Sunflowers – Planting to Harvest
Have you ever eaten a sunflower seed? They are a tasty snack. Each seed is very small, hardly bigger than I, Araña Pequeña! Read with me, and I will give you a closer look.
Planting
The seed is about half an inch long. It has a hard, striped
covering. The covering protects the soft inside (the part that is tasty to eat).
What the covering protects, and what you like to eat, is the food that the sunflower
needs to begin to grow into a plant. Let’s plant the seed and watch it change and grow!
In the spring, when the ground is warm, and the soil is soft, you can plant your seed.
The seed needs to be buried in the soil where it can be warmed by the sun,
watered by the rain, and fed by nutrients and oxygen trapped in the
soil.
Now underground, the hard covering of your seed splits open, and a little, white root
appears! The root is the first part of the sunflower to grow. It will
grow downward because of the force of gravity. The roots will hold the sunflower
in the ground. This is a big job because your sunflower may grow to be over seven
feet tall! The roots will also help feed the plant so that it can grow to be so
tall.
Growing
I see it! Your sunflower has begun to grow! There is a
small green shoot pushing up out of the soil. This is the beginning of the
plant’s stem, and it grows up into the air (instead of down into the ground like
the root) because it needs the sun’s light in order to do its job.
Leaves start to form in pairs on the stem as it grows taller. The leaves
and the roots of your sunflower both feed it so it can become big and strong and then
flower. The roots collect water and nutrients from the soil. The leaves catch
energy from the sun. The energy helps the plant create food in a process called
photosynthesis. This is a big word! It is bigger than I,
Araña Pequeña!
Because the leaves cannot produce food without energy from the sun, your sunflower
leans towards the sunlight all day. As the sun moves from east to west across
the sky, the plant will lean directly toward it.
Now that the leaves are helping the roots feed your plant, it grows very fast.
In two months, your sunflower may grow to be seven feet tall! How much do you
grow in two months? In a year?
Flowering
Look! There is a bud forming at the top of the stem,
above the highest pair of leaves. The bud is the protected, growing flower. There are strong, green, pointed petals covering it as it becomes bigger.
When the bud begins to form, your sunflower won’t grow much taller. The bud is
eating up the food that was used before to make leaves and a strong, tall stem.
One morning, your sunflower bud begins to open. The strong, green petals open
slowly. Watch the big yellow petals appear! These have been growing
inside the bud. Inside the circle of bright yellow petals is a dark disk.
This disk is made up of hundreds of tiny buds. These buds are smaller than I,
Araña Pequeña! They won’t grow very big, but they give your sunflower a special
name. Your sunflower is a composite flower – or a number of flowers that
together form what looks like only one, large flower. Let’s take a closer look
at this composite flower!
Each tiny bud in the disk has its own reproductive parts. The female part is
called the pistil. The pistil is made up of a stigma, a style
and an ovary. The male part is called the stamen. The stamen
is made up of a filament and an anther.
Do you know how a sunflower reproduces? The process is called pollination.
And sunflowers need insects to help them. Watch the bee that has landed on your
sunflower! The bee is attracted by the bright yellow petals. When the
bee lands on the sunflower, pollen from the stamen (the male part) of the flower
gets stuck to the legs of the bee. When the bee flies away and lands on a different
sunflower some of the pollen rubs off onto the pistil (the female part) of that flower.
This is how plants are pollinated.
Once one of the little flowers in the disk is pollinated, it can grow a seed.
Harvesting
More and more seeds start to grow in the sunflower disk.
The food from the roots and from photosynthesis is now going into the
growing seeds. Your sunflower may have more than 2000 seeds!
By fall, all the seeds have grown to their full size, about half an inch long.
Now farmers will harvest the seeds. Some of the seeds will be eaten by
people like you and me. The ones that are not harvest might be eaten by small
animals like squirrels and chipmunks. Do you know what else sunflower seeds are
used for?
Sunflower seeds can be pressed to make oil. The oil is used for cooking or
in paint or soap. They are also used as birdseed, and to feed farm
animals. And some of the seeds are saved to be planted. Without these
seeds, we wouldn’t get any new sunflower plants next spring!
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