Tuesday, 11 June 2013

Basic Issues


May 17, 2013
Friday

Growth measurements:
Acid - 6cm, 4 cm, 2.5 cm, 3 cm, 3 cm
Neutral - 6 cm,. 6 cm, 6.5 cm, 4 cm, 4.3 cm
Basic - died

It has been found that the plants like the neutral and acidic water better than the basic. To verify this, we are concentrating on the basic experiment. We will retry the basic experiment by replanting kohlrabi and using a pH buffer 9 on half of the plants and soap on the other half. The reason the basic plants died may have been from a chemical in the soap and not the pH level of the soil.

June 11, 2013
Tuesday

The kohlrabi that was treated with soap has died again, and the pH buffer 9 plants are healthy. This proves that the soap must have a chemical in it that kills the plants and it is not the basic level of the soil at all. 

The Experiment

Hypothesis:

It is hypothesized that considering that zinnia's prefer more acidic soil types, the neutral and acidic plants will do the best. The basic plants will probably not do as well and may even die.


Materials:

Zinnia seeds (25)
3 lemons
water
30 mL soap
pH 9 buffer
soil
source of light
beakers


Procedure:

1. Plant seeds in 3 separate, equal sized pots. Use only dirt in each pot. Make sure to put and equal amount of seeds in each pot.

2. Once a week, water each plant 10 mL with it's respective water type. The mixtures are as follows:
Acidic - 20mL lemon juice and 20mL water mixed together
Basic - 10mL soap and 30 mL water mixed together
Neutral - 40mL water
The mixtures can be adjusted to make more liquid, however the ratio must stay the same.

3. Each week record the growth of each plant in a journal.


Discussion: 

If the experiment were to be done again, a pH 9 buffer would be used in place of the soap. Soap would not be used as it is thought to have a chemical in it responsible for directly killing the plants. Another good amendment to the experiment would be to make sure there are extra seeds in case a replanting must occur.

Conclusion:

It was found that the hypothesis was correct; the Zahara Starlight Rose Zinnia's prefer neutral to acidic pH levels in the soil as opposed to basic levels. It was also found that the soap we used to create the basic pH had a chemical in it that killed both the Zinnias as wells as the kohlrabi. The kohlrabi did not die due to the pH 9 buffer, so it would be ideal to test that on the Zinnias as well.



Sunday, 26 May 2013

Our Zinnias Part Two

We observed significant changes after we started the acidic and basic treatments to our zinnias. In about a day we had noticed that the basic group was looking unhealthy and not very strong at all.
The Zinnias immediately after treatment

















The acidic group a few days after treatment
It was surprising how fast the effect of the basic treatment was on the plant. Here it is just a few days after the first treatment.
The basic group few days after first treatment
The neutral group
These were the results we had expected, just not as quick as they had happened. The neutral and acidic groups seem to be healthy and have grown significantly. 
After a week the results were much more noticeable, especially the basic group.
The basic group over a week after treatment

The acidic group over a week after treatment 





The neutral group over a week after the treatments
It is quite obvious that the basic treatment killed the plants. The acidic treatment hasn't harmed the plants substantially, however, they do look more yellow and not as strong as the control group. We have planted kohlrabi seeds to retest the basic treatment on them.  

Friday, 24 May 2013

Stephen Jay Gould

Name: Stephen Jay Gould

Birth: September 10, 1941 in Bayside, New York, United States

Death: May 20, 2002 in Manhatten, New York, United States for the cancer

Nationalism: American

Field: Paleontology, Evolutionaty Biology, History of science

Marriage: Twice - Deborah Lee on October 3, 1965
                            - Rhonda Roland Shearer in 1995

Kin - 2 children from first wife(Jesse and Ethan)
      - 2 children from second wife (Jade and Lodon Allen)

Institutions: Harvard University, New York University, American Museum of Natural History

Contribution: Gould's contribution to the science is revising the theory of evolution to the today's version. He developed the theory of punctuated equilibrium in which evolutionary change occurs relatively rapidly, alternating with longer periods of relative evolutionary stability, and the concept of pluralism.

Book: The Mismeasure of Man(1981), Wonderful Life(1989), Full House(1996), and etc

Sunday, 12 May 2013

Anatomy of Zinnia

Anatomy of Zinnia flower






















Pollen of a Zinnia





Petals of Zinnia flower



Composites of Zinnia


Anatomy of stem



General Flower ( has both genders in a flower )

File:Mature flower diagram.svg
The mature flower has both stamen and ovary. Stamen is the male organ used to produce pollen. The ovary is the female organ were the fertilization happens.
Stamens consist of two parts: a stalk called a filament, topped by an anther where pollen is produced by meiosis and eventually dispersed.
Ovules give rise to egg cells.
The sticky tip of the pistil, the stigma, is the receptor of pollen. The supportive stalk, the style, becomes the pathway for pollen tubes to grow from pollen grains adhering to the stigma.


Exception ( has only one gender flower )
The staminate is the male flower while the pistillate is the female  flower. An example of an only sex flower is the Catkins of the willow tree. Only one gender flower can not do the self-fertilization. It has to do cross-fertilization with other factors' helps such as bee, butterfly, wind, and birds.
   File:Young-catkin.jpg Male Catkin

Female Catkin



Friday, 10 May 2013

Day 21

Today we started the treatment on our plants. We watered each sprouted plant with 10mL of water, we watered the acid group with a solution of half lemon juice to half water. The basic group was watered with a solution of 20% soap and 80% water. The neutral was watered with plain tap water. We measured our plants to compare the heights now and at the end. The measurements before the experiment were as follows:
Acid- 2.0cm (shortest) & 5.0cm (tallest)
Basic- 3.0cm (shortest) & 6.0cm (tallest)
Neutral- 1.0cm (shortest) & 5.5cm (tallest)

The average height was 3.75cm.

In a week we will measure our plants again to see if anything has changed since the treatment began.

Sunday, 5 May 2013

Our Zinnias

We planted our seeds and let them germinate under no special lights.

After a few days we moved them under special grow lamps to help them grow faster.


Finally, after we realized we had been over watering our flowers, we moved them under the highest powered grow lamp. They began to get stronger and grow taller.




Thursday, 2 May 2013

Growing Zinnia

Germination
 - Time:  takes approximately five to seven days
- Temperature: 68 to 72°F (20 to 22°C)

 - Light: not required
 - Humidity: until cotyledons come out from the seeds, maintain 95%-97% humidity

Growth
 - Time: takes 61days from sowing to flowering
 - Transplant: when there are at least two sets of true leaves
 - Space: space 6-12 inches apart
 - Light: full sun
 - Soil: PH 5.5 - 7.0, fertile 
 - Temperature: 60-65° days/55-60° nights
 - Water: normal
 - Blossom season: spring to summer

Common Problems
 - Insects:Monitor for Aphids early in production, and
Thrips during flowering
 - Disease: Avoid high humidity or condensation because these conditions are favorable for Botrytis and Powdery Mildew diseases.







Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Background Information

Conditions:
Grows as an annual, a plant that matures and completes its life cycle over the course of a single year. The plant enjoys full sun and moderate watering. The pH level of the soil should be 5.5 to 7.0.

Origin:
The Zahara Starlight Rose is believed to have originated from Mexico. The flower is named after German botanist Johann Zinn who was known greatly in the botanical sciences.


Taxonomy:

Kingdom: Plantae

Phylum: Angiosperms (flowering plants)

Class: Eudicots (grooved structure of pollen)

Order: Asterales (dicotyledonous flowering plants)

Family: Asterales

Genus: Zinnia

Species: Marylandica

Subspecies: Asteroideae






Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Day Five

April 23rd, Tuesday

Today we watered our plants with neutral water for all of them until they grow a bit more. It was found that 8 out of the 26 plants planted have sprouted. We are planning on starting the treatments on Friday when more plants have hopefully sprouted.




Friday, 19 April 2013

Day One

April 19th Friday
Today we planted our seeds, the Zinnia marylandica. We planted the 26 seeds in three separate groups, acidic, basic and neutral. We did not start the treatment today, we are going to wait until they have germinated. There should be germination within five to ten days.