Vascular plants collected or observed during the botanical expedition to West Greenland 1946.
The 1,500 plants collect industrial waste water from about 30,000 big industries.
However, plants do collect tin in their roots.
All these nurseries sell seed-grown plants, not plants collected in the wild, so customers can be sure that they are not inadvertently endangering American flora.
The plant clogs the habitat and collects detritus, which eliminates the pupfish's breeding substrates.
This would mean that plants collect odors as well as emit them.
Such roots enable the plants to collect more of the available moisture from their dry environment.
These plants collect solar energy in parabolic trough concentrators with linear collector tubes.
When a plant collects energy from the sun through its leaves, it is called photosynthesis.
The plant has blue flowers (as suggested by the specific epithet "hyacinthina"), collected into an umbel.