally occcur in rocks and soil • helps the heart function well and helps water balance • ...
nutrition basics 2022-09-01
Across
- health dimensions
- best wellness
- average wellness
- second highest cause of death in teens
- highest cause of death in teens
- third highest cause of death in teens
- quality of live based on health status
- challenging your mind
- values and morals
Down
- attitudes thoughts and actions
- lowest wellness
- acting on emotions
- state of body
- Overall balance of mind, body, and relationships
- relationships
- goal setting acronym
16 Clues: best wellness • state of body • relationships • lowest wellness • average wellness • health dimensions • values and morals • acting on emotions • goal setting acronym • challenging your mind • attitudes thoughts and actions • highest cause of death in teens • third highest cause of death in teens • second highest cause of death in teens • quality of live based on health status • ...
Nutrition crossword 2023-09-05
Across
- an iron deficiency is called
- cups how many cups of water should females drink per day
- dissolved substances that regulate many processes in your cells are called
- acids pieces in the link of proteins
- what should you drink when exercising for less than an hour
- the chemical process where your body breaks down food to release it's energy
- cups how many cups of water should males drink per day
- what helps in the function of the heart
Down
- what is a symptom of dehydration
- what are nutrients that occur naturally in soils and rocks
- the unit of measurement used to identify amount of energy release when nutrients are broken down
- five What percentage of your body is made of water?
- maintaining water balance in body
- what helps with maintaining the health of blood cell
- soluble Which type of vitamins can be stored in the body to be used later
- what are vitamins that help protect cells against the normal aging process and certain types of cancer
16 Clues: an iron deficiency is called • what is a symptom of dehydration • maintaining water balance in body • acids pieces in the link of proteins • what helps in the function of the heart • five What percentage of your body is made of water? • what helps with maintaining the health of blood cell • cups how many cups of water should males drink per day • ...
Nutrition Review 2025-02-26
Across
- __________ are needed to build and repair cells in the body.
- __________ are organic nutrients that include sugars and starches.
- __________ is a series of chemical reactions that break food down into usable forms.
- __________ is a material in green plants that turns water, air, and sunlight into food.
- Food provides energy and essential __________ needed for growth and health.
- __________ are fats and oils that contain twice as much energy as carbohydrates.
- __________ are proteins that speed up chemical reactions in the body.
Down
- __________ carbohydrates, like starches, provide a steady supply of energy.
- __________ is a substance that aids digestion but cannot be digested itself.
- Like breathing, uses oxygen.
- __________ is the process by which plants convert energy from the Sun into food.
- __________ carbohydrates digest quickly and can be found in desserts and soda.
- _________ are nutrients that are not produced by living things.
- __________ are essential for eyesight, teeth, and skin health.
- __________ are inorganic nutrients like salt, zinc, and calcium.
- __________ is an invisible, odourless gas essential for life and part of the air.
16 Clues: Like breathing, uses oxygen. • __________ are needed to build and repair cells in the body. • __________ are essential for eyesight, teeth, and skin health. • _________ are nutrients that are not produced by living things. • __________ are inorganic nutrients like salt, zinc, and calcium. • __________ are organic nutrients that include sugars and starches. • ...
Nutrition Volcabularies 2025-05-31
Across
- Protein found in wheat, may cause allergy
- No animal diet
- Chemical reactions in the body to convert food into energy
- Maintaining body's water balance
- Muscle-building nutrient
- Macronutrient: energy-dense nutrient
- Fight cell damage
- Fats in the blood, necessary for cell structure, but too much is harmful
- Unit of energy from food
Down
- Essential for immunity and growth
- Excess body fat condition
- Body's primary energy source
- Plant-based carbohydrate
- Substance for growth and health
- Elements like Calcium and Iron
- Good gut bacteria
16 Clues: No animal diet • Good gut bacteria • Fight cell damage • Plant-based carbohydrate • Muscle-building nutrient • Unit of energy from food • Excess body fat condition • Body's primary energy source • Elements like Calcium and Iron • Substance for growth and health • Maintaining body's water balance • Essential for immunity and growth • Macronutrient: energy-dense nutrient • ...
Hygiene & Nutrition 2025-11-26
Across
- A unit of energy in food
- A sweet substance to limit
- A microorganism that causes disease
- To rub hands together hard
- A piece of material for drying
- A cleaning liquid
- To make something free from germs
- A state of being clean
Down
- Nutrient for muscle repair
- A vital liquid for hydration
- Found in fruits and vegetables
- To apply sanitizer
- A protective hand covering
- To clean with water and soap
- To consume food
- Essential for building muscle
- A balanced ______ (diet)
17 Clues: To consume food • To apply sanitizer • A cleaning liquid • Nutrient for muscle repair • Essential for building muscle • A state of being clean • A unit of energy in food • A balanced ______ (diet) • A sweet substance to limit • To rub hands together hard • Found in fruits and vegetables • ...
Nutrition Basics 2026-01-30
Across
- 4 calories per gram, quickest source of energy
- where minerals can come from
- having too few of a vitamin
- acids building blocks for proteins
- type of carbs that spike blood sugar quickly
- type of amino acids that come from your diet, 9 of them
- the best kind of fats
- water soluble vitamins in alphabetical order
- number of amino acids
Down
- fat soluble vitamins in alphabetical order
- 4 calories per gram, repairs and rebuilds muscles
- having too much of a fat-soluable vitamin
- type of protein that contains all essential amino acids
- major mineral beginning with a letter M
- indigestible part of plant
- 9 calories per gram, insulates the body and stores vitamins
16 Clues: the best kind of fats • number of amino acids • indigestible part of plant • having too few of a vitamin • where minerals can come from • acids building blocks for proteins • major mineral beginning with a letter M • having too much of a fat-soluable vitamin • fat soluble vitamins in alphabetical order • type of carbs that spike blood sugar quickly • ...
Gaseous exchange in plants 2023-08-07
Across
- Most plants undergo gaseous exchange process with the surrounding through leaves, _______, and roots.
- Guard cells undergo photosynthesis to produce _____
- Water molecules undergo osmosis process through a __________ membrane.
Down
- Opening and closing condition of stoma is affected by the diffusion of water in and out.
- Stoma is ________ to undergo photosynthesis process when there is light.
- Water molecules moves from the region of ______ concentration of water molecules to a region of lower concentration of water molecules.
- Stoma is ________ during the night or when the plant loses a lot of water.
- During daytime, carbon dioxide and ________ are taken and removed.
- Enables the exchange of _____ to occur.
9 Clues: Enables the exchange of _____ to occur. • Guard cells undergo photosynthesis to produce _____ • During daytime, carbon dioxide and ________ are taken and removed. • Water molecules undergo osmosis process through a __________ membrane. • Stoma is ________ to undergo photosynthesis process when there is light. • ...
Fungi: The Forgotten Kingdom 2025-03-31
Across
- a country, state, or territory ruled by a king or queen
- the spore-bearing structure of a fungus.
- a living organism that feeds on organic matter
- An organism living as a parasite
- A type of fungi
- A type of fungi
Down
- providing the food necessary for health and growth
- A hairy fungi commonly found on food
- A microscopic fungus
- A group of spore producing organisms that feed on nutrition from the ground
- Possible to be eaten
- a disease caused by infection with a fungus
12 Clues: A type of fungi • A type of fungi • A microscopic fungus • Possible to be eaten • An organism living as a parasite • A hairy fungi commonly found on food • the spore-bearing structure of a fungus. • a disease caused by infection with a fungus • a living organism that feeds on organic matter • providing the food necessary for health and growth • ...
Optogenetic control in plants 2020-07-15
9 Clues: origin of RLuc • origin of FLuc • the Cas9 used was ...-deficient • ROS stand for ... Oxygen species • type of GFP-binding protein used • isolated cells, derived from leaves • name of the optogenetic system created • prefix derived from Greek word for seeing • plant-derived protein that senses red light
Gas Exchange in Plants 2021-04-14
Across
- closely packed with narrow air spaces and contain a lot of chloroplasts
- protects inner layer of cells and has no chloroplasts
- tiny pores in stem
- transports water and minerals
- loosely packed with large air spaces and contain few chloroplasts
Down
- transports organic nutrients
- thin waxy layer that prevent excessive water loss
- tiny pore that allow gases to diffuse into and out of leaves
- main site of gas exchange
9 Clues: tiny pores in stem • main site of gas exchange • transports organic nutrients • transports water and minerals • thin waxy layer that prevent excessive water loss • protects inner layer of cells and has no chloroplasts • tiny pore that allow gases to diffuse into and out of leaves • loosely packed with large air spaces and contain few chloroplasts • ...
Gas Exchange in Plants 2021-04-14
Across
- closely packed with narrow air spaces and contain a lot of chloroplasts
- protects inner layer of cells and has no chloroplasts
- tiny pores in stem
- transports water and minerals
- loosely packed with large air spaces and contain few chloroplasts
Down
- transports organic nutrients
- thin waxy layer that prevent excessive water loss
- tiny pore that allow gases to diffuse into and out of leaves
- main site of gas exchange
9 Clues: tiny pores in stem • main site of gas exchange • transports organic nutrients • transports water and minerals • thin waxy layer that prevent excessive water loss • protects inner layer of cells and has no chloroplasts • tiny pore that allow gases to diffuse into and out of leaves • loosely packed with large air spaces and contain few chloroplasts • ...
Gaseous exchange in plants 2025-02-05
Across
- it takes place for 24 hours in plants.
- Photosynthesis take place here.
- the synthesis and break down of the reaction.
- respiration, little or no energy produced.
- it produces in the result of respiration.
Down
- the rate is higher during 13:00n to 15:00.
- cells, pair of cells surrounds stoma.
- they are present in the lower epidermis.
- it is thin and broad.
9 Clues: it is thin and broad. • Photosynthesis take place here. • cells, pair of cells surrounds stoma. • it takes place for 24 hours in plants. • they are present in the lower epidermis. • it produces in the result of respiration. • the rate is higher during 13:00n to 15:00. • respiration, little or no energy produced. • the synthesis and break down of the reaction.
Foodstrong 2024-01-18
SEAN Q 4.01 Crossword puzzle 2023-04-23
Across
- Plant tissue is made up of 90% _____.
- Food and nutrients move throughout a plants parts through a process called ______?
- What increases plant numbers from seeds?
- During translocation what is made by photosynthesis?
- When a plant rests or grows very little it is considered to be what stage of plant growth?
- North Carolina is in hardness zones 6 -8 and Charlotte is considered zone ______?
- Plant hardness zones are categorized by average minimum ______?
- What is one of the two types of reproduction?
- Plants lose water from their leaves through ________?
- Respiration is the process by which what is consumed through plant leaves, stems and roots?
Down
- The movement of minerals and water through a plants cell walls is called what?
- Plant roots take in water and air through a process called what?
- What stage of plant growth occurs when flowers, seeds and fruits are produced?
- When a plant first starts to grow from a seed it is ________.
- ______ is carried throughout the plant by water.
- ______ needed varies depending on the type of plant
- African violets and spinach are long day plants that require ______ nights to flower
- How plants respond to different amounts of light is called what?
- The process of transpiration also occurs in what part of the plant?
- What is it called when plants tend to grow towards a light source?
20 Clues: Plant tissue is made up of 90% _____. • What increases plant numbers from seeds? • What is one of the two types of reproduction? • ______ is carried throughout the plant by water. • ______ needed varies depending on the type of plant • During translocation what is made by photosynthesis? • Plants lose water from their leaves through ________? • ...
Lesson 5 Vocabulary Quiz 2017-09-25
Across
- a hole in the ground, especially one made by digging (p-)
- extremely important and necessary for something to succeed or exist (v-)
- a mixture of decayed plants, leaves etc used to improve the quality of soil (c-)
- living, or produced by or from living things (o-)
- someone whose job is to buy and sell large amounts of something (m-)
- not special or very important (h-)
- a situation in which there is not enough of something that people need (s-)
- something or someone that is not included in a general statement or does not follow a rule or pattern (e-)
- an important discovery or event that helps to improve a situation or provide an answer to a problem (b-)
- if a substance ( s) something, that thing is part of it (c-)
- extremely unpleasant and making you feel sick (d-)
- the kind of food you eat and the way it affects your health (n-)
- the decay of food that means that it can no longer be used (s-)
Down
- a substance in food such as meat and eggs which helps your body to grow and be healthy (p-)
- to experience a chemical change because of the action of yeast or bacteria, often changing sugar to alcohol; to make something change in this way (f-)
- to get rid of something, especially something that is difficult to get rid ofb(d-)
- a good or useful quality or condition that something has (a-)
- extremely important and necessary (e-)
- [the verb form of this:] to decay or make something decay (d-)
- having a good effect (b-)
- an animal, plant, human, or any other living thing (o-)
21 Clues: having a good effect (b-) • not special or very important (h-) • extremely important and necessary (e-) • living, or produced by or from living things (o-) • extremely unpleasant and making you feel sick (d-) • an animal, plant, human, or any other living thing (o-) • a hole in the ground, especially one made by digging (p-) • ...
Chapter 15: Food & Agriculture 2023-03-22
Across
- When materials of the Earth’s surface are loosened, dissolved, or worn away and transported from one place to another naturally
- The basic processes of farming include plowing, fertilization, irrigation, and pest control
- Agriculture that conserves natural resources and helps keep the land productive indefinitely
- The raising of aquatic plants and animals for human use or consumption
- a disorder of nutrition that results when a person does not consume enough of each of the nutrients that are needed by the human body
- domesticated animals that are raised to be used on a farm or ranch or to be sold for profit
- A technology in which the genome of a living cell is modified for medical or industrial use
- Land that can be used to grow crops
- The catching or removing from a population more organisms than the population can replace
Down
- Cud-chewing mammals that have a 3- or 4-chambered stomach
- The processes of farming using machinery, chemical fertilizers, and sprinkler systems
- the type and amount of food that a person eats
- When human activities or climatic changes make arid or semiarid areas more desert-like
- Revolution when worldwide increases in crop yields resulted from the use of new crop varieties and the application of modern agriculture techniques
- The accumulation of salts in the soil
- a prolonged period during which rainfall is below average
- Farming when a crop is harvested without turning the soil over, as in traditional farming
- Organisms that have been bred and managed for human use
- the amount of crops produced per unit area
- the widespread malnutrition and starvation in an area due to a shortage of food
20 Clues: Land that can be used to grow crops • The accumulation of salts in the soil • the amount of crops produced per unit area • the type and amount of food that a person eats • Organisms that have been bred and managed for human use • Cud-chewing mammals that have a 3- or 4-chambered stomach • a prolonged period during which rainfall is below average • ...
Biology 2023-11-15
Across
- a simple but important ingredient in photosynthesis - you may know it as H2O
- an ingredient in a chemical reaction
- adenosine di-phosphate
- the gas that human beings and most animals breathe
- is another word for breathing - plants do this!
- these green organelles allow a plant to perform photosynthesis
- the process through which plants take energy from sunlight to create chemical energy
Down
- the memes were true - it IS the power-house of the cell!
- an element represented by the letter "h" this is the most common element in the universe
- a living thing
- adenosine tri-phosphate
- things that make their own food (like plants)
- this is what plants get their energy from to turn into glucose
- tiny building blocks of plants,each one is so small you need a microscope to see it, but is much larger than an atom
- an element represented by the letter "c"
- this is the sugar that plants make from sunlight and it is what makes fruit sweet
16 Clues: a living thing • adenosine di-phosphate • adenosine tri-phosphate • an ingredient in a chemical reaction • an element represented by the letter "c" • things that make their own food (like plants) • is another word for breathing - plants do this! • the gas that human beings and most animals breathe • the memes were true - it IS the power-house of the cell! • ...
ThE CRossROad WaY 2018-09-25
Across
- green pigments in plants used for photosynthesis.
- simple carbohydrates formed from plants.
- formed when plants combine single glucose units.
- formed when two monosaccharides combine chemically.
- sugars formed from simple one and two unit structures.
- sugars with single-unit chemical structures.
Down
- plants form by combining single glucose units.
- carbohydrates with complicated structures.
- substances used in place of sugars.
- Your main source of energy.
- plant materials that are eaten but can't be digested.
- sugars extracted by plants and used to sweaten foods.
- chemical process by whhich plants make carbohydrates.
13 Clues: Your main source of energy. • substances used in place of sugars. • simple carbohydrates formed from plants. • carbohydrates with complicated structures. • sugars with single-unit chemical structures. • plants form by combining single glucose units. • formed when plants combine single glucose units. • green pigments in plants used for photosynthesis. • ...
Phylum 2019-05-15
Across
- The system used by plants to transport water using tubes
- Chemicals used by organisms to communicate
- Scraping device used by mollusca
- Plants that do not use the vascular system
- When plants react to gravity
- What vascular conifers use to reproduce
- Main symmetry used by the phylum echinodermata
- A very common example of non-vascular plants
Down
- Main symmetry of the phylum chordata
- When animals become inactive in the winter
- When animals become inactive in the summer
- When plants react to sunlight
- Reproduction system used by flowering plants
13 Clues: When plants react to gravity • When plants react to sunlight • Scraping device used by mollusca • Main symmetry of the phylum chordata • What vascular conifers use to reproduce • When animals become inactive in the winter • Chemicals used by organisms to communicate • When animals become inactive in the summer • Plants that do not use the vascular system • ...
Chapter 7 Targets of Health Promotion in Australia 2020-06-03
Across
- Anti-smoking laws are an example of what action area of the Ottawa Charter?
- The name of the commitment strategy to help achieve equality in health status for Indigenous Australians
- How many guidelines are there in the Australian Dietary Guidelines
- Fill in the blank. Guideline 5: ___ for your food; prepare and store it safely
- When the amount of energy consumed is the same as the amount of energy required
- Fill in the blank. Nutrition Australia coordinates events for the annual National _____ Week.
Down
- Fill in the blank. Guideline 2: Enjoy a ____ _____ of nutritious foods from the 5 food groups every day.
- Providing advice about quitting smoking in multiple languages is an example of what action area of the Ottawa Charter?
- The ability to resist short-term temptations in order to meet long term goals.
- Fill in the blank. It is important to ____ Indigenous initiatives to determine their effectiveness
- Fill in the blank. Smoking rates have ______ in the last 40 years.
- Providing information and education around quitting smoking is an example of what action area of the Ottawa Charter?
- Fill in the blank. The Healthy Eating Pyramid shows the food groups in ____ on a pyramid
- Fill in the blank. The rate of smokers in ____ Australians is almost 3 times the amount of non-_____ smokers.
- Fill in the blank. The Australian Guide to Health Eating shows food groups in a ___ chart.
15 Clues: Fill in the blank. Smoking rates have ______ in the last 40 years. • How many guidelines are there in the Australian Dietary Guidelines • Anti-smoking laws are an example of what action area of the Ottawa Charter? • The ability to resist short-term temptations in order to meet long term goals. • ...
Science 2021-08-22
Across
- Produces oxygen
- A gas produced in when doing photosynthesis
- or blue A color that forms when you put iodine onto a pizza
- Plants conduct both Photosynthesis and
- From where do plants get nutrients
- like gates
Down
- for starch A special solution is used for this test
- A green chemical
- Where is the food stored in plants
- What form is food stored in plants
- A solution used on food which is brown color
- to make proteins for plants
12 Clues: like gates • Produces oxygen • A green chemical • to make proteins for plants • Where is the food stored in plants • What form is food stored in plants • From where do plants get nutrients • Plants conduct both Photosynthesis and • A gas produced in when doing photosynthesis • A solution used on food which is brown color • for starch A special solution is used for this test • ...
[S]ina[F]ritz crossword for dummies 2021-09-03
Across
- "e" in MRS GREN
- "S" in MRS GREN
- controls cell division
- is a sperm cell plant or animal based?
Down
- several tissues grouped together
- "M" in MRS GREN
- FIGURE B2.8 "Cells from the lining ... of the cheek (x1500)" page 9
- "n" in MRS GREN
- independent plant or animal
- "G" in MRS GREN
- hundreds of single type cells
11 Clues: "M" in MRS GREN • "n" in MRS GREN • "G" in MRS GREN • "e" in MRS GREN • "S" in MRS GREN • controls cell division • independent plant or animal • hundreds of single type cells • several tissues grouped together • is a sperm cell plant or animal based? • FIGURE B2.8 "Cells from the lining ... of the cheek (x1500)" page 9
vocabulary science 2023-02-01
Across
- eats both plants and animals; examples include bears and humans
- primary consumer
- this is the first consumer in the food chain that eats the producer
- only eats plants, examples include rabbits and grasshoppers
- only eats animals; examples include lion and wolf
- producers; have most energy
- do not make their own food but get energy from eating other plants and animals; also called heterotrophs
- secondary consumers and beyond
Down
- this is the second consumer that eats the first consumer
- the sequence of living organisms in which one organism consumes another organism to transfer food energy
- shows the relationship between different organisms and the flow of energy in different trophic levels in an ecosystem
- something that takes excess carbon out of the air. Examples include plants, trees, oceans
- the process where consumers breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide; it uses oxygen and glucose to make carbon dioxide, water, and energy
- organisms that make their own food; also called AUTOtrophs (synonym); examples include plants, algae, microorganisms
- interconnected food chains that show flow of energy in an ecosystem
- when plants use energy from the sun, carbon dioxide, and water to make glucose (sugar) and oxygen (to be released into the air).
- break down dead organisms and waste; often called nature’s recyclers; examples include fungi and bacteria
17 Clues: primary consumer • producers; have most energy • secondary consumers and beyond • only eats animals; examples include lion and wolf • this is the second consumer that eats the first consumer • only eats plants, examples include rabbits and grasshoppers • eats both plants and animals; examples include bears and humans • ...
Biology Module 19 2024-05-02
Across
- tubular cell in phloem; lacks nucleus
- protective tissue that forms from the hardening of the outside layers of the ovule
- vascular plant tissue composed of tubular cells
- tubular cell in the xylem that has tapered ends; has small openings for transport of water and minerals
- first part of the embryo to emerge from the seed and begin to absorb water and nutrients from the environment
- region of the stem nearest the seed
- male reproductive organ of most flowers composed of a filament and an anther
- plants that do not have vascular tissues
- colorful flower structure that attracts pollinators and provides them a landing place
- openings in the outer cell layers of leaves that enable the exchange of gases even with the presence of a waxy cuticle
- tissues found in vascular plants composed of tubelike, elongated cells through which food, water, and other materials are transported throughout the plant; include xylem and phloem
- seed structure that stores food or helps absorb food for the sporophyte of vascular seed plants
- tissue that provides nourishment to the developing embryo of flowering plants
- plants that have vascular tissues; enables faster movement of substances
Down
- hollow, tubular cell in the xylem
- process in which a seed’s embryo begins to grow
- in plants, the outermost layer of flattened cells that covers and protects all parts of the plant
- controls the opening and closing of the stomata
- a plant organ of seed plants consisting of an embryo, a food supply, and a protective coat; protects the embryo from drying out
- vascular plant tissue made of tubular cells joined end to end
- flower organ that protects the bud
- type of asexual reproduction in plants where a new plant is produced from existing plant organs or parts of organs
- compact cluster of spore bearing structures in some seedless vascular plant sporophytes
- flower’s female reproductive organ; it is usually composed of a stigma, a style, and an ovary
- plant tissue that is not meristematic, dermal, or vascular; has diverse functions, including photosynthesis, storage, and support
- cell with nucleus that helps transport sugars and other organic compounds through sieve tubes
- period of little or no growth that varies from species to species
27 Clues: hollow, tubular cell in the xylem • flower organ that protects the bud • region of the stem nearest the seed • tubular cell in phloem; lacks nucleus • plants that do not have vascular tissues • process in which a seed’s embryo begins to grow • vascular plant tissue composed of tubular cells • controls the opening and closing of the stomata • ...
Nutritional Support Indications for and complications of enteral and parenteral support. 2025-02-28
Across
- Tube feeding method for patients with a functional gut.
- Intravenous nutrition for patients with non-functioning intestines.
- Potential electrolyte imbalance in refeeding syndrome.
Down
- Essential nutrient often deficient in total parenteral nutrition (TPN).
- A common complication of parenteral nutrition, affecting the liver.
5 Clues: Potential electrolyte imbalance in refeeding syndrome. • Tube feeding method for patients with a functional gut. • Intravenous nutrition for patients with non-functioning intestines. • A common complication of parenteral nutrition, affecting the liver. • Essential nutrient often deficient in total parenteral nutrition (TPN).
Plant Science 2015-03-16
Across
- manages the golf course grounds
- a person who reproduces plants
- a person licensed to install landscapes bused on passing certification exams
- a professional trained in the art and science of arranging land and objects upon it
- manages the production of wines
- grow, manage and sell hay crops for various animal producers
- person who studies plant processes and functions
Down
- manages retail produce departments of grocery stores
- maintains lawn and landscape Ex. homes, schools, businesses,etc.
- grows and sells vegetables
- a person who studies insects
- a person who grows and maintains plants for estates, institutions,etc.
- manages a business that grows and sells greenhouse plants
- federal employee that inspects harvested grain crops
- a person who develops new plants through select hybridization, etc.
- manages a business that grows and sells trees, shrubs and other ornamental plants
- designs and arranges cut flowers.
- a specialist in soil and crop sciences
18 Clues: grows and sells vegetables • a person who studies insects • a person who reproduces plants • manages the golf course grounds • manages the production of wines • designs and arranges cut flowers. • a specialist in soil and crop sciences • person who studies plant processes and functions • manages retail produce departments of grocery stores • ...
Photosynthesis 2025-03-12
Across
- A process where substances change into new substances, such as photosynthesis.
- The green pigment in plants that absorbs sunlight for photosynthesis.
- Tubes inside the plant that transport water from the roots to the leaves.
- A substance made from glucose that strengthens plant cell walls.
- Tubes that carry food (glucose) from the leaves to other parts of the plant.
- The process of taking in substances, like how chlorophyll absorbs sunlight.
- The process by which plants make their own food using sunlight.
- The idea of maintaining natural resources like plants and oxygen for future
Down
- Tiny structures inside plant cells where photosynthesis occurs.
- A type of sugar produced during photosynthesis, used for energy.
- A group of atoms bonded together, such as H₂O (water) and CO₂ (carbon dioxide).
- Tiny openings on the underside of leaves that allow gas exchange.
- A gas released by plants during photosynthesis that animals and humans breathe (O₂).
- Chain A system showing how energy moves from plants to animals.
- The main site of photosynthesis where sunlight is absorbed.
- The part of a plant that absorbs water and nutrients from the soil.
- A gas taken in by plants from the air to use in photosynthesis (CO₂).
- A series of steps to achieve an outcome, like photosynthesis.generations.
18 Clues: The main site of photosynthesis where sunlight is absorbed. • Tiny structures inside plant cells where photosynthesis occurs. • Chain A system showing how energy moves from plants to animals. • The process by which plants make their own food using sunlight. • A type of sugar produced during photosynthesis, used for energy. • ...
Biosphere Crossword 2017-12-06
Across
- Eats both plants and Animals.
- Turning co2 to energy
- Abiotic and biotic factors working together
- can't make their own food
- Plant and animal _________ help them survive in new surroundings.
- Goes into to change something
- animals at a constant number
- A group of animals having similar traits
- A limiting factor in an ecosystem that benefits by eating its prey.
- Turning oxygen to food
- Two or more species taking up the same area
- Organisms that make their own food.
- One benefits other is affected
Down
- Feeds on already dead organisms that they find
- interaction with two different organisms
- An organism that only eats animals.
- An animal that only eats plants.
- The number of organisms in a population that it can maintain.
- All members of a species in one area.
- Organelles turning stuff green in plants
- Change in structure
- Species that are the first to a new location
- Organelles in plants
- Large community working together
- One benefits other is non-effected
- Moving someplace else for
- Both benefit
- Come out from reactants
- Moving permanently
29 Clues: Both benefit • Moving permanently • Change in structure • Organelles in plants • Turning co2 to energy • Turning oxygen to food • Come out from reactants • can't make their own food • Moving someplace else for • animals at a constant number • Eats both plants and Animals. • Goes into to change something • One benefits other is affected • An animal that only eats plants. • ...
Biosphere Crossword 2017-12-05
Across
- Organisms that make their own food.
- Both benefit
- Abiotic and biotic factors working together
- can't make their own food
- Moving permanently
- Turning co2 to energy
- animals at a constant number
- Turning oxygen to food
- interaction with two different organisms
- Come out from reactants
- A limiting factor in an ecosystem that benefits by eating its prey.
- Organelles in plants
- Change in structure
- An animal that only eats plants.
- Eats both plants and Animals.
Down
- Two or more species taking up the same area
- An organism that only eats animals.
- Feeds on already dead organisms that they find
- All members of a species in one area.
- Plant and animal _________ help them survive in new surroundings.
- A group of animals having similar traits
- Organelles turning stuff green in plants
- Moving someplace else for
- Species that are the first to a new location
- The number of organisms in a population that it can maintain.
- One benefits other is affected
- One benefits other is non-effected
- Large community working together
- Goes into to change something
29 Clues: Both benefit • Moving permanently • Change in structure • Organelles in plants • Turning co2 to energy • Turning oxygen to food • Come out from reactants • Moving someplace else for • can't make their own food • animals at a constant number • Goes into to change something • Eats both plants and Animals. • One benefits other is affected • Large community working together • ...
Unit 2 Vocabulary 2024-11-26
Across
- the range of many kinds of plants and animals in a habitat
- health and comfort
- brought an animal or plant back to an area
- animals and plants depend on one another for survival
- the natural home of a plant or animal
- not affected by something, such as illness
- single or alone
- ready to use
- removed
- a group of living things that are the same in most ways
- safety
- animals that live by eating other animals
Down
- comes out of a hidden place
- the number of animals or people living in a place
- the order of something
- changes in plants or animals that help them survive in their habitat
- a disguise that hides something from view
- increased greatly in number
- to say or do something the same way again
- the appearance of something that is the same on both sides
- counted or relied on
- enough different plants and animals to keep a habitat healthy
- parts of the world that are not made by people
- sets of things that repeat in order
24 Clues: safety • removed • ready to use • single or alone • health and comfort • counted or relied on • the order of something • comes out of a hidden place • increased greatly in number • sets of things that repeat in order • the natural home of a plant or animal • a disguise that hides something from view • to say or do something the same way again • animals that live by eating other animals • ...
Energy transfers 2026-02-05
Across
- .... bisphosphate Molecule that CO₂ attaches to in the Calvin cycle.
- Feeding by absorbing nutrients from dead organic matter.
- Excess nutrients in water causing algal blooms and oxygen loss.
- Product of glycolysis, used in the Krebs cycle.
- Conversion of nitrates back into nitrogen gas by bacteria.
- Organism that eats other organisms for energy.
- First stage of respiration, breaking glucose into pyruvate.
- Organisms that use light energy to make their own food.
- Series of reactions in mitochondria producing energy carriers.
- Total mass of living material in an ecosystem.
- Fungi that form mutualistic relationships with plant roots.
Down
- Organisms that break down dead material, recycling nutrients.
- Organism that makes its own food, usually by photosynthesis.
- Process where light energy excites electrons in chlorophyll.
- Process of converting nitrogen gas into usable forms for plants.
- Coenzyme that carries electrons during photosynthesis.
- Process by which plants convert light energy into chemical energy.
- Green pigment in plants that absorbs light for photosynthesis.
- Molecule that stores and transfers energy within cells.
- Animal that eats only plants.
20 Clues: Animal that eats only plants. • Organism that eats other organisms for energy. • Total mass of living material in an ecosystem. • Product of glycolysis, used in the Krebs cycle. • Coenzyme that carries electrons during photosynthesis. • Molecule that stores and transfers energy within cells. • Organisms that use light energy to make their own food. • ...
Gardening Techniques 2024-09-27
Across
- – Placing seeds or plants in soil
- – Moving plants from one location to another
- – Adding nutrients to the soil
- – Gathering mature crops
- – Creating holes in soil to improve air circulation
- – Providing moisture to plants
- – Covering soil to retain moisture
Down
- – Growing new plants from cuttings
- – Recycling organic waste into fertilizer
- – Turning over soil to prepare for planting
- – Trimming plants for growth
- – Removing unwanted plants from a garden
12 Clues: – Gathering mature crops • – Trimming plants for growth • – Adding nutrients to the soil • – Providing moisture to plants • – Placing seeds or plants in soil • – Growing new plants from cuttings • – Covering soil to retain moisture • – Removing unwanted plants from a garden • – Recycling organic waste into fertilizer • – Turning over soil to prepare for planting • ...
Plants: How They Survive 2013-08-27
Across
- plants breathe this in
- a process where pollen is transferred for reproduction
- absorbs nutrient and water from the ground
- collected through the roots along with water
- light source needed in photosynthesis
- captures sunlight and conducts photosynthesis
- forms in a fruit and contains a new plant
Down
- a green pigment found in the leaves of plants
- a process in which a plant emerges from a seed
- plants release this gas
- a process where plants make their own food
- provides a covering for seeds
- they can acquire this from rain or underground
- supports the plant and transports nutrients
- the reproductive part of a plant
15 Clues: plants breathe this in • plants release this gas • provides a covering for seeds • the reproductive part of a plant • light source needed in photosynthesis • forms in a fruit and contains a new plant • a process where plants make their own food • absorbs nutrient and water from the ground • supports the plant and transports nutrients • ...
Plants: How They Survive 2013-08-27
Across
- a process where pollen is transferred for reproduction
- light source needed in photosynthesis
- plants breathe this in
- a green pigment found in the leaves of plants
- a process in which a plant emerges from a seed
- captures sunlight and conducts photosynthesis
- plants release this gas
- forms in a fruit and contains a new plant
Down
- absorbs nutrient and water from the ground
- a process where plants make their own food
- provides a covering for seeds
- the reproductive part of a plant
- supports the plant and transports nutrients
- collected through the roots along with water
- they can acquire this from rain or underground
15 Clues: plants breathe this in • plants release this gas • provides a covering for seeds • the reproductive part of a plant • light source needed in photosynthesis • forms in a fruit and contains a new plant • absorbs nutrient and water from the ground • a process where plants make their own food • supports the plant and transports nutrients • ...
nutrition 2024-03-19
8 Clues: eats only one thing • eat almost everything • the 13_________Vitamins • there are 6 types of______ • the human body is 60%______ • there are 3 types of this___ • the word has two different meanings • have three things that make up this nutrition
TISSUES 2021-08-25
Across
- Tissue with irregular thickening at the corners of the cells.
- _____________tissues have the ability to divide throughout their lives.
- _________ are more effective in conducting water in flowering plants.
- ________ cells are responsible for the exchange of gases and transpiration.
- Cell wall of a sclereid is made up of _________.
- Skeletal or voluntary muscles are also called __________ muscles.
- group of cells that combine together to perform a particular function
- Blood is type of _________ tissue.
- __________muscles make up our heart.
Down
- The spinal cord is composed of _____________ tissue.
- Most abundant living cell in the plant body.
- Complex permanent tissue that conducts water.
- Waxy layer secreted by the epidermis in desert plants.
- The process by which meristematic tissues turn into permanent tissues.
- Dead simple permanent tissue in plants.
- Type of parenchyma that helps aquatics plants to float on water.
- Nerve cells are also called __________.
- Pore-like structures present in the epidermis of leaves.
- Outermost layer that covers the entire plant.
19 Clues: Blood is type of _________ tissue. • __________muscles make up our heart. • Dead simple permanent tissue in plants. • Nerve cells are also called __________. • Most abundant living cell in the plant body. • Complex permanent tissue that conducts water. • Outermost layer that covers the entire plant. • Cell wall of a sclereid is made up of _________. • ...
Therapeutic Food For Children 2024-03-06
Across
- relating to the healing of disease
- Lack of nutrition
- organic compound necessary for growth and nutrition of the human body
Down
- Ready-to-use therapeutic food for malnourished children
- a young human
- Adding extra nutrients to food that aren't normally there
- Agency in the United Nations responsible for providing humanitarian aid to children worldwide
7 Clues: a young human • Lack of nutrition • relating to the healing of disease • Ready-to-use therapeutic food for malnourished children • Adding extra nutrients to food that aren't normally there • organic compound necessary for growth and nutrition of the human body • Agency in the United Nations responsible for providing humanitarian aid to children worldwide
Careers in Horticulture 2024-01-25
Across
- The science and practice of propagating, growing, planting, maintaining, and using grasses, annuals, shrubs, and trees.
- Educational requirement for unskilled, entry-level jobs.
- The science and practice of growing, maintaining, and processing grapes.
- Grows vegetables, fruits, and flowers including cut flowers, bedding plants, potted plants, hanging baskets, and landscaping plants. Employees do both sexual and asexual plant propagation
- The science and practice of growing, harvesting, storing, processing, and marketing flowering plants.
- You can work in a variety of wholesale and retail areas for operations like a seed grower or a wholesale plant grower.
- Cares for the land area and plants surrounding a business, school, church, industry, or other public or private places with lawns and plants that must be maintained (includes IPM).
Down
- Work in jobs that are environmentally friendly and have to do with reusing, recycling, and reducing the carbon footprint.
- Cares for plants, moves plants and supplies, arranges and displays plants and supplies, and sells plants and supplies
- Is responsible for maintaining golf courses including turf grass, pest management, irrigation and drainage, sand trap, trees and shrubs, buildings, and equipment.
- The science and practice of growing, harvesting, storing, processing, and marketing tree-grown fruits.
- There are many career opportunities in this field working for USDA, EPA, and the FDA, you can be a technician, a researcher, a marketing specialist, and much more!
- Educational requirement for a skilled job.
- The science and practice of growing, harvesting, storing, processing, and marketing vegetables.
- Maintains plants, grounds, buildings, facilities, equipment, and driveways in national, state, city, or privately owned parks.
15 Clues: Educational requirement for a skilled job. • Educational requirement for unskilled, entry-level jobs. • The science and practice of growing, maintaining, and processing grapes. • The science and practice of growing, harvesting, storing, processing, and marketing vegetables. • ...
Chapter 24 The Plant Body 2014-01-23
Across
- A root system typical of monocots composed of numerous thin adventitious roots that are all roughly equal in diameter. (Contrast with taproot system.)
- (1) In plants, the tissue between the epidermis and the vascular tissue of a stem or root. (2) In animals, the outer tissue of certain organs, such as the adrenal gland (adrenal cortex) and the brain (cerebral cortex).
- Either of the two meristems, the vascular cambium and the cork cambium, that give rise to a plant's secondary growth.
- In plants, a specialized cell layer marking the inside of the cortex in roots and some stems. Frequently a barrier to free diffusion of solutes.
- The meristem at the tip of a shoot or root; responsible for a plant's primary growth.
- That part of an apical meristem that gives rise to the ground tissue system of the primary plant body.
- Roots originating from the stem at ground level or below; typical of the fibrous root system of monocots.
- In plants, a lateral meristem that produces secondary growth, mainly in the form of waxy-walled protective cells, including some of the cells that become bark.
- In plants and animals, the outermost cell layers. (Only one cell layer thick in plants.)
- The outer covering of a plant, consisting of epidermis in the young plant and periderm in a plant with extensive secondary growth. (Contrast with ground tissue system and vascular tissue system.)
- Meristem that produces the tissues of the primary plant body.
- A "seed leaf." An embryonic organ that stores and digests reserve materials; may expand when seed germinates.
- The outer tissue of the secondary plant body, consisting primarily of cork.
- A root extending outward from the taproot in a taproot system; typical of eudicots.
- A plant tissue composed of relatively unspecialized cells without secondary walls.
- The stalk of a leaf.
Down
- A growth pattern in which the growth of an organism or organ ceases when an adult state is reached; characteristic of most animals and some plant organs. (Contrast with indeterminate growth.)
- In plant roots, tissue just within the endodermis, but outside of the root vascular tissue. Meristematic activity of pericycle cells produces lateral root primordia.
- In angiosperms, an elongated, tapering sclerenchyma cell, usually with a thick cell wall, that serves as a support function in xylem. (See also muscle fiber.)
- All tissues external to the vascular cambium of a plant.
- A open-ended growth pattern in which an organism or organ continues to grow as long as it lives; characteristic of some animals and of plant shoots and roots. (Contrast with determinate growth.)
- Chloroplast-containing, photosynthetic cells in the interior of leaves.
- Those parts of the plant body not included in the dermal or vascular tissue systems. Ground tissues function in storage, photosynthesis, and support.
- The thin, flat portion of a leaf.
- A type of plant cell, living at functional maturity, which lends flexible support by virtue of primary cell walls thickened at the corners. (Contrast with parenchyma, sclerenchyma.)
- In plants, a protective outermost tissue layer composed of cells with thick walls waterproofed with suberin.
- In plants, growth that is characterized by the lengthening of roots and shoots and by the proliferation of new roots and shoots through branching. (Contrast with secondary growth.)
- In vascular plants, the vascular tissue that transports sugars and other solutes from sources to sinks.
- In plants, relatively unspecialized tissue found within a cylinder of vascular tissue.
- Primary meristem that produces the vascular tissue.
- In plants, the chief organ of photosynthesis.
- (1) In plants, a waxy layer on the outer body surface that retards water loss. (2) In ecdysozoans, an outer body covering that provides protection and support and is periodically molted.
32 Clues: The stalk of a leaf. • The thin, flat portion of a leaf. • In plants, the chief organ of photosynthesis. • Primary meristem that produces the vascular tissue. • All tissues external to the vascular cambium of a plant. • Meristem that produces the tissues of the primary plant body. • Chloroplast-containing, photosynthetic cells in the interior of leaves. • ...
Among the hidden chapters 16-30 by Naysha 2017-04-27
Across
- To make fun of in a joking or taunting manner.
- Growing plants in water, without soil.
- Latin for “unfree person,” meaning who is a fugitive or who has no rights.
- One’s identity as male or female.
- A limited portion or amount that you are permitted to eat or buy or use.
- Mentally ill; personally out of control.
- Destruction of living things.
- To limit freedom or options.
- Political misinformation designed to mislead people about the truth.
- A French word that means “so there it is.”
- Shocking and overwhelming.
- Done with passion and zest.
- Crying.
Down
- An illegal action or plot in which one person or group takes advantage or steals from others.
- To worry or think about something repeatedly without cause.
- The state of not caring or of not having an opinion.
- A government or system that totally controls all aspects of the lives of its citizens.
- Unable to do or complete something.
- Fascinated, deeply interested.
- The state of finding or placing blame.
- Sick and diseased because of very poor nutrition and lack of food.
- Having to do with household work and cooking and cleaning.
- Enemy spy; one who sneaks in and spies.
- To do something in a carefree, unconcerned way; “la-dee-dah; la-dee-dah”
- Organized protest or assembly, usually for political reasons.
- To control something or someone.
- Intentionally destroying or breaking something, usually relating to actions taken during war (blowing up railway tracks).
- Reasonable, credible, believable, possible.
- Verb meaning to return to a topic or item repeatedly.
- Able to be heard.
30 Clues: Crying. • Able to be heard. • Shocking and overwhelming. • Done with passion and zest. • To limit freedom or options. • Destruction of living things. • Fascinated, deeply interested. • To control something or someone. • One’s identity as male or female. • Unable to do or complete something. • Growing plants in water, without soil. • The state of finding or placing blame. • ...
Year 3 Science Revision 2019-11-19
Across
- part of plant that prepares food for the plant
- ability for living things to increase in size
- example of an insect
- another name for non standard unit of measuring length
- holds a plant firmly to the ground
- group of animals with thick scales
- attracts insects to the plant
- getting rid of chemical waste from the body
- group of animals that live partly on water and on land
- used to measure round objects
- example of a reptile
- Number of legs of an insect
- colouring matter of a leaf
- ability to take in air
- moving air
- making more living things of the same type
- preferred type of soil for planting
- taking in and using food
- rule used by tailors
- old method of measuring length
- group of animals with wings
- transports nutrients to the plant
Down
- what plants need to grow
- part of an insect
- the air we breathe in
- group of animals with body parts divided into three
- example of a fish
- standard unit of measuring length
- how long an object is
- ability to detect changes around us
- example of a bird
- the air we breathe out
- example of a mammal
- type of soil that is sticky when wet
- soil type with large particles
- another name for modern method of measuring length
- top covering of the earth surface
- group of animals that feed their young ones with milk from their breast
- property of soil that makes it rough to feel
- harmful substance in the air
- group of animals with gills fins and scales
41 Clues: moving air • part of an insect • example of a fish • example of a bird • example of a mammal • example of an insect • example of a reptile • rule used by tailors • the air we breathe in • how long an object is • the air we breathe out • ability to take in air • what plants need to grow • taking in and using food • colouring matter of a leaf • Number of legs of an insect • ...
