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Flower, complete pistillate

Splendour. This aims at the beauty of colours and their changes. The multi petalled flower with pistil which was completed by G.Aoki belongs to this type. Generally, to obtain the same visibility effect the high class brilliancy is avoided, and to obtain the relief effect the petals are of cold colour, weaic stream(s,r) or flash(j ) and the pistils are of a v/arm colour. [Pg.19]

The calyx usually remains after the corolla and stamens have fallen, sometimes even until the fruit matures— in either case it is said to be persistent. If it falls with the corolla and stamens, it is deciduous, and if when the flower opens, caducous, as in the Poppy and May-apple. It often more or less envelops the ovary or base of the pistil, and it is important, in plant analysis, to note the presence or absence of such a condition, which is indicated in a description by the terms inferior, or non-adherent (hypogynous), when free from the ovary and inserted upon the receptacle beneath it (the most simple and primitive position) half-superior, or half-adherent (peri-gynous), when it partially envelops the ovary, as in the Cherry superior or adherent (epigynous), when it completely envelops it, as in the Colocynth, etc. [Pg.184]

FLOWER. An axis bearing one or more pistils or one or more stamens or both when only the former, it is a pistillate flower, when only the latter, a staminate flower-, when both are present, it is a perfect flower (i.e., bisexual or hemaphroditic). When this perfect flower is surrounded by a perianth representing two floral envelopes (the inner envelope the corolla, the outer the calyx), it is a complete flower... [Pg.702]


See other pages where Flower, complete pistillate is mentioned: [Pg.82]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.7]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.182 ]




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