A) Japan B) France C) The Netherlands D) Italy
A) Central Asia B) Australia C) South America D) Africa
A) Yellow B) White C) Purple D) Red
A) Double tulip B) Viridiflora tulip C) Parrot tulip D) Fringed tulip
A) Clay soil B) Well-drained soil C) Sandy soil D) Boggy soil
A) Fusarium wilt B) Tulip breaking virus C) Botrytis blight D) Powdery mildew
A) Bulbgarden B) FloraWorld C) Tulipmania D) Keukenhof
A) Asteraceae B) Rosaceae C) Fabaceae D) Liliaceae
A) Leonardo da Vinci B) Claude Monet C) Vincent van Gogh D) Pablo Picasso
A) Persian B) Arabic C) Greek D) Latin
A) 15th century B) 12th century C) 17th century D) 10th century
A) Single-colored blooms B) Fragrance C) Variegated patterns D) Smaller flowers
A) 17th century B) 18th century C) 16th century D) 19th century
A) Round B) Strap-shaped C) Oval D) Heart-shaped
A) Six B) Eight C) Four D) Two
A) Only red and white B) Red, orange, pink, yellow, or white C) Brown, grey, silver D) Blue, green, purple, black
A) Leaf growth B) Germination C) Root development D) Flowering
A) Rembrandts B) Dutch Masters C) Ottoman Beauties D) Golden Age
A) 100 B) 50 C) 75 D) 150
A) 5 cm to 10 cm in diameter B) 10 cm to 15 cm in diameter C) 1 cm to 5 cm in diameter D) 0.5 cm to 2 cm in diameter
A) Two to six B) One to three C) More than twelve D) Seven to ten
A) Tropical rainforests B) Steppes and mountainous areas with temperate climates C) Deserts and arid regions D) Swamps and marshes
A) 19th century B) 12th century C) 17th century D) 15th century
A) 5 to 15 cm B) 30 to 40 cm C) 20 to 30 cm D) 10 to 25 cm
A) Bluish-green B) Yellow-green C) Red-green D) Purple-green
A) Conical B) Truncated basally and elongated towards the apex C) Cylindrical D) Spherical
A) Alternate B) Rosette C) Whorled D) Opposite
A) Tunic B) Skin C) Shell D) Casing
A) Axillary B) Cauline C) Radical D) Terminal
A) 16th century B) 17th century C) 18th century D) 14th century
A) Cereal crops B) Wildflowers C) Medicinal plants D) Ornamental garden plants
A) Root vegetables B) Leafy greens C) Cut flowers D) Fruit-bearing plants
A) Native species B) Wild species C) Hybrid and cultivars D) Endangered species
A) Zygomorphic (bilaterally symmetric) B) Bilateral symmetry C) Asymmetric D) Actinomorphic (radially symmetric)
A) Calyx B) Corolla C) Perigonium D) Bract
A) Purple B) Yellow C) Red D) Pure blue
A) Queen of the Night B) Black Tulip C) Semper Augustus D) Wienerwald
A) 2000 B) 1975 C) 1986 D) 1990
A) Bracts B) Sepals C) Tepals D) Petals
A) Inferior B) Subglobose C) Superior D) Half-inferior
A) Three B) One C) Two D) Four
A) Bell-shaped B) Small, delicate cleft at the top C) Star-shaped D) Uninterrupted ovals
A) Three distinct lobes B) Two lobes C) Four lobes D) Single lobe
A) Filaments are equal in length to the tepals B) Filaments are longer than the tepals C) Filaments are absent D) Filaments are shorter than the tepals
A) Flat, disc-shaped seeds B) Spiky, irregular seeds C) Round, smooth seeds D) Long, narrow seeds
A) T. gesneriana B) T. kaufmanniana C) T. hungarica D) T. clusiana
A) Angelique B) Creme Upstar C) Brown Sugar D) Monte Carlo
A) Joseph Dalton Hooker B) Charles Darwin C) Gregor Mendel D) Carl Linnaeus
A) Orithyia B) Eriostemones C) Clusianae D) Tulipa
A) Arabic B) Ottoman Turkish C) Latin D) Greek
A) Flower B) Gauze C) Turban D) Muslin
A) Longevity B) Resurrection C) Strength D) Beauty
A) Defence B) Attack C) Protection D) Shield
A) 30° north B) 50° north C) 40° north D) 60° north
A) Bulgaria B) Romania C) France D) Greece
A) Lebanon B) Iran C) Syria D) Turkey
A) Tropical rainforest B) Steppes C) Meadows D) Chaparral
A) Neo-tulipae B) Cultivated tulipae C) Domestic tulipae D) Wild tulipae
A) Greece B) Uzbekistan C) Spain D) Italy
A) Pamir-Alai mountains B) Southern Siberia C) Tien-Shan mountains D) Inner Mongolia
A) Rome B) Madrid C) Paris D) Tashkent
A) China B) Armenia C) Turkey D) Russia
A) Swamps B) Roadsides C) Deserts D) Tropical forests
A) Alps B) Rockies C) Andes D) Himalayas
A) Lebanon B) Spain C) Italy D) France
A) Bulgaria B) Portugal C) Greece D) Romania
A) Argentina B) Turkmenistan C) Chile D) Brazil
A) Morocco B) Egypt C) Libya D) Azerbaijan
A) New Zealand B) Australia C) Cyprus D) Japan
A) Jordan B) Thailand C) India D) Vietnam
A) Nigeria B) Israel C) South Africa D) Kenya
A) Trichoderma viride B) Tulip breaking virus C) Botrytis tulipae D) Sclerotium rolfsii
A) Botrytis tulipae B) Sclerotium rolfsii C) Green peach aphid D) Trichoderma viride
A) Green peach aphid B) Trichoderma viride C) Bulb nematodes D) Sclerotium rolfsii
A) Bulb dormancy B) Frosting C) Germination D) Vernalisation
A) Breeding B) Sprinkling paint powders C) Using Trichoderma viride D) Infection with the tulip breaking virus
A) Reduced growth B) Immediate flowering C) No change in growth D) Greater growth
A) Causes rotting B) Prevents flower development C) Induces flower development D) Induces bulb dormancy
A) Induces rotting B) Causes immediate flowering C) Prevents elongation D) Dependent on an extended period of low temperature
A) 10 species B) 20 species C) 14 species D) 7 species
A) Babur B) Sultan Selim II C) Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq D) Sultan Ahmet III
A) Qasim from Herat B) Omar Kayam C) Jalāl ad-Dīn Rûmi D) Sultan Selim II
A) 1594 B) 1573 C) 1593 D) 1592
A) Amsterdam B) Vienna C) Leiden D) Antwerp
A) Pietro Andrea Mattioli B) Oghier Ghislain de Busbecq C) Carolus Clusius D) Conrad Gessner
A) Oghier Ghislain de Busbecq B) Polly Nicholson C) Carolus Clusius D) Conrad Gessner
A) Richard Sullivan Fay, Esq. B) Seymour Cobley C) The Dutch royal family D) The Royal Horticultural Society
A) 1000 acres B) 100 acres C) 500 acres D) 250 acres
A) Seymour Cobley B) The Dutch royal family C) The Canadian government D) Richard Sullivan Fay
A) 10,000 bulbs B) 83,000 bulbs C) 100,000 bulbs D) 20,500 bulbs
A) That a display be created for the hospital B) That they be used for research C) That they be sold to raise funds D) That they be planted in Ottawa
A) They are genetically modified B) They are hybridized with modern varieties C) They traditionally go extinct D) They are preserved in seed banks
A) Fifteen B) Twelve C) Ten D) Twenty
A) Double early B) Darwin hybrid C) Triumph D) Single early
A) Viridiflora B) Lily-flowered C) Single late D) Fringed (Crispa)
A) Greigii B) Kaufmanniana C) Darwin hybrid D) Fosteriana
A) Double late B) Viridiflora C) Multiflowering D) Single early
A) Darwin hybrid B) Fosteriana C) Greigii D) Kaufmanniana
A) Darwin hybrid B) Double late C) Single early D) Viridiflora
A) Single late B) Lily-flowered C) Double early D) Darwin hybrid |