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प्रश्न
Nowadays Abdul keeps thinking about all kinds of plants that he sees.
Abdul saw a plant growing out of a wall in school. He wondered-
- How deep must the roots of this plant be going?
- How do the roots get water?
- How big will this plant grow?
- What will happen to the wall?
- Can you give the name of the plant in the picture?
उत्तर
- The roots of this plant would be going up to at least 10 inches to 20 inches deep.
- The roots get water from the moisture present in the wall.
- This plant can grow big enough.
- If this plant is not removed then it will cause cracks and finally break the wall.
- This is a peepal plant.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
After three days, Abdul saw that one broken part of the pea plant had dried. Guess which part would have dried up? Why?
Why do you think the neem tree did not fall despite the strong wind?
On putting water in the soil where the plants are growing, the dropping leaves become fresh again. How?
Which of the plants around you need regular watering?
- What will happen, if nobody gives water to these plants?
Abdul realised that he never watered the huge neem tree. “Where did it get its water from?” he thought.
Which of the plants around you do not need watering. Where do they get water from? Make two guesses.
Abdul wondered whether radish was a root. Why did he think so?
Which are the oldest trees in your area?
- Find out from your elders how old the trees are?
- Name animals who live on this tree.
- Have you ever seen any big tree that had fallen down? What did you think when you saw it?
Get together with 3-4 of your friends – From the list of things given, decide who will bring which thing.
A transparent glass tumbler or bottle with a wide mouth, rubber band or thread, some seeds of moong, wheat, bajra, mustard, channa (chickpeas) or rajma (red beans) and a wad of cotton wool.
Each group will work with only one kind of seed. Soak a few seeds (5-6) overnight in a bowl full of water. Take the wad of cotton wool and wet it. Put it on the mouth of the tumbler. Tie it tight to the mouth with a rubber band or thread. Remove soaked seeds from the water and place them on the cotton wool. You will have to take care that the cotton wool does not dry. Observe the changes that take place for the next 10 to 12 days. Did you observe the seedlings come out of the seeds? Draw the picture of the seedling as it looks on the fourth and the eighth day.
Write in your notebook
- What difference did you observe in the seeds after soaking? Compare with dry seeds and write.
- What do you think would happen if the cotton wool had been left dry?
- In which direction did the roots grow? And the stem?
- How big did the plant grow in the cotton wool?
- Did small plants come out from all the seeds?
- What is the colour of the roots?
- Did you see any hair on the roots?
- Try and pull out one little plant from the cotton wool. Were you able to pull it out? Why?
- Did you see how the roots grip the cotton wool? Do you think that the roots hold the soil in the same way?
- Also, look at the plants grown by your friends.
Arif and Roopali did the below activity. They saw the seedlings grow. When asked – what are the things that grow? They had very different ideas about things that grow.
Arif made a list of the following – Leaves, munna, bud, puppy, nails, fish.
Roopali’s list had – Moon, tree, I, hair, watermelon, mosquito, crow.
- What do you think? Which of these things listed by Arif and Roopali grow?
- Why don’t you make your own list of things that grow? Your list can include the names of things that are in Arif’s and Roopali’s list.