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[原始] 12.3 阅读放狗狗攒人品!

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51#
 楼主| 发表于 2018-12-3 18:49:59 | 只看该作者
Attano 发表于 2018-12-3 18:16
哇爱你,最担心数学,楼主的话强心针!!!!!
祝搂搂打爆GMAT,750+触手可及 ...

刚刚回忆了点数学发了帖子!你可以去看看  加油!!!爱你!
52#
发表于 2018-12-3 19:19:55 | 只看该作者
感谢分享!               
53#
发表于 2018-12-3 19:51:55 | 只看该作者
姐妹书信的又出来啦,10月15的库里面有的。
54#
发表于 2018-12-3 20:02:07 | 只看该作者
lijj0410 发表于 2018-12-3 15:43
感谢楼主!
植物AP授粉见过三四次了。。

亲,哪里有?可否给个链接,做题太少明天考,伤不起。谢谢谢谢
55#
发表于 2018-12-3 20:23:33 | 只看该作者
感谢楼主!!!呜呜呜
56#
发表于 2018-12-3 20:43:01 | 只看该作者
这几篇文章真的好眼熟啊  感谢楼主
57#
发表于 2018-12-3 21:13:08 | 只看该作者
可以读读这篇,好像跟楼主说的第二篇有点接近。

Mouse Plant
A woodland aroid native of Italy & Spain, Mouse Plant, or Mouse Tail Plant (Arisarum proboscideum), is a small cousin to Jack-in-the-Pulpit.

It does well in dryish shade, though if the soil entirely dries out at any time in spring, it may go prematurely dormant. Persistant moisture in extremely well-draining soil will suit it best.

Its gorgeous green arrowhead leaves form a low, spreading carpet beginning late in winter. It would be a pretty plant even without flowers. But it is the strange flowers that lend it its name. The long tail on each fat little spathes lends the flowers the appearance of a family of mice, enhanced by the chocolate-maroon coloration of the upper portion & tail. The lower portion of the spathe is white like a deermouse's belly.

These flowers appear in mid to late April but are entirely hidden in the leaves, so that to appreciate the plant fully requires some interaction with the plant. If a gardener never thought to part the leaves, the flowers might well come & go never seen.

I sometimes suspect our gardens are in places way too "introverted" rather than showy, & visitors might not appreciate as much as we do such things mouse plants & asarums with interesting blooms invisible beneath leaves, or hellebores with their showiness completely facing the ground. Fortunately we're not alone in liking introverted things. When four of Granny Artemis's out-of-state relatives came to town in April, we were delighted that everyone got down on their knees to part the mouseplant's leaves & many oos & ahs were shared.

For our two clumps, the leaves are fully developed by the time the mice appear. In colder zones the leaves start later in the season, & the mice may appear before the leaves entirely hide them immediately, but the leaves will soon enshroud the mouse family.

These ultra-charming blooms are not quite entirely hidden because the tails make them six or seven inches long, so that either the maroon tail, or occasionally a portion of the main body of the mouse, will poke out of the shiny green arrowhead foliage.

The mice are most numerous in April but may persist to the start of summer. The creeping clump of leaves outlast the flowers by quite some while, but will be dying to the ground by August, sooner if its essential well-drained humousy soil completely dries out. Be sure to mark the location well in order to not accidentally dig them up while they are dormant.

Hardy & easily grown, the main risk is excessive dampness rotting the tubers during autumn/winter dormancy. They do well in either sun or shade, but prefer bright shade. It grows from a tuber that develops rhizomes which develop more tubers & offsets, for a slowly expanding clump, never invasive but may after many years need to be lifted & divided.

I have wondered if this aroid shouldn't be regarded as partially carnivorous. The "tail" has a mushroom odor which is known to attract female fungus gnats as mouse tail pollinators. In the process the gnats lay their eggs in the mouse tail. These eggs hatch but the larvae fail to develop, having no actual fungus to eat. Possibly the fly larvae, starving while in pursuit of food inside the spathe, are also needed for full pollination. If the mouse plant happens to gain any degree of nutrient from the eggs & the dead larvae, that would qualify as carnivorous behavior.

But I've never seen this aspect of the Mouse Plant discussed in any detail, so perhaps it gets nothing from having the eggs left by its pollinator. I've wondered about this because it seems to me nothing is done for no reason by nature, & the Mouse Plant would seem to want those gnat eggs for some actual purpose. The reason the Mouse Plant blooms so early (sometimes ahead of its fully developed leaves) is it wants to get ahead of the actual mushrooms that will soon be attracting the same gnats. If not to any degree carniverous, the Mouse Plant is at least parasitic, in that it attracts pollinators it in no wise provides an exchanged benefit.
58#
发表于 2018-12-3 21:14:42 | 只看该作者
ooooq 发表于 2018-12-3 20:02
亲,哪里有?可否给个链接,做题太少明天考,伤不起。谢谢谢谢

你找找之前的阅读寂静整理 我记得818那个库应该有 那个库的阅读有一些在这几个月里出现好多次了 实在不行也可以看一看…加油!
59#
发表于 2018-12-3 21:15:51 | 只看该作者
冷背小萨 发表于 2018-12-3 21:13
可以读读这篇,好像跟楼主说的第二篇有点接近。

Mouse Plant

万分感谢
60#
发表于 2018-12-3 21:36:36 | 只看该作者
lijj0410 发表于 2018-12-3 21:14
你找找之前的阅读寂静整理 我记得818那个库应该有 那个库的阅读有一些在这几个月里出现好多次了 实在不行 ...

谢谢
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