| DENUDED | Of a landscape, stripped of vegetation or other life (7) |
| GERMINATION | The beginning of vegetation or growth in a seed or plant (11) |
| ORGANISMAL | Relating to an animal, plant or other life form |
| SCENERY | Natural features of a landscape (7) |
| DIORAMA | 3-dimensional scale model of a landscape (7) |
| LEYLINE | Supposed connection between features of a landscape having scientific or magical significance in prehistoric times (3,4) |
| PAYSAGE | From French for "countryside", a word for a landscape; or, a depiction of said natural scenery in a work of art (7) |
| DESERTS | Regions that are devoid or almost devoid of vegetation, especially because of low rainfall (7) |
| LOCUSTS | Tropical insects which travel in a vast swarm, stripping large areas of vegetation (7) |
| TUSSOCK | Dense tuft of vegetation, especially grass, forming a small hillock (7) |
| RECOVER | Get back again to the protection of vegetation (7) |
| ROOTLET | Search abandoned missing second key bit of vegetation |
| SEEDPOD | Spot whales perhaps eating delta's bit of vegetation |
| FIGLEAF | Scant cover of vegetation in Bible (3,4) |
| PALETTE | Tool for a landscape artist or makeup artist |
| PANORAMA | Robert Barker's neologism for a painting of a landscape, hence a word for a wide or unbroken view (8) |
| PROSPECT | A view of a landscape; a mental picture; or, an anticipated event (8) |
| REAGI | From the French for "to laugh", a word used to mean cheerful, chuckling, merry or smiling; or, of a landscape, delightful to the view (5) |
| RIANT | From the French for "to laugh", a word used to mean cheerful, chuckling, merry or smiling; or, of a landscape, delightful to the view (5) |
| VIEW | A scene or prospect, as of a landscape (4) |