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pollination

Pollinating kiwifruit

Article

Pollinating kiwifruit

What usually happens when you cut up a piece of fruit to eat or to put in a salad? If ...

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Pollination – introduction

Article

Pollination – introduction

Flowers are not on plants just to make them look pretty. They are there as a vital part of a ...

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Labelling the parts of a pua/flower

Activity

Labelling the parts of a pua/flower

Although flowers come in all shapes, sizes, colours and scents, most will have the same basic parts to ensure that ...

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Plant reproduction

Article

Plant reproduction

Scientists divide plants into two main groups depending on whether they reproduce by seeds or spores.

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Methods of pollination

Article

Methods of pollination

Flowering plants need to get pollen from one flower to another, either within a plant for self-pollination or between plants ...

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Pollination resources – planning pathways

Teacher PLD

Pollination resources – planning pathways

Flowers are a common sight in most New Zealand school grounds. They offer a colourful starting point to teach about ...

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The buzz of bees

Article

The buzz of bees

The ‘Buzz of bees’ is a Connected journal devoted entirely to bees. Each article has diagrams and illustrations that offer opportunities for students to develop the ...

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Mast years

Article

Mast years

What is a mast? You might be forgiven for thinking it had more to do with ships than conservation! The term comes from the ancient English ...

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Robots for horticulture

Article

Robots for horticulture

The value of the horticultural industry will increase with better pollination systems, robust quality control, better traceability systems, more cost-competitive practice and solutions for the difficulty ...

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Bee-friendly insecticides

Article

Bee-friendly insecticides

University of Otago geneticist Peter Dearden is using the bee genome to develop a bee-friendly insecticide. Listen to this RNZ audio Bee-friendly insecticides from April 2014. ...

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Seeds, stems and spores – introduction

Article

Seeds, stems and spores – introduction

A plant reproduction resource for New Zealand Curriculum levels 1 and 2. Explore some of the science ideas behind plant life cycles, seed dispersal and how ...

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Plant reproduction without seeds

Article

Plant reproduction without seeds

Not every plant grows from a seed. Some plants, like ferns and mosses, grow from spores. Other plants use asexual vegetative reproduction and grow new plants ...

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Seed dispersal

Article

Seed dispersal

Plants make seeds that can grow into new plants, but if the seeds just fall to the ground under the parent plant, they might not get ...

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The seed-flower life cycle

Article

The seed-flower life cycle

Humans have many reasons to grow plants. We use them for food, for building materials, for pleasure and for many other purposes. A plant really just ...

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The kākāpō, the bat and the parasitic plant

Article

The kākāpō, the bat and the parasitic plant

Fossilised dung (coprolites) from kākāpō in a cave in the South Island has revealed an unexpected and hitherto unknown relationship between three of the country’s most ...

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Bumblebees and pollination

Article

Bumblebees and pollination

Plant & Food Research is investigating whether bumblebees can be used to pollinate flowers in commercial orchards. Dr David Pattemore from Plant & Food Research explains ...

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Investigating pollination – writer insight

Article

Investigating pollination – writer insight

Hub's writer, Nelville Gardner, talks about our pollination resources. One of the scientists featured in the articles on pollination, Dave Kelly of the University of Canterbury, ...

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Jenny Ladley

Article

Jenny Ladley

Position: field services manager and research assistant, University of Canterbury. Field: Ecology As part of her job as Terrestrial Ecology Technician, at the School of Biological ...

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Professor Dave Kelly

Article

Professor Dave Kelly

Position: Professor, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury. Field: Population ecology Professor Dave Kelly is a population ecologist who has a particular interest in pollination ...

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Dr Mark Goodwin

Article

Dr Mark Goodwin

Position: Head of research, Plant & Food Research. Field: Honey bees and pollination. For Dr Mark Goodwin, working with pollination has its challenges. Most crop plants ...

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Honey bee heroes

Article

Honey bee heroes

Honey bees (Apis mellifera) are the most important pollinators of many cultivated food crops and other flowering plants. These plants would be in trouble without bees, ...

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Flowering plant life cycles

Article

Flowering plant life cycles

The flowers and fruit of flowering plants come and go as part of their life cycle. Some flowering plants don’t even have stems and leaves all ...

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Seed-bearing plants

Article

Seed-bearing plants

Plants are living: They grow and die. They produce new individuals. They are made of cells. They need energy, nutrients, air and water. They respond to ...

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Attracting pollinators

Article

Attracting pollinators

Flowering plants need to get pollen from one flower to another, either within a plant for self-pollination or between plants of the same species for cross-pollination ...

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Flower parts

Article

Flower parts

Most flowers have the same basic parts, even though they come in all sorts of shapes, sizes and colours. Flowers are there to make sure that ...

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Pollination and fertilisation

Article

Pollination and fertilisation

Sexual reproduction is a way of making a new individual by joining two special sex cells, called gametes. In the sexual reproduction of animals and plants, ...

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Decline of birds and pollination

Article

Decline of birds and pollination

Birdlife has been declining in the New Zealand bush for many years, mainly due to introduced predators such as rats and stoats. Professor Dave Kelly and ...

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