My hypothesis is that optimal growth requires enough watering but not too much watering. If the growing plant does not get enough water, it will suffer from dehydration, but if it gets too much, it becomes vulnerable to attack by fungus. For hydroponic gardening, it is sometimes possible to grow a plant in water, with an added anti-fungal agent.
Too little water will stunt a plant's growth. Too much will simply kill it. In the proper range of watering the height of a plant is determined by other factors.
the plant on which it grows has little or no chloroplast.
A hypothesis is not a question. If you are in Jr. High or something near that, you can use the structure: If......, then.... to state your hypothesis. For example: If I place one plant in a closet and one plant in the sunlight, then the plant in the sunlight will grow faster.
plant grows well using stem cutting are rose
13 times
the more you water a plant the healthier it will be and if you don't water a plant very often it will be unhealthy, wither and die.
Too little water will stunt a plant's growth. Too much will simply kill it. In the proper range of watering the height of a plant is determined by other factors.
So a good hypothesis needs to be about the problem (obviously). You state a good hypothesis in this form: "If... then..." for example if There was a project on watering plants, a good hypothesis would be, " if i give every plant an equal amount of water, then the fern will grow the fastest." :)
it grows Edited answer: If the plant has reached the stage of permanent wilting it will not respond, in case of temporary wilting the plant will recover on watering.
it grows faster
Watering a plant with sugar water will usually harm it because it makes soil water less available to the plant. In technical terms, it lowers the water potential of the soil water by lowering the osmotic potential.
You write an if-then statement to represent what you think will happen at the end of your experiment. For example, let's say someone did an experiment on if chemicals effect plant growth. The hypothesis would be, "If chemicals contain unnatural substances that are un-earth friendly, then they will effect plant growth."
yes because the plant needs oxygen water and a bit of sun
answer: yes, a plant that grows in sand grows stronger than a plant that grows in cotton or soil. =)
the 3 kinds of hypothesis are: 1. alternative: this is the hypothesis that is affirmative, positive, and approving..... this gives a positive possible result of the experiment. 2. null: this is a negative hypothesis about the experiment........ 3. cause and effect: this kind of hypothesis gives a cause and effect hypothesis.... this has the "if & then" clause...... (example: "if sunlight affects the growth of plants, then it might slow down or fasten the plant's growth.")
by watering it
Iron helps fight the bacteria that grows in algae. It dosn't effect the plants.