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question 10 (1 point) which of the following changes signals a plant is…

Question

question 10 (1 point)
which of the following changes signals a plant is entering reproductive growth?

○ a increase in root hairs
○ b rapid stem elongation
○ c development of new leaves only
○ d formation of flower buds

question 11 (1 point)
what is the main goal of reproductive growth in plants?

○ a increasing leaf size
○ b gathering sunlight and water
○ c producing flowers, fruits, and seeds
○ d developing a stronger stem

question 12 (1 point)
what often triggers the shift from vegetative to reproductive growth?

○ a shortage of water
○ b environmental signals like day length and temperature
○ c increase in leaf size
○ d decrease in soil nutrients

Explanation:

Response
Question 10
Brief Explanations

To determine which change signals a plant entering reproductive growth, we analyze each option:

  • Option a: Increase in root hairs is related to vegetative growth (absorbing nutrients/water), not reproductive.
  • Option b: Rapid stem elongation is part of vegetative growth (growth in plant structure).
  • Option c: Development of new leaves only is vegetative (photosynthesis, growth).
  • Option d: Formation of flower buds is directly related to reproductive growth as flowers are involved in plant reproduction.
Brief Explanations

To find the main goal of reproductive growth in plants:

  • Option a: Increasing leaf size is vegetative (photosynthesis support).
  • Option b: Gathering sunlight and water is vegetative (survival, growth).
  • Option c: Producing flowers, fruits, and seeds is the core of reproductive growth (to reproduce, propagate species).
  • Option d: Developing a stronger stem is vegetative (structural support).
Brief Explanations

To identify what triggers the shift from vegetative to reproductive growth:

  • Option a: Shortage of water is a stressor, not a typical trigger for reproductive growth shift.
  • Option b: Environmental signals like day length (photoperiod) and temperature are known triggers for plants to switch to reproductive growth (e.g., seasonal changes).
  • Option c: Increase in leaf size is vegetative growth, not a trigger for the shift.
  • Option d: Decrease in soil nutrients is stress, not a typical reproductive shift trigger.

Answer:

d. Formation of flower buds

Question 11