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Flower bisexual

Malamundi Leaves ovate with round base, spikes medium long, peduncle small, flowers bisexual and female almost in equal proportion, fruits medium, good setting. [Pg.23]

Flowers Bisexual or unisexual Small Regular or irregular Three to five petals Ovary superior, usually syncarpous... [Pg.30]

Eder is a member of the Caprifoliaceae (Honeysuckle) family. Also included in that family are honeysuckles, snowberries, twinflowers, viburnums, and weigelas. There is some discussion about giving elder its own family name, so in the future it may well be called the Sambucaceae family. Elder are mainly small trees or shrubs, yet some are climbing lianas. They all have bisexual flowers. Native to Europe, Western Asia and Northern Africa, elder is widely distributed in temperate and subtropic regions. [Pg.71]

Flowers Regular or slightly irregular with tabular calyx Corola rotate Hermaphrodite Bisexual... [Pg.26]

Flowers Regular Olitary or in cymes, racemes or panicles Bisexual... [Pg.46]

Flowers Regular with 4—5 free sepals and petals Bisexual... [Pg.54]

Thulamundi Leaves ovate, base round, spikes medium in length, flowers (male, female and bisexual-mixed), alternate bearer, poor yield, quality medium. [Pg.24]

The flowers of most species in this family are small, yellow, and aromatic. Some species have bisexual flowers containing both male and female organs. Some species have unisexual flowers, with each flower having either male organs or female organs. Some species are polygamous, in that individuals have some flowers which are bisexual, and others that are unisexual. [Pg.75]

Bisexual—Flowers that have functional male and female organs. [Pg.76]

Polygamous—Plants that have some unisexual and some bisexual flowers. [Pg.76]

The flowers of mints are bilaterally symmetric. Because they are mostly pollinated by insects, mints have relatively brightly colored, nectar-rich flowers usually grouped into a larger inflorescence The lower, flised petals of the flower provide a platform for pollinators to land on called a lip (or in Latin, labia, from which the family name Labiatae is derived). Most species in the mint family have bisexual flowers, containing both male (staminate) and female (pistilate) organs. The fruits are small, one-seeded nutlets. [Pg.374]

Perfect—In the botanical sense, this refers to flowers that are bisexual, containing both male and female reproductive parts. [Pg.668]

Palm flowers are occasionally bisexual, but usually they are unisexual. When unisexual, the flowers of each sex may be on the same plant or, as in humans, only one sex is found per individual. The flowers are small and are generally borne on large, many-branched stems (inflorescences) that are located within the crown or Jirst below it Flower parts are normally in threes. The pollination biology of palms is not well studied, nevertheless, both wind and insect pollinaticn ate ccnrmcn in the family. [Pg.742]

Androaonoeoiouoi male and bisexual flowers on the same indi-... [Pg.54]

Monoeclous-polygamoust male, female and bisexual flowers on... [Pg.54]

The effect of homoBR on flowering tissues was to produce bisexual and pistillate flowers on a staminate inflorescence. Also, sepals were deformed (24), and one would suspect some of these effects were due to induced ethylene biosynthesis, as the dosage of the brassinosteroid used was very high. Excess hormone levels are known to induce the biosynthesis of ethylene BR can also do this, and it interacts with auxin and cytokinin in the induction (43). BR can also affect endogenous auxin and abscisic acid levels in treated tissue (21,44,45). Thus BR does have multiple and modulatory effects. [Pg.161]

Flowers On a leafless stalk from the bulb or solitary flower (rarely) Corona Bisexual... [Pg.63]

Other distinguishing features Leaves cause strong bums and photosensitivity when touched. Leaves quickly senescing after which the stem is covered with leaf remnants. Flowers along the outer margin of the umbellets are bisexual flowers in the center are male. [Pg.201]

Description Herbaceous perennial, with a thick caudex. Stems 10-60 cm tall, densely leafy. Caudex leaves scale like stan leaves alternate, sessile, linear-lanceolate, 2-6 cm long, 3-15 mm wide, slightly serrate. Inflorescences cymose, dense, compact. Flowers unisexual or occasionally bisexual. Sepals linear or triangular, 1.5-3 mm long. Petals 3-A mm long, brownish-red, pink or yellow. Fruits paired elongate follicles with curved apical beaks. [Pg.211]

B and C genes in angiosperms that are gynodioecious (individual plants produce either exclusively female or exclusively bisexual flowers e.g. Barrett, 2002). In this context, gymnosperm-sourced copies of LEAFY are more effectively expressed when transgenically inserted into model angiosperms such as Amhidopsis than are copies of the gymnosperm-only clade. [Pg.15]


See other pages where Flower bisexual is mentioned: [Pg.21]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.652]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.740]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.391]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.11]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.14 , Pg.16 , Pg.32 , Pg.52 , Pg.59 , Pg.75 , Pg.89 , Pg.100 , Pg.157 ]




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