what hard work can do
Wait what .
Lmfao this has just made my day.
Lmao

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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Show & Tell
noise dept.
One Nice Bug Per Day
we're not kids anymore.
macklin celebrini has autism

titsay

Discoholic 🪩
Cosmic Funnies
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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Claire Keane
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RMH

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@uhhhhcrackers-blog
what hard work can do
Wait what .
Lmfao this has just made my day.
Lmao
lesbiansandthelivingdead:
This film answered the age old question “How do you make Beyonce more sassy?” Answer: Put Nathan Lane to be her sass twin.
My lovely followers, please follow this blog immediately!
BILBO
STOP
PLZ LET US IN
BILBO
how i feel when ppl ask me to do something outside of my bed.
I AM SOBBING EVERYWHEREO H MYG DO
Breathtaking view of the Milky Way from the surface of Mars
the universe is amazing
it really is
You’re welcome !
How I feel when people touch my stuff.
Watching someone eat something you can't have
every fucking day,
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Hoop dance to thrift shop
I’m rewatching season 1 of Eureka.
Annnnnd I'm hooked on Eureka
Carter: “Is there another voice for S.A.R.A.H?” Fargo: “Well, it’s just a temp voice until I get a call back from Sarah Michelle Gellar’s people. Rawrrr…” Carter: “I….I don’t even know how to respond to that. “
*Hangs up the phone*
Thriving since 1960, my garden in a bottle: Seedling sealed in its own ecosystem and watered just once in 53 years.
“To look at this flourishing mass of plant life you’d think David Latimer was a green-fingered genius. Truth be told, however, his bottle garden – now almost in its 53rd year – hasn’t taken up much of his time. In fact, on the last occasion he watered it Ted Heath was Prime Minister and Richard Nixon was in the White House.
For the last 40 years it has been completely sealed from the outside world. But the indoor variety of spiderworts (or Tradescantia, to give the plant species its scientific Latin name) within has thrived, filling its globular bottle home with healthy foliage.
Yesterday Mr Latimer, 80, said: ‘It’s 6ft from a window so gets a bit of sunlight. It grows towards the light so it gets turned round every so often so it grows evenly. ‘Otherwise, it’s the definition of low-maintenance. I’ve never pruned it, it just seems to have grown to the limits of the bottle.’
The bottle garden has created its own miniature ecosystem. Despite being cut off from the outside world, because it is still absorbing light it can photosynthesize the process by which plants convert sunlight into the energy they need to grow.”
So how does it work exactly?
“Bottle gardens work because their sealed space creates an entirely self-sufficient ecosystem in which plants can survive by using photosynthesis to recycle nutrients.
The only external input needed to keep the plant going is light, since this provides it with the energy it needs to create its own food and continue to grow.
Light shining on the leaves of the plant is absorbed by proteins containing chlorophylls (a green pigment).
Some of that light energy is stored in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a molecule that stores energy. The rest is used to remove electrons from the water being absorbed from the soil through the plant’s roots.
These electrons then become ‘free’ - and are used in chemical reactions that convert carbon dioxide into carbohydrates, releasing oxygen.
This photosynthesis process is the opposite of the cellular respiration that occurs in other organisms, including humans, where carbohydrates containing energy react with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide, water, and release chemical energy.
But the eco-system also uses cellular respiration to break down decaying material shed by the plant. In this part of the process, bacteria inside the soil of the bottle garden absorbs the plant’s waste oxygen and releasing carbon dioxide which the growing plant can reuse.
And, of course, at night, when there is no sunlight to drive photosynthesis, the plant will also use cellular respiration to keep itself alive by breaking down the stored nutrients.
Because the bottle garden is a closed environment, that means its water cycle is also a self-contained process.
The water in the bottle gets taken up by plants’ roots, is released into the air during transpiration, condenses down into the potting mixture, where the cycle begins again.”
Read more…