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Allelopathy in Plants: Is it Really There?

Allelopathy in Plants: Is it Really There?. Rachel French 9 th Grade Academy of Notre Dame de Namur. Problem. Are allelopathic effects present when various seeds are watered with alfalfa extract. Research. Allelopathy is the competition of limited resources by plants

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Allelopathy in Plants: Is it Really There?

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  1. Allelopathy in Plants: Is it Really There? Rachel French 9th Grade Academy of Notre Dame de Namur

  2. Problem • Are allelopathic effects present when various seeds are watered with alfalfa extract

  3. Research • Allelopathy is the competition of limited resources by plants • Reason for why some plants cannot live together • May not be present but rather other factors effect growth

  4. Hypothesis • If radish, seed rye, and rye grass seeds are separately watered with alfalfa extract, then there will be a negative effect on the germination of the seeds.

  5. Materials • 45mL alfalfa extract • Alfalfa sprouts • 45 mL water • 1 layer of cheesecloth • 45 mL distilled water • 1 roll of paper towels • 60 radish seeds • 60 seed rye seeds • 60 rye grass seeds • 18 petri dishes • 2 5-mL syringes

  6. Procedure • The alfalfa extract was made by straining a mixture alfalfa shoots and water • Each of the 18 petri dishes were labeled and lined with paper towels • 5 mL of either distilled water or alfalfa extract was added to each dish • The seeds were added to their respective petri dishes • The seeds were observed, observations were recorded, and statistics were calculated

  7. Procedure • Tested six times, either with alfalfa extract or distilled water • Independent variable = type of seed • Dependent variable = number of seeds germinated • Control variable = seeds tested with distilled water

  8. Data

  9. Data

  10. Data

  11. Data

  12. Conclusion • Hypothesis supported • More seeds germinated when watered with distilled water • Use a wider range of treatments • Measure germination at multiple points during experiment

  13. Thanks • Thank you for listening to my presentation • I ask you to further your knowledge of my experiment with any questions

  14. References • Allaby, M. (2004). A Dictionary of Ecology. In Allelopathy. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from Encyclopedia.com website: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O14-allelopathy.html • Allelopathy. (2006, June). Allelopathy Journal. Retrieved November, 2009, from Allelopathy website: http://allelopathy-journal.com/allelopathy.aspx • Dailey, R. (2008, January 19). Allelopathy. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from Suite101 website: http://www.suite101.com/blog/bobcajun/allelopathy • Ferguson, J. J. (2009). What is Allelopathy? In Allelopathy: How Plants Supress Other Plants. Retrieved November 6, 2009, from Universtiy of Florida website: http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/HS186 • A Study of Allelopathy in Plants. (2000). In Encouraging Student Biological Research (pp. 21-51). Jefferson City, MO: National Association of Biology . • Willis, R. J. (2007). Chapter 1. In The History of Allelopathy (pp. 1-14). Retrieved from http://books.google.com/books?id=C-nPBYjDAjYC&pg=PA3&dq=allelopathy+plants#v=onepage&q=allelopathy%20plants&f=false

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