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"ovate" Definitions
  1. shaped like an egg
  2. having an outline like a longitudinal section of an egg with the basal end broader

1000 Sentences With "ovate"

How to use ovate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ovate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ovate". Mastering all the usages of "ovate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

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" That didn't save "Sea of Trees" from the carnage, but Mr. McConaughey's response at a news conference was characteristically sanguine: "Anyone has as much right to boo as they do to ovate.
Eight of the dried specimens that Edward gathered are on view here alongside the watercolors that comprise Orra's "Herbarium Parvum, Pictum" ("A Small Herbarium of Paintings"), whose pages contain spindly reeds of Kelly green, and ovate leaves scratched with delicate veining.
Lamina membr., glab., ovate to ovate-elliptic to lanceolate, acuminate, tapering to petiole; ± 60-(75) × 20- (35) mm.; margins ± waved.
It has ovate to bipinnately compound leaves with , serrate, ovate to shield-shaped leaflets on short petioles. Fruits are dark and globose.
Sepals are long with 5–7 veins and are ovate-lanceolate; petals are long and ovate. The fruit is an ovoid capsule up to in length.
The stem is square with very long internodes. Leaves are ovate to ovate-lanceolate with a toothed margin and grow up to 4 in (10 cm) long.
The shell of Ancillista ngampitchae sp. nov. is 2 ovate and bulbous and the last whorl is prominent. The aperture is also ovate and very wide with a thin lip.
Flowers are fused and lobed at the tip of the tube. Fruits are smooth ovate nutlets. Nutlets are in a group of four about 2 mm. Fruit shape is ovate.
The solitary inflorescences contain 18 to 22 flowers with a cream-white coloured perianth. After flowering woody fruits form that have an obliquely ovate to broadly ovate shape and are in length and wide with an obscure beak. The blackish brown seeds have an obliquely ovate or elliptic shape with a wing down one side.
The leaves are alternate, not toothed. 6 to 10 cm long, 2 to 5 cm wide. Blunt or bluntly pointed at the end of the leaf. Ovate to ovate elliptic in shape.
Bracts are small and ovate, pedicels are long. Sepals are small and ovate. The vexillum is rather large broadly ovate, vaulted and has three broad spreading lobes with a dense tuft of petaloid hairs above the conjunction of the lobes. It has a long filiform appendage which is entirely hidden in the spur and extends its whole length.
Colubrina greggii is a shrub 2–3 m in height or a small tree, reaching 5 m. Stems zigzag and are glabrate to loosely sericeous. Leaves are alternately arranged, simple, ovate to lanceolate-ovate or elliptic-ovate, and have finely toothed margins. The blades measure 6–18 cm in length and 3–8 cm in width.
Its central segments are obovate-cuneate, its lateral segments are oblique-ovate. Umbels are 4–10 cm across; bracts are either 2-3 or absent, ovate-lanceolate, 5-10 x circa 2mm, pubescent.
The leaves are simple ovate-lanceolate, long, , and are attached to short petioles. They are opposite, ovate to elliptic-lanceolate, and have entire or undulating margins with small hairs, which can irritate skin.
There are between fifteen and twenty stamens encircling six to twelve ovate carpels each about 4–5 mm long and topped by a stout style of about 2 mm. The fruiting heads are 12–18 mm across. There are usually two to five seeds per follicle, each 1.2-2.0 mm long, glossy red-brown to dark purple brown, ovate to broadly ovate, or elliptic ovate. Flowering occurs between September and December, and ripe fruits can be found from December until March.
The elongate, ovate seeds reach a length of about 0.6 millimeters.
Detail of the cilia along the margins of C. cotyledonis grey, pubescent leaves C. cotyledonis stem specimens This plant forms a low, sparse rosette. Its tiny, woody stem is short and against the ground. Its flattened, ovate (sickle/moon-shaped) leaves are usually a light grey-green colour, and can vary from narrowly-ovate (e.g. in the Karoo), to broadly ovate.
The original description of the genus is short and states that the shells are ovate with a one-whorled protoconch. The aperture is ovate and the columella has a feeble plait. The sculpture consists of spiral ribs only. The original description of the type species is also rather short and states that the shell is ovate with an obtuse apex and 4½ whorls.
While internal ones are linear-ovate and ~2mm long. Sepals 4, broadly ovate to oblong, obtuse, rigid, brown, margins on the upper and under surfaces slightly hairy and up to 4mm long. Four petals that are white ovate and about 8mm long. Many stamens but rarely less more than 20, filaments up to 4m long and surrounded by short tubular ciliate effigurations.
This barrel bubble snail has an ovate white shell with shouldered whorls. The body whorl has 10 -14 slightly irregular spiral grooves. The columella is twisted. The aperture is ovate and is rounded above and below.
The leaves are simple, ovate to broad–ovate, alternate, palmately veined. They are usually 3 cm to 6 cm long. leaves are soft and thin, with a hairy look-like structure in the midvein and lowest veins.
Moderately oblong. Subobsolete. Almost disappearing. Subovate. Nearly ovate. Subparallel. Almost parallel. Subperforated.
The tepals are brown to purple, ovate, and have an acute apex.
The fourth glume is as long as the third, ovate, obtuse, paleate.
Impatiens kinabaluensis reaches about in height. It has long, rigid stems. The leaves are about 3-4 inches long, dark green, entire, ovate to lanceolate-ovate, ribbed and shiny. The upper surface has a thick, water- repellent cuticula.
Salvia dolichantha is a herbaceous perennial native to Sichuan province in China, growing at elevation. It grows up to high, with purple flowers that are approximately long. The leaves are cordate-ovate to hastate-ovate, long and wide.
The length of the shell attains 4.5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The white, minute shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. It contains 8 whorls, of which two vitreous whorls in the protoconch. The oblique aperture is ovate.
The plant is an annual climbing shrub with long vines that can reach over in length. When the plant is young, it is almost completely covered with fuzzy hairs, but when older, it is almost completely free of hairs. The leaves are tripinnate, ovate, reverse ovate, rhombus-shaped or widely ovate. The sides of the leaves are often heavily grooved and the tips are pointy.
Flowers are arranged in a globose terminal head, subtended by rhombic-ovate bracts.
It is a small, broadly ovate species; with its body strongly flattened laterally.
The fruit surface is smooth but uneven. The ovate seeds are blackish brown.
Ophrys apifera grows to a height of . This hardy orchid develops small rosettes of leaves in autumn. They continue to grow slowly during winter. Basal leaves are ovate or oblong-lanceolate, upper leaves and bracts are ovate-lanceolate and sheathing.
The internodes are long, exceeding all leaves except some of the uppermost. The sessile, spreading, persistent leaves are long and wide. The leaves are papery and membranous. Lower leaves are ovate or elliptic and upper leaves are ovate or suborbicular.
Fertile lemma is chartaceous, ovate, is long and keelless. Sterile floret is barren, ovate, and is clumped. Both the lower and upper glumes are keelless, oblong, are long, and have obtuse apexes. Palea have eciliate keels and is 2-veined.
The shell has an ovate-conic or pyramidal shape. It is imperforate, smooth or spirally sculptured outside, brilliantly iridescent within. The colors are generally bright and variegated. The aperture is less than half the length of shell, longer than wide, ovate.
Fissurella afra has on ovate-oblong and convex shell. The bull-fish within it is painted with brownish-violet rays and is white within. For the rest it is ovate, conicale, and obtuse at its summit; its fissure is ovate and contracted in the middle. Fissurella afra is also very finely striated radiately, and marked in the same way with radiating bands of a violaceous-brown on a yellowish-white ground.
The leaf blades are ovate to broadly ovate or ovate-elliptic. They typically range in size from long and wide. At their tips, leaf blades are acute to acuminate (tapering to a sharp point), while at their base, they are either cordate to abruptly contracted and obtuse or long, slender and wedge shaped. The surface of the leaf blade is puckered with a blistery appearance or is wrinkly and rugged.
The sutures are impressed. The aperture is obliquely ovate. The siphonal canal is short.
The umbilicus is moderate, showing none of the whorls. The aperture is obliquely ovate.
The pitchers of N. sibuyanensis also differ in shape, being ovate or slightly infundibulate.
Bracteoles vary from 1.5–3 mm in length and are ovate to lanceolate in shape. They lack stipules and are ovate, acuminate, hairy and attached at the base of the calyx tube. Lobes acuminate to acute with ciliate margins, and ovaries visibly hairy.
The appearance of the winged bean varies abundantly. The shape of its leaves ranges from ovate to deltoid, ovate-lanceolate, lanceolate, and long lanceolate. The green tone of the leaves also varies. The stem, most commonly, is green, but sometimes boasts purple.
This is a deciduous tree with a straight, gray trunk that can measure up to 30 metres tall. Its leaves are ovate, ovate-cordate or lanceolate in shape, with conspicuous primary veins and serrated edges. The greenish flowers are unisexual and inconspicuous.
The height of the shell varies between 12 mm and 35 mm. The thick, solid shell has a pointed-ovate shape. The 5–6 whorls are moderately convex, sloping below the sutures. The oblique, ovate aperture is about half the length of shell.
Sagittaria guayanensis is a perennial herb with broadly hastate (arrow-shaped) leaves with ovate lobes.
The dark fuscous hindwings are ovate triangular, the termen slightly rounded and hardly perceptibly sinuate.
The first glume is small, oblong-ovate or oblong, 1-nerved with a scabrid keel.
Rhododendron sphaeroblastum (宽叶杜鹃) is a species of flowering plant in the Ericaceae family. It is native to southwestern Sichuan and northern Yunnan in China, where it grows at altitudes of 3300–4400 meters. It is a shrub that grows to 1–3 m in height, with leathery leaves that are ovate to oblong-ovate or ovate-elliptic, 7–15 by 4–6.5 cm in size. Flowers are white, pink, red, or yellow.
The inflorescence has a diffuse compound umbel eith a length of with spherical to ovate shaped reddish-brown spikelets with a length of and a width of that are round or acute toward the apex. It has ovate long spirally arranged glumes and yellow anthers.
Trees up to 20 m (~60 ft) tall, trunk with fissured bark. Imparipinnate leaves 20–55 cm long, with ovate-elliptic or ovate-oblong (sometimes oblong) leaflets. Inflorescences between 12 and 30 cm long, with small greenish to cream colored flowers that grow in bunches.
Elliptical, ovate to ovate-oblong in shape, 4 to 9 cm long, 1 to 5 cm wide. Wavy edged, stiff, thick. Margins toothed, without teeth or with scalloped margins. Leaves abruptly tapered at the base, with a leaf tip or rounded at the end.
Its inner margin is lined with small but distinct teeth. The pitcher mouth is round to ovate and has an oblique insertion. The lid or operculum is ovate and generally obtuse. It bears a number of filiform appendages (≤5 mm long) on its upper surface.
The solitary inflorescences contain 16 to 20 flowers with a cream-white perianth. After flowering obliquely ovate shaped beaked fruit that are in length and . The black to brown seeds within have a narrowly ovate or elliptic shape with a wing down one edge.
Teak is a large deciduous tree up to tall with grey to greyish-brown branches, known for its high quality wood. Its leaves are ovate-elliptic to ovate, long by wide, and are held on robust petioles which are long. Leaf margins are entire.Tectona grandis.
Commelina cyanea is a trailing herbaceous perennial plant, whose stems grow along the ground. It readily roots at the nodes when they come into contact with the soil. They die off in winter. The leaves are ovate to narrow-ovate, and measure long by wide.
The length of the ovate, dirty white, semitransparent shell attains 10.5 mm, its diameter 3½ mm. It contains 7½ whorls. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thickened close to the lowest rib and is hardly sinuate..The columella has a slight callus.
Host described the tree as having broad-ovate scabrid leaves, doubly toothed with broad, obtuse teeth.
Leaves very variable, oblong-ovate, cordate to rounded base, acute to obtuse apex, margins faintly scalloped.
The mottled brown to grey-brown seeds have a broadly ovate shape and a length of .
Sepals ovate-acute. Petals white, with a purple midrib, 5–7 mm, lanceolate, acuminate. Carpels stellate.
The white lip is accompanied by dark yellow lateral lobes with dark red stripes at the base. The dorsal sepal is elliptic to elliptic-ovate and obtuse-rounded. The lateral sepals are obliquely ovate, sub-acute and divergent. Petals are rhomboid, cuneate-clawed, obtuse and broadly rounded.
Mitragyna diversifolia is a deciduous under-story tree, that reaches up to 15 m in height. The branches are angled and cylindrical. The leaves are ovate-oblong to elliptic-ovate, averaging 146 × 93 mm in size, obtuse apex to shortly acuminate. The yellow corolla has white lobes.
Impatiens platypetala is variable species of perennial Impatiens discovered on the island of Java and widespread throughout Indonesia. It reaches high, with bright orange flowers that have a white eye in the center. The ovate to lanceolate-ovate leaves are long. It produces the anthocyanin aurantinidin.
The shell is ovate, involute, a little contracted and truncate behind, rounded in front, whitish and thin. The aperture is subcircular behind, ovate in front, elongated, dilated, margins approximating toward the posterior terminations. The inner lip is smooth and thin. The outer lip a little inflexed behind.
Compound leaves are 8 to 30 cm long. Containing 4 to 9 leaflets. Leaflets glossy, without teeth, ovate to ovate lanceolate in shape, usually 2 to 15 cm long and 2 to 6 cm wide. Leaf veins noticeable on both sides of the leaf, more evident below.
Warnstorfia fluitans is a medium-sized moss ranging in color from green to yellowish to brownish and can be rarely red when the species occurs in exposed habitats. The cells of its stem epidermis are not widened, and its pseudoparaphyllia are ovate-triangular to lanceolate in shape. It has axillary hairs with a distal portion of one to four cells, the hairs being hyaline when young. Its stem leaves are narrowly ovate to triangularly ovate, with denticulate margins.
A typical lower pitcher Rosette and lower pitchers are either wholly ovate or ovate in the basal half of the pitcher cup and narrower above. They measure up to 15 cm in height by 5 cm in width. The hip is usually located near the middle of the pitcher, but may be completely absent in entirely ovate traps. A pair of wings (≤12 mm wide) runs down the ventral surface of the pitcher cup, bearing narrow fringe elements.
This species is known as acebiño in Spanish and azevinho in Portuguese. It is a shrub or small tree up to 6.5 meters tall sometimes 10 m high, evergreen, with a gray trunk. It has glossy ovate leaves, 5–7 cm long by and 2.5–4 cm wide, usually whole rounded edges in the leaves and only a few small spines; iota obtuse or rounded. The leaves have ovate to ovate to lanceolate, bright and whole.
Salvia schizocalyx is a perennial plant that is native to Yunnan province in China, growing at elevation. The plant grows on one to a few unbranched upright stems with widely spaced leaves, reaching approximately tall. The leaves are broadly ovate to narrowly triangular-ovate, and rarely oblong- ovate, typically ranging in size from long and wide, though they can grow larger. Inflorescences are 2–4-flowered verticillasters on terminal racemes, with a blue or violet corolla that is long.
They are greenish at flowering time. They are narrow and rounded, ovate, oblong or oblong-lanceolate shaped.
Specimens exhibit many different leaf shapes from narrow-lanceolate to widely- ovate, with straight or wavy margins.
The periphery is evenly rounded. The sutures are distinct. The aperture is ovate. The margin is simple.
After the iris has flowered, it produces an ovate, oblong or triangular seed capsule, that is long.
Each leaf has ovate or lanceolate shape and serrate marginal shape. It also produces fruits and flowers.
The length of the shell attains 6 mm, irts diameter 2 mm. The small shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. It contains 6-7 subconvex whorls crossed by oblique, obtuse longitudinal plicae (5-7 in penultimate whorl and fewer in the body whorl). The small aperture is ovate.
The half amplexicaul petiole is up to 5 millimeters long. The green, almost circular, broadly ovate or inversely ovate laminae are 1.5 to 5 centimeters long and 1.3 to 4 centimeters wide. Their apices are blunt and their bases narrowed. The leaf margin is entire or serrate-crenate.
The species in genus Chenopodiastrum are non-aromatic annual herbs. Young plants have vesicular trichomes, that later collapse and fall down, thus plants becoming glabrescent. Stems grow erect, with lateral branches. The alternate leaves have a petiole and a thickish triangular, ovate, rhombic-ovate to lanceolate leaf blade.
The fruit mature after some 13 to 14 months when they release ovate seeds covered with velvety hairs.
Leaves are crowded at the root, stalked, ovate and blunt; stem leaves are obovate, lance-shaped and linear.
Snails in this genus have medium to large shells which are ovate in shape and often colourfully streaked.
'linear leaves'. Descriptions commonly refer to the plant using the ablative singular or plural, e.g. 'with ovate leaves'.
The pods contain dull black seeds that are arranged longitudinally with an ovate shape and a length of .
The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thickened. The sinus is very obscure. The columella is straight.
Its brown seeds are ovate. The plant flowers from June to August and fruits from July to October.
The species has an ovate body measuring 2.4 mm long. General coloration is black with rust- colored antennae.
Annual. pubescent-glandular, 10–30 cm. Leaves ovate, crenulate or dentate. Flowers in loose racemes. Bracts linear, entire.
Calyx c. 1.8–2.0 cm long, pubescent, teeth linear-lanceolate. Corolla bright yellow. Vexillum ovate-oblong, slightly exserted.
Scutellaria formosana (蓝花黄芩, lan hua huang qin) is a plant species endemic to the Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Jiangxi, and Yunnan provinces in China. It grows on woody stems up to about 30 cm in height, with ovate to ovate-lanceolate leaves 3-8 × 1.5-3.3 cm.
The interior is white. The ovate, subfusiform shell is pointed at its summit. It is composed of eight very distinct whorls, a little swollen, ridged lengthwise by several subnodulous folds, covered also by transverse striae and ridges. The aperture is ovate, violet, edged with reddish, and narrowed at its base.
The corolla is colored white with reddish color at throat, and is about long, glabrous, with acute ovate lobes. Capsule is x , ovoid acute, and glabrous. Fruits are obliquely ovate and pointed. Rauvolfia micrantha is related to the snakeroot plant (Rauvolfia serpentina) which is used as a traditional herbal medicine.
Description: Epiphyte. Rhizome short. Pseudobulbs appressed, laterally compressed, narrowly ovate, costate, to 2 cm wide and 8 cm long, 2 to 30 foliate, with 2 to 3 distichous, foliaceous sheaths surrounding the base. Leaves thin, heavily veined on the underside, narrowly ovate, acuminate, to 8 cm wide and 32 cm long.
The leaves are alternate, shiny and dark- green above, and paler beneath. The leaves are ovate-lanceolate to ovate- oblong in shape, with entire or shallowly serrated leaf margins. The leaf petioles are 3–5 mm long, and the leaf blades 20–100 mm long and 10–50 mm wide.
The five unequal, often pink sepals are up to 15 mm long, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acuminate and subaristate. The five mauve to violet petals are narrowly funnel-shaped, and 2.3 to 5 centimetres long. There is only a single ring of five stamens. The plant flowers during the summer.
Manual of Cultivated Trees and Shrubs. 2. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1949. Print. It has alternately arranged leaves growing to 5 cm long and broad. The leaves themselves are simple and ovate to oblong-ovate with serrated or crenate margins, to which the tree owes its specific epithet serrata.
Sideritis candicans (erva branca, selvageira). More or less white to greyish, densely tomentose shrub 45–100 cm. Leaves 2.5-12 x 1.5 x 7.5 cm, the lower ovate-lanceolate to ovate, acute to obtuse, rounded to cordate at base, weakly crenate to sub-entire, petiolate. Inflorescence up to 30 cm.
The length of the ovate-biconic shell varies between 3 mm and 4 mm; its diameter is 2 mm.
Capsules short- pedicellate, obovate to oblong or ovate, 5–7 cm, apex short-beaked. Seeds (7–)9–11 mm.
The leaves are opposite, ovate and shiny. Male and female flowers are separate, female flowers produce the larger berries.
Their blades are approximately 2-4(-6) × 2-2.5(-3) cm ovate-lantiolate, green color and have rough surfaces.
The dull black seeds inside have an oblong to ovate shape with a length of and a clavate aril.
Aglaothorax is a genus of ovate shieldbacks in the family Tettigoniidae. There are about six described species in Aglaothorax.
Leaves trifoliate; leaflets hairy on both surfaces, smaller than those of Pueraria phaseoloides; terminal leaflet broadly ovate to ovate-rhomboid, lateral ones are obliquely broadly ovate, about to 4 to 5 cm long and a little less in width. Stipules small and triangular; small flowers borne in short axillary racemes of four to eight to 12 on hairy peduncles. Flowers blue with greenish-yellow blotch. Pods linear, compressed, 2.5 to 4 cm long, yellowish brown, densely covered with long erect hairs, four- to eight-seeded.
Glabrous, much-branched, perennial herb, arising from branched, annular, tuberous rootstock up to 2 cm thick, with crown surrounded by fibrous, remnant, sheathing bases of petioles. Height 30–100 cm. Basal leaves numerous, petioles flattened with ovate sheaths, 2 - 6.5 cm in length; leaf-blades oblong-ovate to broad-ovate, up to 35 x 18 cm (usually smaller), bi- to tripinnatifid, pinnae 3 - 4 pairs, petiolulate, terminal lobes lanceolate, 3-lobed at apex. Upper leaves simplified with sheathing petioles, reduced upwards, often absent, leading to aphyllous branching.
They also have ribbed surface which is also rough and scaberulous as well. The panicle itself is open and ovate, and is long while its divaricate branches are long. The panicle branches are capillary and carry distant spikelets. The spikelets themselves are ovate, just like panicles and are long and are long.
The species' bud scales are efarinose, ovate to oblong and are long. The leaves form a rosette which have winged petiole that is long. It have even longer leaf blade, measuring , efarinose, puberulous and is ovate to deltoid. The base itself is cordate and subsagittate with irregular margins, coarse dentate and acute apex.
The body whorl is swollen. The aperture is ovate. The thin, outer lip is expanded. The siphonal canal is short.
The aperture is ovate. The outer lip spreads out loosely. The siphonal canal is very short. The columella is simple.
The shiny black seeds have an oval to ovate shape and a length of with an orange or yellow aril.
The aperture is widely ovate. The outer lip is slightly thickened. The shell is whitish. The aperture is brown within.
C. subcordata grows to at maturity, but may be as tall as . It has ovate leaves that are and wide.
Its leaves are ovate with pointy tips, around long and around wide. The flowers are formed of five white ovate petals. Like that of the related citruses, the byeonggyul fruit has a fragrant dimpled rind. The yellow to yellow-orange fruit with an elongated basal portion and a bulbous end grows to long and broad.
Floating leaves It produces both floating and submersed leaves on the same plant. The floating leaves are ovate to oblong-ovate and almost always cordate at the base. They are dark green, leathery, opaque, with translucent longitudinal veins. They are 5 to 10 cm long, pointed at the tips, and rounded at the base.
Leaves are smooth, simple, petiolated, ovate to oblong-ovate, long, wide, with obtuse apex, entire margin, symmetrical but tapering base, and reticulate venation. The texture of the leaf is extremely smooth due to the presence of numerous hairs.BP Pimple, AN Patel, PV Kadam, MJ Patil. Microscopic evaluation and physicochemical analysis of Origanum majorana Linn leaves.
The flowering glumes are 4–6 mm long. The male spikelets are ovate and 4–8 mm long, with six tepals, three stamens and a minute pistillode. The female spikelets are ovate to elliptic and 8.5–9.3 mm long, with four tepals and two staminodes. It is found on alluvium in swamps and depressions.
Indian heliotrope is an annual, erect, branched plant that can grow to a height of about . It has a hairy stem, bearing alternating ovate to oblong-ovate leaves. It has small white or purple flowers with a green calyx; five stamens borne on a corolla tube; a terminal style; and a four-lobed ovary.
Vigna parkeri has climbing or prostrate stems, sometimes forming mats measuring long. The main rootstock is slender but tough. The stems are thin and often root at the nodes, and are sparsely to densely covered with mostly spreading hairs. There are three leaflets that are round, ovate, or ovate to lanceolate and are by .
Spikelets are oblong, solitary, and are long with pedicelled fertile ones. Sterile spikelets grow in pairs and carry 2–3 fertile florets. Both upper and lower glumes are long and are also ovate, membranous, glaucous, with a single keel and vein, and with acuminated and muticous apexes. Fertile lemma is ovate, membranous, and is long.
The shell is limpet-shaped, non- spiral, oblong-ovate and flattened. The shell is bilaterally symmetrical when adult. The apex is either subcentral or posterior, and either remaining as a minute recumbent spiral or lost in the adult shell. The ovate aperture is very large and internally brilliantly iridescent or almost deprived of nacre.
Tendrils are up to 6 mm in diameter and may or may not have a curl. Rosette and lower pitchers are ovate or narrowly ovate in the lower half and cylindrical above. They can be very large, reaching 35 cm in height. Terrestrial pitchers usually lack fringed wings, having a pair of ribs instead.
Smooth aster is tall. Its leaves are arranged alternately on the stems, and their shape varies between lanceolate, oblong-ovate, oblong-obovate, and ovate. They measure from long and from wide. They are usually hairless, and the leaf edges are entire or bluntly or sharply toothed (crenate or serrate), sometimes with smaller teeth (serrulate).
Each solitary inflorescence contains 25 to 40 flowers with a creamy coloured perianth and a cream pistil with a length of . After flowering an obliquely narrowly ovate, curved and prominently beaked fruit is produced which is in length and wide. The fruit contain narrowly ovate shaped blackish brown seeds with a wing down one side.
P. japonicum has a stout umbellifer of 30–100 cm and is essentially glabrous. The stem is frequently flexuous. The leaf blade is broadly ovate-triangular. It size is 35 x 25 cm. It is thinly coriaceous, bearing 1-2 ternate(s). leaflets are ovate-orbicular, 3-parted, 7–9 cm broad and glaucous.
Bank sinkers are long and ovate and have a small hole at the top for the fishing line to thread through.
The suture is impressed. The body whorl is very short and slightly inflated. The aperture is ovate. The columella is sinuate.
Perianth 2–3 cm ; tepals elliptical-ovate, cream-white, yellow and bearded at base. Anthers whitish, longer than filament. Stigmas orange.
395-397 and ovate. The base of both its long flagella is below the tip (subapical). There is only one nucleus.
Inflorescences are unisexual, while its fruit is ovate, approximately x , with a very short apex, largely included in the pubescent perigon.
The aperture is ovate. The siphonal canal is rather produced. The body whorl is shorter than the spire.Hutton F. W. 1873.
Ovary round-ovate, compressed, laterally hairy, tapering into a recurved style scarcely its own length. Head of fruit similar, but larger.
Lathyrus latifolius has winged hairless stems, and alternating blue green compound leaves consisting of a single pair of leaflets and a winged petiole about 2 in long. The leaflets are narrowly ovate or oblong-ovate, smooth along the margins, hairless and up to 3 in long and 1 in across. There is a branched tendril between the leaflets.
Its panicle is long, with stiff and nearly glabrous floral branches. The branches are ascending. Its whitish spikelets are long with three to five flowers. The acute glumes are erose to serrulate; the first glume is long, narrowly ovate and acutish, with one nerve, and the second is long, broadly ovate and abruptly acute, with three nerves.
They are falcate or ovate with an acute base and an acute or rounded apex. The petiole is 0.5 cm long with 3-5 obvious major ribs. Terminal and lateral racemose inflorescences occur at the apex of the branches. The greenish or red ovate flower bracts are persistent and 2.2 cm long by 1.8 cm wide.
Salvia omeiana is a perennial plant that is native to forest edges and hillsides in Sichuan province in China, growing at elevation. It is a robust erect-growing plant reaching , with broad cordate-ovate to hastate-ovate leaves that are long and wide. Inflorescences are raceme-panicles, with a yellow corolla. There are two varieties: Salvia omeiana var.
Salvia potaninii is a herbaceous perennial plant that is native to Sichuan province in China, growing in thickets at elevation. It grows high, with leaves that are ovate to oblong-ovate, long and wide. The upper surface of the leaf is covered with fine hairs, with the underside having glandular hairs. The yellowish flowers, long, are on terminal racemes.
The species is perennial and tufted, with wiry culms that are long and in diameter. Its lemma is elliptic and oblong, lowest one of which is long. Low glume is ovate and is long while the upper glume is lanceolate and is long. The species spikelets are ovate to oblong, are purple in colour and are .
The gamosepalous green sepals consist of ovate lobes, and are distributed in one whorl. The annular disk is hypogynous. The five gamesepalous petals have oblong or ovate lobes and are disposed in one whorl. The corolla lobes overlapping to the left (such as A. rostrata) or to the right (such as A. macrophylla) in the bud.
Salvia mairei is a perennial plant that is native to Yunnan province in China. The plant grows on one to a few stems from tall. The leaves are cordate-ovate to subhastate-ovate, typically ranging in size from long and wide, though they are sometimes larger. Inflorescences are 4-flowered verticillasters on terminal racemes or panicles that are long.
The penultimate whorl contains 8 close-set spiral rows of smooth ovate granules. The body whorl has ten spiral rows of granules above the acutely angled periphery. The granules of the infrasutural row are much larger and placed axially, the rest spirally ovate. The ten rows on the base have flatter, more quadrate, and more close-set granules.
Sterculia balanghas is a species of plant in the family Malvaceae. It is native to India and Sri Lanka. Leaves are simple, alternate; swollen at base and tipped; lamina elliptic, obovate, oblong, elliptic-ovate or oblong-ovate; base subcordate or round; apex acuminate; with entire margin. Flowers may be unisexual or polygamous are yellow or greenish-purple in color.
Stimpson (1865) described the genus as follows: “Shell ovate- conic, imperforate; apex acute; whorls coronated with spines; outer whorl nearly two-thirds the length of the shell; aperture ovate, outer lip acute. Operculum corneous, subspiral. Foot rather short for the length of the shell, broadest in front and strongly auriculated. Tentacles very long, slender, and tapering.
It is a relatively small-leaved fig. The changeable leaves are simple, entire and stalked. The petiole is long. The young foliage is light green and slightly wavy, the older leaves are green and smooth; the leaf blade is ovate to ovate-lanceolate with wedge-shaped to broadly rounded base and ends with a short dropper tip.
Water mint is a herbaceous rhizomatous perennial plant growing to tall. The stems are square in cross section, green or purple, and variably hairy to almost hairless. The rhizomes are wide-spreading, fleshy, and bear fibrous roots. The leaves are ovate to ovate-lanceolate, long and broad, green (sometimes purplish), opposite, toothed, and vary from hairy to nearly hairless.
The body whorl is one and one-half armed with erect long stout tubular spines on the carinae, ten to twelve in number on the last whorl, usually tinged with green. The ovate aperture ovate, pearly white and iridescent within. The columella is thickened below, deflexed, produced and somewhat channelled, excavated at the conspicuous umbilicus. The operculum is subcircular.
Euphorbia paralias, the sea spurge, is a species of Euphorbia, native to Europe, northern Africa, and western Asia. It is a glaucous perennial plant growing up to 70 cm tall. The crowded leaves are elliptic-ovate (ovate toward the top of the stems) and 5 to 20 mm long. The species is widely naturalised in Australia.
The aperture is ovate. Sykes E. R. 1906. On the Mollusca procured during the "Porcupine" Expeditions 1869-1870. Supplemental notes, part III.
Individuals measure 2.04–2.08 mm in length. Body shape is slightly ovate. General coloration is black, with rust-colored tarsi and antennae.
Aglaothorax ovata, the ovate shieldback, is a species of shield-backed katydid in the family Tettigoniidae. It is found in North America.
The aperture is whitish, elongate-ovate, with the outer lip showing many black denticles. The operculum is dark brown, thick and small.
The aperture is broadly ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is slender, curved, decidedly revolute.
It is marked like the spire. The ovate aperture moderately large. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is evenly curved.
The laminae are ovate to nearly circular in outline, with 2 recurved rachises, each rachis bearing pinnules on only the basiscopic side.
It differs from C. trilobus by having a broadly ovate flower. It flowers September to October and fruits from November to early January.
The leaves are ovate or elliptic, 4–7 cm long, with a cinnamon-like odour. Flowers are star-shaped and borne in panicles.
The red, fleshy fruit is narrowly ellipsoidal and 15–20 mm long. The seeds are ovate with a narrow margin.Flora of Australia Online.
They are evergreen with branches forming horizontal layers. The leaves are alternately arranged, ovate long by wide, and have a slightly abrasive feel.
The seeds inside the fruit have a narrowly ovate or elliptic shape and are in length with a narrow wing down one side.
The dull black seeds within the pods are arranged longitudinally and have an oblique oblong-elliptic to ovate shape with a length of .
Pertaining to the smell. Olivaceous. Colored like an olive. Organism. An organized being, or living object made up of organs. Ovate. Egg- shaped.
Its breeding season is from March-May. Nests are usually in inaccessible areas. Eggs are ovate and 35.5 x 28.0 mm in size.
The rather large aperture is oblique and has a sub-ovate shape. The thick peristome is dilated. The columella is oblique.Garrett A. (1873).
The calyx is glabrous except for the inside surface of the teeth, having 10 veins with the accessory veins inconspicuous. The 2–3 mm long calyx teeth are ovate-triangular in shape and are subequal or the posterior teeth larger, with rigid apices. The corollas have some darker purple tinted veins inside; they are 1.2 cm long with silky-lanate hairs but bases that are glabrous. The corolla tubes are about 6 mm long with the upper lip ovate in shape with entire margins; the lower lips are subpatent with the middle lobe broadly ovate in shape, lateral lobes oblong.
Nepenthes suratensis also has a characteristically flattened peristome, unlike the cylindrical lip found in N. andamana. Furthermore, the pitcher lid of N. suratensis is broadly to narrowly ovate and typically somewhat smaller than the trap's orifice, whereas that of N. andamana is orbicular to broadly ovate and usually slightly larger than the mouth. The lid of N. suratensis is also distinct in that it often has irregularly wavy margins and bears a small depression under its apex. In N. suratensis, the pitcher mouth is triangular as opposed to ovate, and larger in relation to the size of the trap.
Nepenthes suratensis also has a characteristically flattened peristome, unlike the cylindrical lip found in N. andamana. Furthermore, the pitcher lid of N. suratensis is broadly to narrowly ovate and typically somewhat smaller than the trap's orifice, whereas that of N. andamana is orbicular to broadly ovate and usually slightly larger than the mouth. The lid of N. suratensis is also distinct in that it often has irregularly wavy margins and bears a small depression under its apex. In N. suratensis, the pitcher mouth is triangular as opposed to ovate, and larger in relation to the size of the trap.
The Chittenango ovate amber snail, scientific name Novisuccinea chittenangoensis, is a species of small air-breathing land snail in the family Succineidae, the amber snails. This species was discovered in 1905, and was reported three years later as a subspecies of the oval ambersnail, Succinea ovalis. Several taxonomic reviews took place in the subsequent decades until the end of the 1980s, when the Chittenango ovate amber snail was finally judged to be a distinct species Novisuccinea chittenangoensis, based on chemical and morphological data. The Chittenango ovate amber snail is endemic to the Chittenango area of Madison County, New York, United States.
The leaves of C. tenuipes are typically 2-2.5 cm (occasionally up to 3.5 cm) long, and 1.5–2 cm wide, and range in shape from ovate or elliptic-ovate to narrowly elliptic-ovate. The undersides are grayish with raised veins, and covered with short, woolly hairs which lie flatly to the surface; the uppersides are green, with slightly impressed veins, and sparsely covered with long, thin, soft, weak, hairs when young, but nearly hairless with age. Both the leaf-stems (3–5 mm long) and their stipules (2.5–5 mm long, lanceolate) are hairy, but the stipules are much less so.
The ovate obtuse sepals are 5 mm long, with the lateral sepals larger than the dorsal sepal. The linear petals are also 5 mm long. As with other members of the genus Epidendrum, the lip is adnate to the column to its apex. The lip is heart- shaped where it diverges from the column, ovate, and obtuse at the apex.
Tepals, which are up to 4 mm long, are ovate-elliptic in females and orbicular to ovate in males. Fruits reach 18 mm in length, while seeds measure around 6 mm. Male flowers sometimes produce a "faint, sweet fragrance". The vegetative parts of the plant are mostly glabrous, although an indumentum of velvety, brown hairs may be present on the spur.
Salvia cynica is a perennial plant that is native to Sichuan province in China, growing in forests and streamsides at elevation. The leaves are broadly ovate to broadly hastate-ovate or subcircular, ranging in size from long and wide. Inflorescences are 2–6-flowered widely spaced verticillasters in raceme- panicles up to long. The yellow corolla is , blooming July–August.
The prickles on the stems are straight or slightly curved and have a broad base. The light- or greyish-green leaves have 5 to 7 ovate leaflets with small teeth; the veins are sometimes pubescent and the rachis bears prickles. The stipules are narrow with spreading, free tips. Small, ovate fruits called hips are borne, turning orange-red in autumn.
Hakea ulicina is an erect shrub or small tree growing between tall, resprouting from a lignotuber . It has long, narrow leaves long and wide with a prominent longitudinal vein. White conflorescences with 6-18 flowers appear in the leaf axils in spring. The fruit grow on a short stalk are ovate or obliquely ovate long by wide with a short beak.
Spikelets are lanceolate, ovate, solitary, long, and have pedicelled fertile spikelets that carry 2–6 fertile florets which have a diminished apex. It also has a hairy callus and scaberulous palea keels. The glumes are lanceolate, membranous, and keelless, have acute apexes, with the only difference being in size. The upper one is long while the other one is ovate and is long.
Salvia atropurpurea is a perennial plant that is native to Yunnan province in China, growing on grassy slopes at elevation. S. atropurpurea grows on one erect stem to tall. The leaves are ovate to broadly ovate, ranging in size from long and approximately wide. Inflorescences are 2–6 flowered verticillasters in terminal racemes or panicles , with a dark purple corolla that is .
A pair of wings (≤6 mm wide) runs down the ventral surface of the pitcher cup, bearing narrow fringe elements. The pitcher mouth is orbicular to ovate and has an oblique insertion. The peristome is cylindrical and up to 5 mm wide at the sides, with teeth up to 0.3 mm long. The pitcher lid or operculum is orbicular to ovate or elliptic.
Salvia mekongensis is a perennial plant native to Yunnan province in China, found growing on hilly grasslands at elevation. S. mekongensis grows on one to five ascending to erect stems, with mostly basal leaves that are usually ovate to oblong-ovate, long and wide. Inflorescences are 2 flowered verticillasters in terminal racemes or panicles, long. The corolla is yellow and .
There are ovate, short sharp spines on shoulder. The upper band of the body whorl often becomes more apparent from the brightened or even whitish shade of its color. The ovate aperture is of an orange white. The outer lip is marked by brown spots internally, and bordered externally by the last rib which is denticulated in a portion of its length.
The leaves are leathery, shining, ovate, elliptic or oblong-ovate, about 12 to 25 centimeters long, and coarsely toothed at the margins. Its flowers are white, large, showy, and about 15 centimeters in diameter with reddish pistils and stamens. The edible fruits are rounded, about six to eight centimeters in diameter, with large fleshy sepals tightly enclosing the true fruit.
There are also thin wings along the angles of the stem. The glabrous opposite leaves in a decussate arrangement are noticeably toothed (dentate to serrate) and are up to 12 cm long and 5 cm wide. They are ovate, lanceolate-ovate, or lanceolate, gradually narrowing to a sharp point at the apex. At the base are narrowly winged petioles about 1.2 cm long.
The falls are elliptic or obovate (ovate with the narrower end at the base) in shape, they are long and 2.5 cm wide. In the centre of the petal, is a narrow, sparse beard. The standards are narrow and ovate (oval-like) shaped, they are 2.8 cm long and 1.6 cm wide. It has 1.3 cm long stamens, 1.5 cm long ovary.
Dipsey sinkers are ovate or egg-shaped and are attached to the fishing line with a loop of brass wire embedded in the sinker.
The aperture is widely ovate. The outer lip is thin and deeply sinuated posteriorly. The lip is inconspicuous. The columella is long and twisted.
Trees up to 25 m tall. Leaves lanceolate, elliptic or ovate, with acuminate or acute apex. Figs edible, globose, 0.8-1.2 cm in diameter.
Individuals measure 2.04–2.51 mm in length. The body is elongated and slightly ovate. General coloration is black, with rust-colored tarsi and antennae.
The shell grows to a height of 2 mm. The depressed shell has an ovate shape. The spire is plane. The umbilicus is moderate.
Hieracium sylvaticum, wood hawkweed is a species of flowering plant from family Asteraceae that have many lanceolate and ovate leaves with bended forward teeth.
Leaf stipules are between 10 and 15 mm long, ovate and hairy. There are oil glands present at the base of the leaf stipules.
Flowers are narrowly cyathiform and a brownish yellow colour, covered with scattered glandular trichomes. The hypanthium is long; calyx lobes are ovate and acuminate.
Smooth grey to black fruit that are obliquely ovate or elliptic, dilated apically and approximately long and wide. It blooms from August to December.
The aperture is roundly-ovate. The sinus is rather wide and deep. The outer lip is slightly expanded. The columellar margin is fairly straight.
The flowers appear in February and March. They are white and triangular outlined, with widely ovate filaments (very similar to those of Eriospermum pubescens).
Pedicels filiform, spreading-erect, sometimes recurved at apex. Calyx lobes ovate- Ianceolate, 2–3 mm. Corolla blue and white, 8–15 mm in diameter.
The leaves are ovate to oblong, 5 to 8 centimeters long, and pointed at both ends, with subentire or undulately toothed or lobed margins.
The leaves are ovate to oblong, 5 to 8 centimeters long, and pointed at both ends, with subentire or undulately toothed or lobed margins.
The siphonal canal is short and wide. The columella is straight, attenuated in front. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thin and arcuate.
The shape of the shell is cylindrical-ovate. The width of the shell is 1.2 mm; the height of the shell is 2.1-2.2 mm.
Goodenia ovata has glossy green ovate (oval) shaped leaves, and yellow flowers. It flowers for most of the year, but especially from October till March.
The white flowers are about 1.5cm wide, and the fruits are a crimson red. The small ovate leaves turn a vibrant orange in the fall.
Leaves are entire, lanceolate to ovate, acute. Flowers are whitish, small in lax terminal and axillary panicles. Fruiting pedicels are pendulous.Bramwell, D.; Bramwell, Z. (2001).
The shell attains a height of 2 mm. The shell has an ovate, depressed shape. The spire is nearly plane. The 2½ whorls are plane.
The firmly chartaceous pods are up to in length and wide and contain dull dark brown coloured seeds with a broadly elliptic to ovate shape.
Karamu in fruit Fruit are often dark orange-red to red, oblong to narrow ovate drups. The best fruiting period is between April and May.
Melicope obovata, also called Makawao melicope or ovate melicope, was a species of plant in the family Rutaceae. It was endemic to the Hawaiian Islands.
Cytisus scoparius, Common Broom. 1. Two-lipped calyx. 2. Broadly ovate vexillum or standard. 3. One of the alae or wings of the corolla. 4.
It is very solid, obtusely ribbed with fine spiral striae. The outer lip is extremely thickened. The inner lip is simple. The aperture is ovate.
Branches arise in four ranks from these stems. The branches are often spread out at wide angles which result in sparse branches. The leaves of Abietinella abietina are broadly ovate, patent, and they pilcate at the base and they also taper to a long acuminate apex. The leaves of the branches are rather concave and broadly ovate to lanceolate, with a rather shorter apex.
Salvia brevilabra is a perennial plant that is native to Sichuan province in China, growing on hillsides, grasslands, and in forests at elevation. It grows up to tall, with basal leaves that are ovate to triangular-ovate, long and wide. The stem leaves are somewhat smaller, and more triangular in shape. Inflorescences are racemes or panicles, approximately , with a blue-purple corolla about long.
Basal leaves are oblanceolate in shape and have petioles. Cauline leaves, those growing along the stem, are ovate to ovate-lanceolate in shape, with alternate attachment to stem, sessile, acuminate at the base, acute at the tip. Leaf margins are entire, or smooth and lacking teeth or serration. Leaf texture is sericeous adaxially (above) and abaxially (below), giving the leaves a silvery-grey appearance.
The tiny seeds are explosively expelled. Plants acaulescent or nearly so. The stems, if any, are very short and covered with persistent petiole bases. Leaves are often very numerous and crowded. Stipules persistent; petiole 8–25 cm. Leaf blade long-petiolate, oblong-ovate, deltate- ovate, or orbiculate, entire or deeply pinnately or almost palmately lobed, 6-20 × 7–22 cm, sparsely scabrous or pubescent.
Calibrachoa are small shrubs or herbaceous plants with woody shoot axis that grow annual or perennial. The leaves are ovate, elliptic, reverse ovate or linear; its edge is flat or rolled back. The inflorescences are monochasic and have oppositely standing, foliage-like bracts. The flowers are usually zygomorphic, the bud cover is reciprocal in most species, the only exception is Calibrachoa pygmaea in both cases.
The sepals have a length of 2 to 4 mm and are separate from each other. They are depressed ovate, almost circular or kidney-shaped, dotted and ciliated. The petal is pale mauve to dark pink, the corolla lobe is ovate-elliptical or elongated elliptical, asymmetrical, dotted with small scattered glands. The 8 mm long and 11 mm wide berries are depressed-globose, first pink, then black.
Salvia smithii is an aromatic perennial plant that is native to Sichuan province in China, found growing on riverbanks, valleys, and hillsides at elevation. S. smithii grows to tall, with leaves that are broadly cordate- ovate to ovate-hastate, ranging in size from long and wide. Inflorescences are 2-flowered verticillasters in loose many branched raceme-panicles. The plant has a yellow corolla that is .
Salvia bulleyana is a perennial plant that is native to Yunnan province in China, growing on hillsides at elevation. S. bulleyana grows on a few branched stems with ovate to ovate-triangular leaves. Inflorescences are 4 flowered verticillasters in loose racemes or panicles that are , with a purple-blue corolla that is . S. bulleyana is closely related to and commonly mistaken for another Yunnan Salvia, Salvia flava.
Overarched glands are present at a concentration of around 500 per square centimetre. The pitcher lid or operculum is orbicular or ovate, up to 3 cm in diameter, and lacks appendages. A number of large round to ovate glands are concentrated near the midrib on the lower surface of the lid. An unbranched spur (≤15 mm long) is inserted near the base of the lid.
The solid shell grows to a height of 2 cm and has an ovate- conic shape. Its pointed, conic spire is higher and more acute than the spire of Phasianella nivosa. The five, somewhat convex whorls are separated by well marked sutures and are somewhat flattened above. The rather small aperture is short ovate, and measures less than half the length of the shell.
The mouth is ovate and has a neck. The peristome is much narrower than that found in lower pitchers, measuring only up to 1 cm in width. Its teeth, although distinct, are also much shorter, with those of the neck reaching 1.3 mm. The fringed lid is ovate, has a cordate base, and measures up to 6.1 cm in length by 5.5 cm in width.
Flowers hermaphroditic, actinomorphic. Sepals 5, fused at the base, ovate to deltoid, hirtellous, 0.6-1.2 mm x 0.5–1 mm. Petals 5, ovate to acuminate, free, 2.0-3.0 mm x 0.6-1.0 mm. Stamens 10, distinct, filaments 2.0-2.8 mm, anther dorsifixed, 0.4-0.5 x 0.3-0.5 mm, pollen grains bright yellow. Ovary extremely hirtellous at the base, style 2.3-3.0 mm, stigma club to disc-shaped.
Saururus chinensis, commonly known as Asian lizard's tail, is an herb that grows in low, damp places to more than 1 meter high, endemic to China, India, Japan (including the Ryukyu Islands), Korea, Philippines, and Vietnam. Its leaves are green, papery, ribbed, densely glandular, and ovate to ovate- lanceolate, and (4-)10-20 × (2-)5-10 cm in size. Each flower spike resembles a lizard's tail.
It has compound leaves with typically 7--9 (but range from 3--15) ovate to ovate-lanceolate leaflets with serrate margins. Each leaflet is 20–40 cm long at maturity and comes to a point at the apex. The leaves are covered with fine hairs that are most prominent at the veins and on the undersides of the leaves. All parts of the plant are intensely bitter.
They are often stoloniferous, forming long spreading colonies by way of short stolons produced after flowering. Plants produce both basal and cauline leaves; the foliage occupy 1/4–1/2 of the plant height, the leaves have petioles 1–6(–10+) cm long, with simple leaf blades or they sometimes have 1 or 2, or more lateral lobes. The basal leaf blades are suborbiculate or ovate-elliptic to lance-ovate and typically 15–55 mm long and 9–25 mm wide. Flower heads are produced on the ends of 8 to 25 cm long peduncles, the heads have 9–12 mm long phyllaries that are lance-deltate to lance-ovate.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is squarely truncated. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved and reflected over the reinforcing base.
In addition, this hybrid has a less ovate lid, which lacks the bristles characteristic of N. lowii, and a denser indumentum covering the stem and leaves.
In addition, this hybrid has a less ovate lid, which lacks the bristles characteristic of N. lowii, and a denser indumentum covering the stem and leaves.
Small white flowers appear on panicles flowers December to January. The fruit matures in July, being a red fleshy ovate shaped capsule, 2.3 cm in diameter.
Biodiversidad de Tabasco. CONABIO-UNAM, México. Iresine heterophylla is a perennial herb up to 100 cm tall. Leaves are opposite, ovate, up to 6 cm long.
The aperture is transversely ovate, and silvery within. The operculum is calcareous. The lip is simple. The narrow columella is arcuate and thickened at the base.
The height of the shell reaches 6.2 mm. The elongate shell has a pointed ovate shape. It is thin, smooth, and shining. The spire is conic.
The body whorl is rounded. The base of the shell shows a few concentric, separated, impressed lines. The aperture is ovate. The thin outer lipis acute.
Sageretia randaiensis is a small woody shrub. It has dark green, ovate-oblong leaves. The shrub is found in the mountains of C and N Taiwan.
There is a deep, broad groove at the suture. The aperture is ovate. The siphonal canal is rather produced. The body whorl is shorter than the spire.
The anal sulcus is rounded, wide and shallow. The outer lip is thin, sharp and arcuately produced. The aperture is narrowly ovate. The inner lip is erased.
On the body whorl there is a row of white spots below the nodules. The shell contains 7 whorls. The apex is mamillated. The aperture is ovate.
The suture is deep. The ovate aperture measures ⅓ the length of shell. The outer lip is thickened and conspicuously dentate within. The sinus is broad, conspicuous, posterior.
The spire is sharp. The apex is purple. The aperture is elongately ovate, deep purple within. The outer lip is finely denticulated at the edge, contracted below.
The narrowly ovate aperture has a rounded anterior end. Across the shell run numerous microscopic lirae.A.W. Powell, Antarctic and Subantarctic Mollusca. Pelecypoda and Gastropoda; Discovery reports. v.
The leaves are alternate, simple, long, ovate-acuminate to lanceolate with a long pointed tip, and evenly serrated margins. The fruit is a small drupe in diameter.
The generally large shells are variegated with spots. The fusiform shell is turriculated with a long, sharp spire. The aperture is ovate. The columellar lip is smooth.
The aperture is elongately ovate. The thin outer lip is simple. The base of the columella is sometimes tinged with brown. The posterior sinus is very shallow.
In this genus, the shell is deeply rimate and ovate. The apex is acuminate and obtuse. The shell has 5–6 whorls. The last whorl is rounded.
Its leaves are opposite, simple, and ovate, from long, entire or with a few sparse shallow teeth. Its fruit is a hairy, ovoid capsule approximately inches long.
Nepenthes ovata is a tropical pitcher plant endemic to Sumatra. The specific epithet ovata is Latin for "ovate" and refers to the shape of the lower pitchers.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is with a decided notch. The thin outer lip is strongly arcuate. The columella is slender, curved, and slightly revolute.
Erythrina caffra leaves The leaves are made up of three leaflets. Each leaflet is broadly ovate to elliptical. The leaflets do not have prickles and are hairless.
Flowers blue-purple, 1.4–1.6 × 2.5 cm; petals ovate-deltate, 6–8 mm, densely pubescent with stellate hairs. Filaments 1 mm; anthers 8 mm. Style 1 cm.
The leaves are dimorphic, with primary leaves short ovate leaflets, and secondary leaves with 11 to 33 leaflets. These secondary leaflets are 1 to 2.5 cm long.
Justicia procumbens is procumbent herb with angular stems, swollen at nodes, small ovate leaves, small purple flowers in terminal spikes, inserted didynamous stamens, and shortly bilobed stigmas.
The umbilicus is narrow, partly covered by the strongly reflected columella. The aperture is ovate, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin.
Sepals narrowly elliptic; petals ovate, elliptic or rhomboid; lip folded to form a tube, with very wavy front margin. Pollinia 4, with curved appendages. Cattleya rex. Habit.
Salvia cinica is a perennial plant that is native to the hills of Anhui and Zhejiang provinces in China. S. cinica grows on one to a few erect stems to tall, with stem leaves that are narrowly ovate and smaller terminal leaflets that are ovate to oblong-lanceolate. Inflorescences are 5–12 flowered verticillasters in terminal racemes, with a corolla that is tawny, purplish or purple on the upper lip, .
Rhododendron concinnum (秀雅杜鹃) is a rhododendron species native to Guizhou, Henan, Hubei, Shaanxi, Sichuan, and Yunnan in China, where it grows at altitudes of 2300–3000 meters. It is a shrub that grows to 1.5–3 m in height, with leaves that are oblong, elliptic, ovate, oblong-lanceolate or ovate- lanceolate, 2.5–7.5 by 1.5–3.5 cm in size. Flowers are pale pink to deep purplish red.
Cryptocarya foetida is a small or medium-sized tree up to 20 metres tall and 20 cm in diameter with a dark green crown. The trunk is greyish brown, slightly fissured, cylindrical, not buttressed but slightly flanged at the base. Leaves are typical of many Australian laurels. Alternate, simple, not toothed, ovate to ovate lanceolate, smooth, thick and shiny with a transparent margin, tapering to a blunt point.
It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 30–70 cm high. The stems are usually glabrous (hairless), but sometimes pubescent at the nodes, and 7-10mm in diameter near the base of plant. The basal leaves have a 3–7 cm long petiole which is subterete in profile, and having a surface covered in numerous papilla. The leaves are of a narrowly triangular or triangular-ovate, rarely narrowly ovate, shape.
Salvia evansiana is a perennial plant that is native to Sichuan and Yunnan provinces in China, found growing on alpine meadows, hillsides, and forests at elevations from . It has erect stems growing tall, with ovate to triangular- ovate leaves that are long and wide. Inflorescences are racemes or panicles that are long, with a straight corolla that is long. There are two varieties, with slight differences in bract and calyx size.
Primula bracteosa have dimorphic leaves, the outer of which are long and are spoon-shaped to obovate-spoon-shaped. The species have tapering and flat to heart-shaped base which goes into a short winged stalk which have a rounded tip and carries long inner leaves. Leaf blades are ovate to oblong-ovate and are long. The species' margin is irregularly toothed and have rounded tip just like its winged stalk.
Tubers of S. affinis S. affinis is a perennial herbaceous plant with red to purple flowers and reaches a height of 30 – 120 cm. The green leaves are opposite arranged on the stem. The rough, nettle-like leaves can be ovate-cordate shaped with a width of 2.5 – 9.5 cm or ovate-oblong with a width of 1.5 – 3.5 cm. The leaves are separated into a leaf blade and a petiole.
Their blades are also ovate, though the bases may be cordate to rounded. They measure long by wide, making them often much longer than the basal leaves. The distal leaves are typically sessile, meaning that no petiole is present, though they are sometimes subpetiolate, meaning a very short petiole is present. The blades are ovate to lanceolate, meaning lance-shaped, with rounded bases and are long by wide.
Rhododendron wardii (黄杯杜鹃) is a rhododendron species native to southwestern Sichuan, southeastern Xizang, and northwestern Yunnan in China, where it grows at altitudes of 3000–4600 meters. It is a shrub that grows to 3 m in height, with leathery leaves that are narrowly ovate to oblong-elliptic or broadly ovate-elliptic, 5–8 by 3–4.5 cm in size. Flowers are yellow to white.
Mature and immature flowers, Bonnechere Provincial Park, Ontario In late spring to midsummer, white flowers are produced that are in diameter with reflexed petals that are ovate-lanceolate in shape and long. Inflorescences are made up of compound terminal cymes, with large showy white bracts that resemble petals. The bracts are green when immature. The bracts are broadly ovate and long and wide, with 7 parallel running veins.
Leaves long-petioled, petioles 1.5 - 3 x longer than the blades. Blades oval, ovate or cordate, at the tip obtuse or shortly acuminate, at the base lobate or abrupt, 9 – 11 cm long x 7 – 8 cm wide, in the terrestrial forms often only 3 cm long x 2 cm wide. Submersed blades oval or ovate, often nearly rounded. Blades trimmed with pellucid lines to 2 mm long.
Salvia deserta is a perennial plant that is native to Xinjiang province in China, and the countries of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. It grows in wastelands, sandy grasslands, and along streams in forests at elevations from . Salvia deserta grows on erect stems to tall, with ovate to lanceolate-ovate leaves. Inflorescences are 4-6 flowered verticillasters in elongated terminal racemes or panicles, with a blue-purple to purple corolla that is long.
Ovulids mostly have smooth shiny shells with a very long aperture and a very low or invisible spire. The shell can be pyriform (shaped like a pear), ovate (egg-shaped) to sub-ovate, cylindrical or lanceolate (lance-shaped). The shell is often monochromatic white, but in some species the shell is pink or reddish. In a few species of ovulids, the shell quite closely resembles that of cowries.
A hairless, slim climber with bulbous roots and lignescented base, its leaves are stalked with 2 to 6 cm long petioles. The leaf blade is ovate to circular in outline, 3 to 10 cm long and 6 to 9 cm wide. It is divided into five to seven segments, these are lanceolate, ovate or elliptic, entire and pointed at the tip and base. Often pseudo side-leaves are formed.
Centrosema virginianum is a perennial herbaceous vine growing procumbently or twining to a height approaching two meters. It has alternate pinnately divided leaves, 3 to 10 centimeters long. Leaflets are lanceolate or ovate, 1 to 4 cm long, Stipules are often deciduous, and mostly setaceous. There is a wide range of leaflet forms, from linear to ovate to oblong or lanceolate-oblong, acute or acuminate at the apex.
The aperture is narrow and ovate with a white interior. The outer lip is thin. The siphonal canal is short and slightly recurved. Melvill J.C. & Standen R. (1903).
The oblique interstices are smooth. The body whorl is subcostate. The base of the shell is transversely striated. The white aperture is ovate, becoming blunt at the top.
Its fertile lemma is ovate, keelless, membranous and is long. The floret callus is hairy with rhachilla internodes being pilose. The flowers have three stamens which are long.
The base of the shell is plane. The flat whorls are margined below and ciliate-fimbriate above. The aperture ovate-lanceolate. The outer lip is callous-margined inside.
The shell grows to a height of 3.8 mm. The elongate shell has a pointed ovate shape. It is rather thin, smooth, and shining. The spire is conic.
And other lacunae are found throughout the translation. EA 86 is an extremely ovate, pillow-shaped (thick) clay tablet. It is located in the British Museum, no. 29804.
Stipules are red, usually about long. Leaf blades are ovate to elliptic, up to long. Figs are red, in diameter, borne in the axils of the leaves.S.S. Chang.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is slender, slightly curved and provided with a fold at its insertion.
Schizolaena microphylla grows as a tree up to tall, exceptionally up to . Its leaves are elliptic to ovate or roundish in shape and are hairy on the underside.
These tiny epiphytic and rarely lithophytic orchids lack pseudobulbs. The erect, thick, leathery leaf is elliptic-ovate in shape. The aerial roots seem like fine hairs.Luer, C.A. (1996).
Measurements are only known from the holotype. It has a length of 1 mm. Its overall appearance is ovate, very convex, and nitid. The upperside is pitchy black.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angleis obtuse. The outer lip is thin, rendered angular by the keels. The columella is slender, decidedly curved, reinforced by the base.
The upper surfaces of the leaves are dark- green and the lower surfaces, pale-green. There are 8-14 lateral veins on each side of the midrib and between these the venation is reticulate. This plant is very like Fontainea picrosperma, but differs in that it has no glands in the leaf lamina; the disk is irregularly lobed and not as high as that of F. picrosperma (c 0.6 mm high vs 0.7-1 mm); the calyx of the male flower has four lobes (versus 2-3 lobes); the male calyx lobes are ovate/broadly ovate versus triangular ovate; and the stamens are joined for 1–1.5 mm versus 0.5 mm for F. picrosperma..
Some very faint spirals show elsewhere in certain lights. The periphery is rounded. The base of the shell is convex and subperforate. The aperture is small and narrowly ovate.
The periphery of the body whorl is well rounded. The base of the shell is slightly prolonged, and well rounded. The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute.
Shells of Poirieria zelandica can reach a size of . These shells are roughly fusiforms, with long, straight spines. The aperture is ovate and large. The outer lip is thin.
The size of the shell attains 6 mm. The white shell has a subconical shape and is narrowly umbilicated. The shell contains four whorls. The aperture is ovate-triangular.
The shell is internal, solid, ovate, convex above, flatly concave beneath, with a small apex, not coiled, lying on the right side as seen from about near the end.
P. mizellei differs from P. woodi by having a comparatively small vaginal sclerite with two small chambers. The vaginal sclerite of P. woodi has a larger single ovate chamber.
Petals twice as long as sepals. Sepals 5, ovate, acute, 2 x 1.5 mm. Petals 5, elliptic, 3.5 x 2 mm. Disc large, cushion- like, with 5 globose lobes.
The four whorls are ventricose with a bluntly angular periphery. The base of the shell is rounded and widely perforated. The aperture is ovate. The thin columella is arcuated.
The shell size varies between 3 mm and 6 mm. The short and solid shell has an oval or ovate shape. The spire is conic. The apex is obtuse.
The leaves are ovate with serrated margins. The flowers have white petals. The stamens are equal to the length of styles. The flowering period extends from April through May.
The height of the shell attains 2½ mm, its largest diameter 4½ mm. The small shell has an ovate shape. Its back is convex. The shell is transversely striated.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved, slightly revolute, and provided with a fold at its insertion.
The fruits produced by this plant are oblong or linear and are known as legumes or pods. Fruits contain ovate or flat seeds which are separated into 2 valves.
Originally considered a subgenus of Guraleus, it was separarated by Charles Henley in 1922 because of these special characteristics: rounded shoulder, ovate contour, shorter spire, and a smoother sculpture.
The perianth is glabrous or puberulent outside and densely pubescent inside. The purplish- black fruit is an ovate, ellipsoidal or subglobose drupe. The perianth-cup in fruit is cupuliform.
The impressed grooves are crossed by numerous slender axial threads. The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, pinched in in the middle.
There is also a small transverse-linear pale golden- metallic mark on the end of the cell. The dark fuscous hindwings are ovate- triangular, the termen is slightly rounded.
Leaves are broadly ovate, almost round, usually in whorls of 4, with prominent veins. Flowers are in a widely branching terminal panicle. Fruits are green, with long hooked hairs.
It is a shrub that grows to 2 m in height, with leaves that are ovate, elliptic-ovate or obovate to oblanceolate, 1.5–5 by 0.5–3 cm in size. Flowers range from white to dark red. Some species of Rhododendron simsii are poisonous due to presence of grayanotoxin. Poon WT, Ho CH, Yip KL, Lai CK, Cheung KL, Sung RY, Chan AY, Mak TW Grayanotoxin poisoning from Rhododendron simsii in an infant.
The shell can grow to a length of , and the live snail can weigh about .Tibia insulaechorab Gastropoda Stromboidea The shell is elongated ovate, with a short body whorl and a narrowly conical spire with ten or more whorls. The smaller whorls are finely sculptured with transverse ridges; the larger whorls are nearly smooth. The large ovate aperture is whitish, contracted at the top by a transverse fold of the left lip.
Vitis heyneana is known by its two subspecies: V. h. subsp. heyneana (autonym), and V. h. subsp. ficifolia. In Chinese, the former is called mao pu tao, meaning wool grape; it has leaves that range in shape from oval, ovate-oblong, to ovate-quinquangular. The latter subspecies is called sang ye pu tao, or mulberry-leaf grape, and its leaves are usually trilobate to cleft (a few leaves interspersed on a vine will be undivided).
Staminate flowers with sepals 2.2-2.5 x 1.6-2.2 mm., keeled, gibbous at the base, broadly ovate, obtuse, the margins membranous; petals connate for 0.2-0.5 mm., the free lobes 2.8-3 x 2.8-3.2 mm., ovate or elliptic, acute, sometimes with hooded apex; stamens 6, uniseriate, the filaments connate for 0.2-0.5 mm., 2.8-3.2 mm. long, anthers 2.1-2.3 x 1 mm.; pistillode 2.2-2.3 mm., columnar, 0.8–1 mm.
Larger species of Tessaratomidae are known informally as giant shield bugs, giant stink bugs, or inflated stink bugs, but they generally do not have a collective common name and are referred to mostly as tessaratomids. Tessaratomids are ovate to elongate-ovate bugs. They range in size from the smallest members of the tribe Sepinini at , to the large Amissus atlas of tribe Tessaratomini at . They are generally quite large and usually exceed in length.
The lateral sepals spathulate to ovate-lanceolate and petals ovate usually with a single darker pink stripe. The labellum is prominently trilobed with a raised yellow plate near the base of the middle lobe, yellow at the base, with rows of white calli extending from either side of the plate and the lateral lobes suffused with pink, long. Column is curved over the raised central plate, yellow with prominent white lateral wings.
Rumex cuneifolius (also known as Argentine dock or wedgeleaf dock) is a perennial stoloniferous herbaceous flowering dicot in the family Polygonacae. It has obovate or obovate-elepitic leaf morphology with margins entire or crisped. It has terminal and axillary paniculate inflorescences and articulated/swollen pedicels. It yields between 5 and 20 flowers whorl while maintaining ovate- deltoid/ovate-triangular morphology with a truncate/cuneate base for its inner tepals with margins entire.
Leaves of Acer ferrignoi are simple in structure, with perfectly actinodromus vein structure and range from ovate to widely ovate in shape. The base of each leaf is rounded, with the petiole ranging up to . The leaves are dissected into three lobes, with the lateral lobes being one half to three quarters as long as the median lobe. The median lobe is generally triangular in outline and the two lateral lobes are narrow and triangular.
The smooth, ivory white shell has an oblong-ovate shape. It is longitudinally five-angled. It shows compressed ribs at the angles, pointed at the upper part of the ribs.
The scales are ovate on A. bulbiferum, but narrower and almost always drawn out into thin threadlike points in A. gracillimum (filiform apices). The selected lectotype was Dannevirke, New Zealand.
The aperture is oblong- ovate. The outer lip is thin and slightly sinuous. The siphonal canal is wide and short and not dorsally notched. The anal sinus is U-shaped.
The ovate shell has a subconical shape. It is strongly symmetrical, porcellaneous, and thin. The blunt apex is curved backward, downward, and to the left. The shell has no epidermis.
They are elegantly ribbed lengthwise (12–14 in body whorl), transversely regularly lirate. The ribs are angular, smooth, shining. The lirae are broad and flattened. The aperture is narrowly ovate.
The length of the shell attains 10 mm, its diameter 4 mm. The short shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. It has a pale reddish color. It contains six whorls.
Betula humilis is a species of birch that can be found in Europe and Asia. The species have an ovate leaves that are long and is related to Betula fruticosa.
The ovate bracteoles are persistent. It flowers from summer to autumn and the yellow flowers are about 20 mm long. The pods are smooth with minute ridging along the suture.
The height of the shell attains 3 mm, its diameter 9 mm. The shell is patella-shaped, ovate-oblong and symmetrical. The apex is subcentral. The shell is radiately ribbed.
The body whorl is rounded at the periphery. The ovate aperture slightly exceeds one-third the total length. It is brilliantly iridescent within, and sulcate. The greenish peristome is thickened.
Melhania polyneura grows as a herb up to tall. The oblong or ovate leaves are tomentose and measure up to long. Inflorescences are four-flowered. The flowers have yellow petals.
It produces a slender, purplish stem up to tall. Leaves are up to long, biternate or bipinnate, with ovate, doubly toothed leaflets. Flowers are green.Mathias, Mildred Esther, & Constance, Lincoln. 1973.
All the above-ground vegetative parts are covered with finely branched hairs. Leaves are sessile (without ), ovate to elliptical, up to 4 mm (0.16 inches) long. Petals 4, white, narrow.
The base is white, with a pink central area. The 5½ whorls are convex. The body whorl is wide and narrowly rounded at the periphery. The ovate aperture is oblique.
Leaves are ovate to elliptic in shape. 4 to 10 cm long, and 1.2 to 4.5 cm wide. Opposite on the stem, with smooth edges. Thick, not glossy and hairless.
Gerres subfasciatus, the common silver belly roach, ovate silver biddy,, common silverbiddy or Southern silver biddy, is a species of mojarra native to Indian and Pacific coastal waters of Australia.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is fractured. The columella is short, strong, curved, and revolute, provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved, decidedly revolute and provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
The long, lateral petals also end in a thickened, yellow club-shaped tip. The shorter, smooth lip is ovate. It shows the same variations of dark red with magenta dots.
Female flowers have a calyx with sessile laciniae. The ovary is appressed, broadly ovate, apiculate, and denticulate. The style column very short. Sepals of male flowers are subulate and entire.
The length of the acuminate-ovate, white shell attains 7.5 mm, its diameter mm. It contains 7 whorls. The aperture is narrow. The outer lip is thickened and slightly sinuate.
The height of the small, milky-white shell attains 6 mm, its width 2.25 mm. It has an ovate-fusiform shape. It contains 8 whorls. The body whorl is bicarinate.
The shell is elongate and ovate with a sharp apex. The aperture is narrow at the posterior notch but wider at the base. The columella is slightly thickened and twisted.
The lanceolate to somewhat ovate inflorescence is long. The glumes are long. The lemma is long, occasionally with a straight awn measuring between . The palea is either absent or vestigial.
The length of the shell attains 4 mm, its diameter 1.3 mm. The dark brown, ovate-elongate shell has a fusiform shape. The apex is obtuse. The shell contains six whorls.
The shape of the shell is ovate-conic. The shell is thick and smooth. The smooth shell is unique in the tribe Jullieniini. The outer lip is thick with growth lines.
The thin, transparent, glassy, white shell is very small. Its height reaches 1½ mm. It has an ovate shape, and is rather depressed. It consists of 3 rather rapidly increasing whorls.
During ripening the sepals enlarge and cover partly the aggregate fruit. Petals white, ovate, corolla 1.5 – 1.8 cm in diameter, stamens 26 – 30. Anthers oblong, 5 – 10 x shorter than filaments.
Memecylon grande is a species of plant in the family Melastomataceae seen in Indo-Malesia. It is a shrub or small tree with ovate leaves, blue flowers and fruits are berries.
It contains six prominent spiral lirae and is minutely lirate around the umbilicus. The ovate aperture is transversely dilated, and silvery within. The peristome is acute. The white columella is thickened.
The ovate lamina is 1 × 0.8 m in size and 4- to 5-pinnatifid. The small (0.5–1 mm wide), oval sori are borne singly in the sinuses between the lobes.
Leaflets of sub species sambucifolia are toothed, ovate in shape. The other sub species leaves are not toothed. Leaflets 2 to 20 cm long. Leaves glossy green above, dull glaucous below.
The whorl is somewhat constricted in front of it. The sculpture consists only of faint incremental lines. The base of the shell is rounded. The aperture is rounded ovate, slightly oblique.
Leaves 6 to 16 cm long, 2 to 4 cm wide, lanceolate to ovate lanceolate in shape. Leaf stem 5 to 15 mm long. Oil dots present but difficult to distinguish.
Gonothecae (reproductive structures) develop on the stem and main branches; both male and female gonathecae are ovate and covered with rows of spines and appear identical. The colony is typically yellowish.
The corolla tip is ovate. On their outer side, the petals are red and violet with black and red spots, the inside is usually yellowish. Its chromosome count is 2n = 40.
The carpels have hair and are fused together. There are five carpels and one pistil. The petals are rounded. The color of the sepals is green to brown; they are ovate.
The kernels of T. comactum erinaceum are red, short, soft, ovate, humped and curved. Its germ is small and its crease medium to wide and shallow. Its cheeks are usually angular.
The shell is minute, thin, fragile, colorless to translucent, and usually less than 5 mm in size. The overall shape is ovate, pear-shaped, and bulbous. There is a sunken apex.
The shell is minute, thin, fragile, colorless to translucent, and usually less than 5 mm in size. The overall shape is ovate, pear-shaped, and bulbous. There is a sunken apex.
Leaves can be ovate, lanceolate, elliptic or oval in shape. 4 to 13 cm long, 2.5 to 6 cm wide. Oil dots not or seldom visible. Leaves three veined in appearance.
The five whorls are convex, slightly excavated at the sutures. They are nearly smooth and obsoletely spirally lirate. The large body whorl is convex below. The ovate aperture is silvery within.
The fruit is red, ovate, with thin flesh, ripening in July. Chloroplast DNA sequencing has shown that its closest relative is Prunus dictyoneura, at least as far as chloroplasts are concerned.
The ovate-oblong shell is shaped like a Haliotis. Its back all is over striated. Its color is white, clouded with reddish brown. The spire is somewhat prominent with angular whorls.
The aperture is rather large, broadly ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is slender, very strongly curved and reflected, not reinforced by the base.
The leaves are membranous, fuscous, and glabrous. The leaf shape is oblong- ovate to oblong-subelliptical. The base is obtuse, with the apex shortly cuspidate-acuminate. Margins are bluntly crenate-serrate.
The subsutural region is not contrastingly dark. The base of the body whorl is without a row of pustules. The aperture is oblong-ovate. The thin outer lip is slightly curved.
After flowering linear seed pods that are raised over and constricted between each seed that are in length and wide. The dark brown seeds with an elliptic to oblong-ovate shape.
Prunus bucharica is a tall shrub or small tree between 1.5 and 7m tall. Prunus bucharica differs from all other almonds in having broadly ovate leaves and a completely smooth endocarp.
With the ripe fruit, the stems are thicker and corky-warty. The light to dark green colored calyxis is 18 to 32 mm long and has a diameter of 6 to 10 mm. It is tubular or rarely tubular-bellied or puffy, with glandular trichomes or completely hairless, firmly membranous to almost leathery. The calyx teeth are 3 to 8 mm long, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, they rest on the petal, the tips are pointed to tapered.
Magnolia delavayi's flower Magnolia delavayi is a small evergreen tree in height with gray to grayish-black bark. The leaves are ovate to ovate-oblong, 10–20 cm (rarely to 32 cm) long and 5–10 cm (rarely to 20 cm) broad, tough, leathery, with a 5–7 cm petiole. The flowers are fragrant, cup-shaped, 15–25 cm broad, with nine thick, creamy white to pink tepals; stamens ca. 210 and ovoid gynoecium with ca.
Polyarrhena stricta is an ascending or erect low shrublet of about high with the outer whorl of involucral bracts hairless in the lower third or with some stiff hairs, narrowly ovate or lancet-shaped ascending leaves. P. reflexa subsp. reflexa is an ascending or erect high shrublet of about high with the outer whorl of involucral bracts hairless in the lower third or with some stiff hairs, broadly ovate reflexed leaves of long. P. reflexa subsp.
This species was originally described as Amnicola antipodarum in 1843 by John Edward Gray: > Inhabits New Zealand, in fresh water. Shell ovate, acute, subperforated > (generally covered with a brown earthy coat); whorls rather rounded, mouth > ovate, axis 3 lines; operculum horny and subspiral: variety, spire rather > longer, whorls more rounded. This species is like Paludina nigra of Quoy and > Gaimard, but the operculum is more spiral. Quoy described the operculum as > concentric, but figured it subspiral.
The pinnate leaf blades usually have three or five, rarely seven pinna leaflet. The leaflets are at a length of 2.5 to 6 centimeters and a width of 1 to 3 centimeters wide ovate or ovate-oblong with weak-rounded or broad-wedge-shaped base, more or less long tapered upper end and sharply sawn edge. The leaf top is shiny dark green and leaves are almost bare. The stipulesare fused with the petiole on most of their length.
Salvia hylocharis is a perennial plant that is native to Xizang and Yunnan provinces in China, growing on grassy slopes, forest margins, and streamsides at elevation. S. hylocharis grows on one or two ascending to erect stems to tall. The leaves are ovate-triangular to ovate-hastate, typically ranging in size from long and approximately wide, though they sometimes are larger. Inflorescences are racemes or raceme-panicles up to , with a yellow corolla that is , occasionally smaller.
They are either entirely ovate or only ovate in the upper half and infundibular below. They often narrow just below the peristome. Terrestrial pitchers grow to 10 cm in height by 6 cm in width. A pair of fringed wings (≤10 mm wide) usually runs down the ventral surface of the trap, bearing filaments up to 8 mm long, although these wings may be absent altogether or only extend for a portion of the trap's length.
Salvia pauciflora is a perennial plant that is native to Yunnan province in China, growing in and around forests at elevation. It grows on 2–4 slender unbranched stems with widely spaced leaves. The leaves are broadly ovate to ovate-triangular, typically ranging in size from long and wide. Inflorescences are of racemes or panicles that are , with a corolla that is purplish red or purple-white (rarely purplish), with white spotting on the lower lip.
Close-up showing the fine hairs on the leaves and petals of C. trachelium on the GR 5 by the river Doubs Campanula trachelium is a perennial plant with one or more unbranched, often reddish, square-edged stems that are roughly hairy. The leaves grow alternately up the stems. The lower leaves are long- stalked and ovate with a heart-shaped base. The upper leaves have no stalks and are ovate or lanceolate, hairy with toothed margins.
Lianas with oblong-lanceolate to ovate leaves. The flowers are situated in axillary or terminal racemes, rarely solitary, with white corollas, and are strongly zygomorphic (bilaterally symmetrical), the bottom petal being slightly longer than the others and more weakly differentiated, and with a very long spur. The stamens have free filaments, with the lowest two being calcarate (spurred) and possessing a large dorsal connective appendage that is entire and oblong-ovate. In the gynoecium, the style is filiform (threadlike).
The pectinate leaves are twisted at their petioles in opposite directions on each side of the shoot causing the adaxial sides of the leaves face up on one side of the shoot and down on the other side. The leaf blades are most commonly 10-18 millimeters long and 3-5 millimeters wide. They are ovate-lanceolate or ovate- elliptic in shape with visible midribs and entire margins. Stomata can be found on both surfaces of the leaf.
The pectinate leaves are twisted at their petioles in opposite directions on each side of the shoot causing the adaxial sides of the leaves face up on one side of the shoot and down on the other side. The leaf blades are usually 15-25 millimeters long, 3-5 millimeters wide and ovate-lanceolate or ovate-elliptic in shape. Juvenile leaves are often larger. The narrow midrib of the leaf is conspicuous on the abaxial side.
The species is a climbing wintergreen plant. It has few or no thorns. Its leaves are ovate or cordate, almost as broad as long. The flowers are unisexual, in a simple umbel.
The leaves of I. imperati are more linear or lanceolate while those of I. pes- caprae tend to be more circular or ovate. It is considered an invasive species in some places.
The lower portion of the basal whorl and the columella are strongly granulated. The spire is sharp. The aperture is elongately ovate. The outer lip is thickened and varied behind, dentate within.
The ovate, conical shell is thick, smooth, and pointed at its summit. Length varies between and . The spire is composed of six or seven slightly distinct whorls. The suture is moderately deep.
Pistillate catkins at maturity are 8 to 20 cm long with rotund-ovate, tricarpellate subsessile fruits 5 to 8 mm long. Each capsule contains many minute seeds with long, white, cottony hairs.
The shape of the shell is broadly ovate. The shell has 4.5-5.3 whorls. There is a strong axial sculpture on the shell. The width of the shell is 2.4-3.2 mm.
All of the stamens are fertile. The filament is 0.35mm long and swollen. The anthers are linear and 3.2mm long. The apical glands are 0.26 mm in length and ovate in shape.
The alternate leaves are ovate, long, and have petioles. The leaves are shiny, hairless, and green on the top, but are a dull light green with rust-colored veins on the bottom.
P. sanchezi is a small snail that has a maximum height of and ovate to narrow conical shell. It has a short, strongly tapering penial filament that differentiates it from other Pyrgulopsis.
The anal sulcus is wide, moderately deep, close to the suture. The spiral sculpture is feeble. The axial sculpture consists of moderately strong riblets. The operculum is wide, ovate, with apical nucleus.
It grows as an erect shrub to 3 metres high. Leaves 5 to 12 cm long, 1 to 5 cm wide. Elliptic in shape, occasionally lanceolate or ovate. Flowers form on panicles.
The thick, solid shell is imperforate, elevated-conical, granulated or spirally ribbed. The periphery is rounded or obtusely angular. The small aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thick and crenulated within.
Leningrad: Kolos. 376 pp Melilotus wolgicus is a biennial herb with a large taproot. Stems can reach a height of , frequently branching above ground. Leaves are trifoliate with ovate to lanceolate leaflets.
The aperture is short and ovate. The sinus is rather conspicuous. The color of the shell is dark chesnut-brown within and without. The lip is yellowish, crossed with fine brown lines.
The aperture is irregularly ovate. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is strong, rendered decidedly sinuous by the axial ribs. The columella is short, decidedly twisted, strongly curved and reflected.
This herb belongs to family Verbenaceae/Lamiaceae. Leaves are ovate, opposite, deltoid, hairy from below and wavy. The flowers are in small rounded terminal panicle. The flowers bloom in August to February.
The white, shining shell has a smooth sculpture. Its length measures 4–5 mm. The four whorls of the teleoconch are rather convex, subangulated at the suture. The aperture is ovate-elliptic.
The yellowish-white shell is moderately large and measures 3.9 mm. It is elongate-ovate. The nuclear whorls are decollated. The six post- nuclear whorls are well rounded, appressed at the summit.
This agnostoid is strongly effaced. The cephalon lacks a border furrow. The glabella and small basal lobes are weakly defined. The rhachis is circular to ovate, clearly defined by deep axial furrows.
The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle acute;. The outer lip is very heavy. The columella is strong, flexuose with a strong, broad fold somewhat anterior to its insertion.
The height of the small, white shell attains 2 mm. The shell has an oblong-ovate shape. It is solid, smooth, and shining. The spire is moderately elevated, and rather rapidly tapering.
The length of the shell attains 7 mm, its diameter 3 mm. (Original description) The small shell is tumidly ovate. It is whitish, thin opaque. It contains 6 whorls, convex, subangulate, neatly keeled.
The subsequent whorls show lirate ribs. They are spirally crossed by denser lirae forming gemmules in the junctions. The white aperture is ovate-oblong with a glassy interior. The outer lip is thin.
The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is sharp and arcuate. The sinus is deep and not very wide. The author has only seen three specimens, the type here described being the largest.
The length of the shell varies between 20 mm and 43 mm. The ovate, conical shell is somewhat ventricose. It is of a pale fawn color. The spire is composed of eight whorls.
The other whorls are also ornamented with three folds. The spaces between them bear fine transverse striae. The aperture is white, ovate and elongated. The thick columella is rounded, white and almost straight.
Picea critchfieldii had ovate, winged seeds. The seeds varied in size from about 3.5-4.5 mm in length and 2.6-2.8 mm in width with wings spanning about 8–11 mm in length.
The aperture is narrowly ovate. The outer lip is simple and blunt. The base of the shell rounds into a strongly twisted short pillar. The body of the shell has no visible callus.
Stachyurus praecox var. matsuzakii is a deciduous shrub. It has a height of 5 meters, which is higher than other Stachyurus praecox varieties. The ovate-shaped leaves are thin, and they grow alternatively.
The aperture is irregularly subquadrate-ovate. The peristome is simple, its margins joined by a very thin callus. The thin columellar margin is filiform, and subarcuate. The basal and outer margins are subacute.
The 3-4 apical whorls are ochreous and minutely decussate, the subsequent whorls are impressed at the suture. The wide aperture is ovate. The siphonal canal is short. The outer lip is thin.
The ovate shell is rather depressed. The small spire is scarcely elevated and narrowly, profoundly umbilicate. The 2½ convex whorls are decussated by elevated radiating and concentric striae. The oblique aperture is suborbicular.
Pelargonium odoratissimum is a small, spreading species which only grows up to 30 cm high and 60 cm wide. It has small pale pink flowers and its leaves are waxy, green and ovate.
Panicle is inflorescent and is contracted, linear, secund and is long. Peduncle is scabrous above. The panicles have filiform and pubescent pedicels which are hairy above. The spikelets are ovate and are long.
The leaves appear unusually late in the season, in May. They are usually green or yellowish green, alternate, broadly ovate, palmately veined, and long. They have three distinct lobes with coarsely-toothed margins.
The size of the shell varies between 6 mm and 17 mm. The polished shell is ear-shaped with an ovate-oblong form.,The back is equally convex. The left side is striated.
The ovate, fusiform, shell is short and stout. The spire is about the length of the aperture. The columella is straight, very short, axis impervious. The siphonal canal is very short and wide.
The shape of the shell is ovate-conic. The apex is acute and violet-black in colour. The umbilicus of the shell is very narrow. There are fine spiral lines on the shell.
Sutures are well impressed. The aperture is rather large, ovate, within whitish and banded. The columella is strongly indented, base regularly rounded, without any sinus. The width of the shell is 10 mm.
The leaves of the adzuki bean are trifoliate, pinnate and arranged alternately along the stem on a long petiole. Leaflets are ovate and about 5–10 cm long and 5–8 cm wide.
The size of the shell attains 24 mm. The imperforate shell has an ovate-conic shape. Its color pattern is yellowish brown, or yellow clouded with orange-brown. The elevated spire is acute.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded. The spiral sculpture consisting of incised lines only. The umbilicus is bounded by a slender thread. The aperture is elongate-ovate.
The base of the body whorl is prolonged, and well rounded. it is marked by six equally spaced and equally strongly incised spiral lines. The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute.
It is a deciduous large shrub or small tree growing to 7–10 m tall. The leaves are variable in shape, obovate, elliptic-ovate or broadly ovate, 10–24 cm long and 5–14 cm broad, glossy dark green above, paler and slightly downy below, and with a bluntly acute apex. The flowers are creamy white, 6-7.6 cm wide, with the 9-12 tepals all about the same size; they are fragrant, nodding or pendent, and have a rounded, globose profile.
It is an evergreen, climbing shrub with thick, thorny stems and drooping branches that are glabrous or sparsely hairy. The leaves have a 0.3 to 1 centimeter long stem. The leaf blade is ovate to ovate- lanceolate, pointed or briefly pointed, 5 to 13 centimeters long and 3 to 6 centimeters wide, sparsely fluffy hairy on the underside and bald on the top. The leaf-like bracts are purple, oblong or elliptical, pointed, 2.5 to 3.5 inches long and about 2 inches wide.
To a botanist, these types of plants are known as hemiepiphytes. This species is not known to climb to extreme heights and is typically seen at only 3 to 3.5 meters on the side of a host tree (approximately 10 to 11.5 feet). But what the Philodendron lacks in apparent climbing ability, it makes up for with leaf size. Adult specimens of Philodendron maximum are found with leaf blades that are narrowly ovate to sagittate or ovate to triangularly sagittate.
Solanum laxum, commonly known as potato vine, potato climber or jasmine nightshade, is an evergreen vine in the family Solanaceae. It is native to South America and commonly grown as an ornamental garden plant. The ovate or ovate-lanceolate leaves are 30 to 50 mm long and 15 to 25 mm wide. The white or pale blue flowers appear in groups of around 20 in branched inflorescences, produced in profusion in the spring but also sporadically at other times of the year.
Commonly known as 'Ceylon box wood' or 'malakafe', it is an unarmed, smooth shrub 3 to 4 meters or more in height. Leaves are extremely variable, ovate, elliptic, ovate or somewhat rounded, 5 to 15 centimeters long, 1.5 to 10 centimeters wide, leathery, shining above, and usually pointed at both ends. Flowers are white, with very slender stalks, 5 to 10 millimeters long, and borne in compressed, short-stalked cymes. Calyx is cut off at the end or obscurely toothed.
The young branches are light brown, the distance between the internodes is about 1 cm. The leaves vary greatly in their shape, they are almost sessile, the petiole is only 1 to 4 mm long, glabrous and dark purple colored. The leaf blade is 4 to 9 cm long and 2.2 to 5.5 cm wide, elliptic to oblong or ovate to reverse ovate. To the front, the leaf is pointed, blunted or rounded, occasionally provided with a small tip or bulged.
Kritsky, Bakenhaster & Adams (2015) wrote that Pseudorhabdosynochus woodi differs from Pseudorhabdosynochus mizellei by possessing an ovate chamber in the vaginal sclerite (versus two chambers of P. mizellei small and lacking a definitive shape). It most closely resembles P. justinella and P. bunkleywilliamsae by possessing a short robust ventral bar and a vaginal sclerite having a sigmoid distal tube. The chamber of the vaginal sclerite is small and ovate in P. woodi (larger and subspherical in P. justinella and P. bunkleywilliamsae).
The sepals (~1.2 mm long) are triangularly ovate, and the petals (~3–4 mm long and almost as broad) are white and stiff, ovate or suborbicular, and are clawed at their base, giving it its epithet tenuipes which equates roughly with "slender foot" or "slender claw". Each flower has 15 stamens, which are shorter than its petals, and 2 styles that are shorter than or equal to the stamens. The ovary is covered at the apex with very short, fine, erect hairs.
In general, this tree can grow up to 10–15 metres tall. It has rough and short branches which can stretch to 15 decimetres in diameter. The shape of apical leaf is broad-ovate to ovate-oblong or rounded with smooth margin. The yellow-green leaves are thick and glossy and their width can be 5-12 cm long by 4-5cm wide; one edge is usually a little longer than the other edge at the base - one of the typical characteristics.
Centrosema brasilianum is a prostrate-trailing to twining, perennial, herbaceous legume. Amongst different studies, some erect and semi- erect forms were identified along with adventitious roots on trailing stems. Leaves are trifoliate, leaflets elliptical-oblong, sometimes ovate, 3.3-6.6 cm long, 1.5-3.6 cm wide. Flower racemes consists of 2-5 flowers, or sometimes solitary. Bracteoles either are glabrous or pubescent, ranging from 3–13 mm long, 12–17 mm long and 5–10 mm wide, ovate and flat or cupped.
Illicium peninsulare tree is a Small tree, with height up to 10 m, and girth up to 60 cm. The Leaves are Leathery, stiff and tough, but somewhat flexible. They are elliptic, in shape with a midrib impressed above and very prominent below, apex acute to short acuminate, and base attenuate. The Petioles are 11-20 mm long, grooved on adaxial surface. Flowers are axillary on young growth, generally solitary and the pedicels are 1-7 mm long at anthesis. The Perianth parts are 15-25 mm, yellowish white in color. The outermost perianth parts broadly ovate, reduced, 2-2.9-3.5 by 2.8-3.5-4.8 mm and the largest perianth parts ovate, 6.5-7.9-9.6 by 5-6.2-7 mm. The innermost perianth parts ovate, 3.5 by 1.6 mm.
The length of the shell attains 4.5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. (Original description) The abbreviate, white shell is ovate. The short spire is transversely, regularly finely granulosely ridged. Longitudinally it is indistinctly striate.
The ovate aperture is narrow and measures about half the total length. The outer lip is incrassate and is arched forward at its top. The inner lip is simple. The columella is slightly callous.
The shell grows to a length of 22 mm. The ovate, rather dark brown shell has a squat, fusiform shape. The eight whorls are slightly convex. The spiral sculpture shows shallow, well- spaced grooves.
The spiral lirae are feeble. The aperture is oblong-ovate. The columella is upright and shows a slight callus on top. The outer lip is arcuate with a wide sinus and not deeply emarginate.
Males have the termen of the forewing slightly concave in the middle. Hindwing broadly ovate. Upperside very pale Van Dyke brown, darkening outwardly. Forewings and hindwings with subterminal and terminal series of white spots.
Eremolaena darainensis grows as a tree up to tall. Its branches are red to gray brown and lenticellate. The bark is smooth. Its ovate to obovate leaves are chartaceous and measure up to long.
The aperture is oblong-ovate. The anal sinus is large and U-shaped. The siphonal canal is short and moderately wide and is not dorsally notched. The callus on the columellar lip is thick.
The length of the shell varies between 8 mm and 15 mm. The small shell is ovate, subglobular, and spined. The spire is conical and pointed. It is composed of six or seven whorls.
The sutures are scarcely impressed. The columella descendis in a curve, extending into a thick, projecting callus which joins the lip above. The peristome is sinuous and slightly reflexed. The aperture is narrowly ovate.
They are simple leaf types with pinnate venation. The leaves are ovate and range in length from . The breadth of the leaves ranges from . The leaves are evergreen so they are present year round.
Cinchona officinalis is a shrub or tree with rugose bark and branchlets covered in minute hairs. Stipules lanceolate or oblong, acute or obtuse, glabrous. Leaves lanceolate to elliptic or ovate, usually about . long and .
Hypericum aegypticum grows up to two meters tall in the wild. However, some forms grow to only 15 centimeters tall in cultivation. It flowers during the summer. The sepals are ovate with pointed tips.
Novon 8:244-246. Calycolpus australis is a shrub up to 2 m high. Leaves are ovate to lanceolate, thick and leathery, up to 53 mm long. Flowers are about 3–4 cm across.
The spire consists of 3½ whorls with the last one large and very convex. The base of the shell is oblique. The large aperture is very obliquely ovate. The periphery is thin and sharp.
Leaves are simple, leathery, and ovate to round, with toothed margins sometimes tinged with pink to red. Leaves are unusual with broad holly-like leaves, compared to its relatives which have pinnately divided leaves.
Leaves are long. Leaves are ovate overall, but finely pinnately dissected into segments like parsley leaves. Leaves are strongly aromatic when crushed. "Terebinthus" means "like-turpentine", referring to the scented oils in the plant.
The body whorl is distinctly angled at the periphery. The base of the shell is flatly convex. The sutures are well impressed, sometimes subcanaliculate on the lower whorls. The oblique aperture is ovate-rhoniboidal.
P. perforata is a small snail that has a maximum height of and a broad ovate conical shell. It has a larger distal lobe and smaller gland on the penis compared to other Pyrgulopsis.
Form follows function: morphological diversification and alternative trapping strategies in carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plants. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate and has a cordate base.
The ovate-conic shell is perforate, solid, and shining. The sutures are impressed. The 5-6 whorls are convex, rounded, and spirally lirate. The body whorl exceeds the balance of the shell in length.
The size of the shell varies between 100 mm and 181 mm. The thin shell is ovate-globose and ventricose. The spire is generally short. It is composed of six whorls, slightly flattened above.
Leaves are unequal paired; stalk 2–3.5 cm, prickly; leaf blade ovate-oblong, 4–9 × 2–4.5 cm, prickly along veins, margin usually 5–9-lobed or pinnately parted, lobes unequal, sinuate, apex acute.
Schizolaena pectinata grows as a tree up to tall. Its elliptic to ovate leaves measure up to long. The small flowers are white or pink. The involucre of the flowers is fleshy and laciniate.
Zookeys 301 25-49. These snails have ovate-cylindrical shells generally measuring about 5 to 10 millimeters. The center of diversity of the genus is in the Alps. Some species live in alpine climates.
The leaves are opposite, simple, entire, broadly ovate or elliptical, 5 to 10 cm long. Round or drawn into a blunt point, or sometimes notched. Oil dots small and numerous. Leaf stalks very short.
The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is very oblique The columellar fold is decidedly posterior to the middle of the columella.
The aperture is broadly ovate. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin. The columella is very slender, strongly curved, revolute, and provided with a deep fold a little below its insertion.
Its leaves are odd-pinnate, coriaceous, 15–50 cm long, comprising 9-17 leaflets, each of which is 3–15 cm long by 1–5 cm wide, and ovate to elliptic-lanceolate in shape.
The shell is of medium size, measuring 4 mm. The shell is narrowly elongate-ovate, umbilicated, yellowish-white. The nuclear whorls are decollated. The five post-nuclear whorls lie rather high between the sutures.
The sutures are strongly contracted. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter slightly inflated, marked like the spire. The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute.
The limb of its throat is deep green in colour but can sometimes be with purple coloured outside margin and pale green inside. It is also triangular to ovate and is long and wide.
The ovoid buds are rounded at the top. The calyx prefloration is quincuncial. The ovate sepals which are rounded at the tip are 1.2 to 1.5. mm long and finely pubescent on the back.
They are spirally cingulate, the penultimate whorls with 8 cinguli. The body whorl is elongated, rounded in the middle, appressed below the suture, convex beneath. The aperture is ovate-subquadrate. The lip is crenulated.
The leaves are pinnate and alternate, of two to six pairs of leaflets. Leaf shape lanceolate to ovate, not toothed. Leaflets 5 to 15 cm long, 1.5 to 6 cm wide. Hairy and leathery.
The small shell is elongate to ovate. Its color varies between pale brown and grayish with a glassy shine. The round whorls are smooth with deep sutures. The apex is in many cases eroded.
Stout and unbranched to thick stems. Since C. americana does not photosynthesize it also does not have true leaves; it has instead simple, ovate, tiny scales long and brown, which appear underneath each flower.
The length of the shell attains 12 mm. The white shell has an ovate-fusiform shape and is clathrate. It contains 6 whorls. The longitudinal ribs are eminently pronounced and are crossed by transverse plicae.
The length of the shell varies between 2 mm and 3 mm. (Original description) The minute, solid shell has an elongate ovate shape. The lightbrown spire is rather short. It contains 6 whorls, spirally granulated.
Leaf blade elliptic or ovate-lanceolate, 6–17 × 2–6 cm, leathery, margin sharply coarsely-serrate. Stamen baculate to terete; thecae shorter than connective. Stigma subcapitate. Fruit globose or ovoid, 3–4 mm in diam.
The length of this yellow shell measures 3 mm. Its shape is elongate-ovate. The whorls of the protoconch are immersed in the first whorl of the teleoconch. The teleoconch contains 4½ moderately rounded whorls.
Flowers c. 15-18 mm in diam.; buds ellipsoid, rounded. Sepals 2-4 x 1.3-1.7 mm, unequal, shortly united, oblong to ovate, subacute to rounded, margin entire, glands submarginal, veins 3-5, not prominent.
The five stamens alternate with the petals. The pistillate flowers bear rudimentary anthers. The filaments are awl-shaped and more-or-less hairy. The anthers are ovate or cordate, two-celled, with cells opening longitudinally.
The sutures are well impressed. The periphery of the body whorl is somewhat angulated. The base of the shell is elongated, rounded, and marked like the spire. The aperture is ovate, and slightly effuse anteriorly.
The ovate aperture is narrow and measures about 10/23 the total length. The columella is callous. The outer lip is incrassate with 11 short denticles. The wide siphonal canal is very short and straight.
Leaves variable in size and shape. Some narrow lanceolate, others lanceolate and some a broad ovate shape. 3 to 16 cm long, 1 to 6 cm wide. Sometimes with a prominent tip, other times blunt.
The pods have a narrowly oblong shape and are uo to in length and wide. The shiny black seeds inside have an ovate to oblong-elliptic shape and are in length with a clavate aril.
The internal shell in general thin, slightly convex, ovate and white. The apex of the shell is forming a small point at the right side and near the posterior end. The shell is not involute.
The type species is Gurmatia wilkinsi Dance & Eames, 1966. This is a small shell. It is ovate- conic in outline, thin and translucent. The protoconch is smooth, heterostrophic and obliquely immersed in the succeeding whorl.
The 4½ whorls are rapidly widening, slightly convex, and planulate at the sutures. They are separated by impressed sutures. The body whorl is large and rounded on the base. The aperture is dilated, ovate-trigonal.
The length of the shell varies between 20 mm and 50 mm. The solid, umbilicate shell has a pointed- ovate shape. Its color pattern is greenish, longitudinally flammulated with black. The conic spire is pointed.
The size of the shell varies between 50 mm and 110 mm. The rather thin shell is ovate and ventricose. The spire is conical, indistinctly muricated. The ribs are pretty narrow, distant and slightly flattened.
The suture is irregularly undulating. The last whorl is little convex below. The aperture is subvertical, ovate-oblong, nearly half the length of the shell. The peristome is a little thickened, lightly spreading and white.
The shape of the shell is ovate conic. The width of the shell is 14 mm; the height of the shell is 17 mm.Brown D. S. (1994). Freshwater Snails of Africa and their Medical Importance.
The dextral shell is ovate oblong, subcylindrical and slender. Some specimens are more ventricose than other. The shell has six whorls. The color is white or yellow with none to several broad bands of chestnut.
The length of the shell varies between 10 mm and 17 mm. The ovate shell is oblong and thick. It is of a bluish white, with distant red spots. The spire is short and pointed.
Leaves have 3 prominent longitudinal veins on both sides ending in a blunt point. Large blackish-brown fruit are obliquely ovate, from long and wide, obscurely beaked, with a dorsal longitudinal ridge on each valve.
The aperture is roundly ovate. The sharp outer lip is convex. The inner lip spreads as a distinct callosity over the body, and sometimes seals the umbilicus partly or wholly up. The columella is concave.
The length of the shell attains 20 mm. (Original description) The shell is somewhat fusiformly ovate. The spire is rather short, the sutures deep. The shell is longitudinally ribbed, with numerous ribs rather close-set.
The length of the shell attains mm, its diameter mm. The ovate-fusiform shell is white. The shell contains 6 whorls, of which 2 smooth whorls in the protoconch. The subsequent whorls are slightly convex.
The lip is black. The planate columella has a depressed-concave shape and is not produced at its base." "The ovate operculum is yellowish inside. It contains two to three whorls and a sublateral nucleus.
III, pag. 467 It has thick, woody roots. The stems are strong, simple or branched, with slightly rough glandular hairs. The leaves are ovate-spatulate to oblong-lanceolate, with toothed edges and a long petiole.
Perianth segments are only 1,5 mm long. The 5 stamens are alternating with ovate staminodes. Fruiting, the perianth segments develop spreading brown wings, circa 6 mm in diameter. The seed diameter is 2,5–3 mm.
The shell grows to a length of 60 mm. The solid, imperforate shell has an ovate-ventricose shape with a short, acute spire. The five whorls are convex and spirally lirate. The sutures are canaliculate.
Segments sessile, oblong-ovate, Pinnatilobed, in short and acute strips. Flowers 1.5 cm in diameter, bright pink. Petals equal, 2-3 times longer than calyx, rounded at apex. Beak of fruits 4–5 cm long.
The sutures are well impressed. The periphery of the body whorl is obscurely angulated. The base of the shell is somewhat inflated, well rounded, narrowly umbilicated and marked like the spire. The aperture is ovate.
They are marked by numerous closely spaced, wavy spiral striations. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are somewhat inflated and well rounded. They are marked like the spire. The aperture is ovate.
Leaflets are ovate or heart-shaped and toothed. The leaves are 3–10 cm long and 2–6 cm wide. Flowers are white, clustered in unbrels of 25–40 rays. The diameter of umbels reaches .
It is an herbaceous plant; it usually grows to 1.5 meters. in most cases it has many branches with leaves between 5 and 10 cm long, its shape varies form linear ovate to lance-shaped.
It grows to 60–160 cm tall, with 5-12 leaves with 24-40 leaflets a side. The fruit are edible, ovate-lanceolate, yellow-orange, 2.5-3.5 x 1.6-2.5 cm, with a reddish apex.
The lemmas are ovate or slightly rhombic, have broad translucent margins, and are awnless. The anthers are long. The caryopses are as long or shorter than the paleas, and are flat or slightly rolled inwards.
Pollen grain of Abutilon incanum Abutilon icanum, also known as hoary abutilon, pelotazo, pelotazo chico, tronadora, and mao (Hawaii), is a shrub widespread throughout the arid, warm regions of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico as well as Hawaii. It grows to between in height; the leaves are ovate to lance-ovate in shape, with crenate margins, and sizes ranging from in width and in length. The solitary 5-petaled flowers are generally orange; in ssp. incanum they are long and orange-yellow, while in ssp.
The top segment is larger than the lateral segments, and 1½-3 cm wide, or sometimes a little as 1 cm. Between one and six smaller leaves are distanced along the stem, the lowest pinnately segmented, the higher increasingly simple, small and narrow. Each stem carries between one and three flowerheads. The involucre is 1½-2½ cm high and 1½-2¼ cm wide, with the individual bracts without hair, ovate to oblong-ovate in shape, with a rounded tip and an entire or dentate margin.
Lianas or reclining shrubs with oblong-lanceolate to ovate leaves. The flowers, which may be unisexual or bisexual, are in axillary racemoids or fascicles, with a white to orange corollas that are strongly zygomorphic (bilaterally symmetrical) with the long bottom petal weakly differentiated with a well exserted (projecting) spur. On the five stamens, the filaments are strongly connate (fused) with the two lowest anthers calcarate (spurred) and possessing a small dorsal connective appendage that is entire and ovate. In the gynoecium, the style is rostellate (beaked).
Emerse leaves erect, long-petioled, 80–120 cm long. Blade ovate, at the tip shortly acuminate, at the base abrupt, or regularly oval, at the tip blunt or incised, 15 – 26 cm x 7 – 15 cm wide with 7 - 13 veins and distinct pellucid lines. Submersed leaves on short petioles, blades oval or ovate, on both ends acuminate or blunt. Stem erect, 90 – 150 cm long, sparse and inconspicuously warted, inflorescence paniculate, broadly branched in the lower whorl, having 5 - 12 whorls containing 6 - 12 flowers each.
Leaves 25 – 40 cm long, blades join the petiole at an obtuse angle so that they stand nearly horizontally, they are ovate or cordate, on the tip acuminate, the base truncate or shortly lobate, usually with 7 veins, 10 – 17 cm long x 5 – 8 cm wide. Stem recurved, proliferous, 25 – 60 cm long. Inflorescence racemose, having 2 – 4 whorls containing only 3 – 6 flowers each. Bracts shorter than pedicels. Pedicels 1 – 1.5 cm long, sepals ovate, membraneous, 4 – 6 mm long, having 18 – 24 ribs.
Like the stem, the midrib and tendrils are orange to red in rosettes and light green in climbing plants. A collection of lower, intermediate, and upper pitchers of N. chang Rosette and lower pitchers are either wholly ovate or only ovate in the basal third of the pitcher cup and narrower above. They measure up to 12 cm in height by 5 cm in width and are broader than they are deep. The hip, when present, is positioned in the midsection of the trap.
Its outer margin may undulate slightly. The operculum or lid varies in shape from elliptic to ovate or broadly ovate. It has a rounded apex and may have a somewhat cordate base. It measures up to 4 cm in length by 3.5 cm in width. No appendages are present on the lower surface of the lid, although it bears a small number (5 or 6) of sparsely scattered nectar glands. These nectaries are transversely elliptic to circular in shape and measure 0.2–0.4 mm in length.
Clerodendrum infortunatum is a flowering shrub or small tree, and is so named because of its rather ugly leaf. The stem is erect, high, with no branches and produce circular leaves with diameter. Leaves are simple, opposite; both surfaces sparsely villous- pubescent, elliptic, broadly elliptic, ovate or elongate ovate, wide, long, dentate, inflorescence in terminal, peduncled, few-flowered cyme; flowers white with purplish pink or dull-purple throat, pubescent. Fruit berry, globose, turned bluish-black or black when ripe, enclosed in the red accrescent fruiting-calyx.
Their rather flat and smooth carapace is usually wider than long and of hexagonal, subhexagonal, rectangular, or transversely ovate shape. It is usually widest between the hindmost spines of the forward rim; there may be up to 9 pairs of these spines, with a few smaller ones right above the head, but they are missing altogether in some species. In some, the first maxilliped's endopod is lobed, forming the characteristic portunid lobe. The chelipeds are usually robust, and in some the last pereiopod pair has ovate dactyls.
Visually, the tablet is ovate, with even the inscribed cuneiform signs having ovate form, almost over the entire letter. Consequently, though EA 282 is topical, and tells a story, its first appearance is more like a piece of art, rather than a "diplomatic letter" (correspondence). The identified older photo (pictured), also shows an art- like appearance. Most Amarna letters are much more standard, and like a text, though the many styles of letters, as well as clay-types, leads to dramatic differences in Amarna letter's visual appearances.
Campanula latifolia on stamp of USSR, 1988 Campanula latifolia is a clump-forming perennial herbaceous plant growing to a height of . The stem is unbranched, erect and shortly pubescent, basal leaves are stalked, broadly ovate with a heart-shaped (cordate) base, while the upper leaves are ovate-lanceolate, stalkless, softly hairy with bluntly toothed margins. The inflorescence is a many-flowered terminal raceme or in the axils of upper leaves and have subtending bracts. The flowers are hermaphrodite, bell-shaped, initially erect but later nodding and long.
The eggs were described as 12 mm × 16 mm in size and oval in shape by Alfred North (1901–14); Forshaw gave the form as "ovate to elliptical ovate". A sample of forty six specimens from nine clutches were taken and noted as 15.9–17.8 mm × 11.9–13.2 mm to give average dimensions of 16.6 mm × 12.4 mm (Johnstone & Storr, 2004). A clutch of six eggs at Torbay (1959) and another of five closer to Albany (1967) were recorded as larger than this average size.
The plant is a perennial and will bloom during the late summer. The leaves are opposite in arrangement. The leaves are broad and ovate in shape. The leaves are typically six to twelve centimeters in length.
The size of the shell attains 4 mm. The small, solid shell has a short ovate-conic shape. it is imperforate or narrowly umbilicate. It is white with numerous revolving series of red or brown tessellations.
Majority of tree surface is covered with stellate hairs. When damaged, the bark exudes orange latex Its leaves are opposite, simple and ovate. leaf blades 6-20 by 3–10 cm. leaves appear to be glossy.
The length of the shell attains 5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The small, white shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. It is very elegant in form, fusoid towards the base. The shell contains six whorls.
The rest show irregularly placed distant rounder tubercles. The body whorl is rounded, not keeled. The inside of the aperture is white. The erect egg-cases are ovate-oblong, on an expanded base and contracted beneath.
The ovate-oblong shell is longitudinally and transversely decussately striate, with two simple or subtuberculated angular, prominent carinae. The shell is pale, varied with brown spots. The spire is elevated. The oblique aperture is nearly circular.
Astragalus centralpinus can reach a height of . The hairy stem has a diameter of about 10 mm. Leaves are petiolated, long, with rachis covered with ascending hairs. Leaflets are ovate to elliptic, in 20-25 pairs.
Leaves shaped oblong- ovate or oblong-elliptical. Unequal at the leaf base. Midrib, lateral veins and net veins evident from below the leaf. As are numerous yellow coloured bumps along the lateral veins and mid rib.
The base of the shell is moderately long, well rounded, and marked like the spire. The aperture is large, elongate-ovate, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is decidedly obtuse. The outer lip is thin.
The tree grows to be eight to ten meters tall. It is dimorphic. The sterile branches have longer spines, and the fertile branches have shorter spines or no spines. The alternate leaves are ovate and elliptic.
The length of the shell attains 13 mm, its diameter 5½ mm. The small, whitish golden yellow shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. It contains 6⅓ whorls. The convex whorls are slightly excavated near the suture.
Galeruca tanaceti can reach a length of . These leaf beetles have a broadly ovate, convex and glabrous body. The head, pronotum and elytra are matt black and densely punctured. Lateral margins of the elytra are explanate.
The two whorls are nearly plane. They are broadly clathrate with thread-like elevated radiating lines, stronger below the carina, and concentric elevated striae. The umbilical region has elevated concentric lines. The aperture is rounded- ovate.
The small aperture has an ovate-triangular shape. The columellar margin has a slight callus. This is a small, subconical, solid species, not so shining as some of its allies. It has red-brown speckled markings.
The length of the shell attains 11 mm, its diameter 7 mm. The complanate shell is ovate, elongated, transversely delicately striate and contains two whorls. The apex is somewhat prominent. The oblong aperture is ear-shaped.
The spire is very short with a minute whitish nucleus. The three whorls are convex. The body whorl is very large. The ovate aperture is angled above, polished, and bright inside, and of a blue color.
They are slightly convex, and united by a pretty fine and regular linear suture. The aperture is oblong ovate, slightly longitudinal, smooth and of a chamois-yellow color. The outer lip is thin and sharp.Kiener (1840).
Lobelia inflata. Flower Lobelia inflata is an annual or biennial herbaceous plant growing to tall, with stems covered in tiny hairs. Its leaves are usually about long, and are ovate and toothed. they are alternately arranged.
The depressed spaces between these lamellae are crossed by axial threads, as on the spire. The aperture is irregularly ovate. The posterior angle is decidedly obtuse. The outer lip is rendered angular by the spiral lamellae.
Fundación Instituto Botánico de Venezuela, Caracas. Justicia nurianais an herb up to 1 m tall. Leaves are broadly oblong to ovate, up to 22 cm long. Flowers are borne in spikes at the end of branches.
Leaves all basal, floating or aerial, ovate to elliptical, cordate or subcordate. Flowers hermaphrodite, in racemes or panicles. Stamens 6(-11). Carpels few or numerous in a single whorl, free, each with 1 ovule; styles subventral.
The periostracum is thick, and the color of the periostracum is dark brown or black. The shell has about 20 whorls. The apical whorls may be eroded in older snails. The aperture is ovate and white.
As Harpa harpa, up to 7 cm, with 11–14 axial ribs and higher spire. Colour white with cream and pale brown banding. Columella with large, central purple blotch; aperture white. The ovate shell is oblong.
The penultimate whorl is a trifle projecting above the suture. The body whorl is obtusely subangular at the periphery. The aperture is triangular-ovate. The outer lip is arcuate above, green-marginate just within the edge.
The body whorl is strongly rounded and covers almost the whole shell. The aperture is rather ovate and has a smooth outer lip. A siphonal canal is lacking. The umbilicus is partly covered with a callus.
The minute shell is similar in form to Phasianella. The aperture is ovate. The columella has a heavy callus, bearing near the base a strong curved denticle projecting into the aperture. The outer lip is simple.
It is orange to yellow in color when cut. The broadly ovate smooth (glabrous) leaves are opposite and around by in size. The upper surface is glossy green. The bottom side has raised prominent yellow venation.
Leaves are trifoliate, the leaflets ovate (egg-shaped), up to long. its Flowers are yellow.Wislizenus, Friedrich (Frederick) Adolph. Memoir of a Tour to Northern Mexico: connected with Col. Doniphan's Expedition in 1846 and 1847 99. 1848.
Rhododendron columbianum is a shrub up to tall, spreading by means of underground rhizomes. The evergreen leaves are ovate to lanceolate, fragrant when crushed. Flowers are white to cream, borne in groups of 10 to 35.
The forewings are pale orange grey with a semi-ovate costal mark, two streaks on the costa at one-third and one-fourth and another at three-fourths beyond the costal mark. The hindwings are grey.
Generic characters of the genus Pyrgulopsis are: the shell is minute, conically turreted, somewhat elongated, imperforate and unicarinate. The apex is acute. The aperture is ovate. The edge of the aperture, called the peritreme, is continuous.
Petals are purple or white abaxially hispidulous. Its styles are short. The fruit is oblong-ovate or ellipsoid, to 6 x 4mm. It is hirsute, especially on dorsal ribs; its lateral ribs have very thick wings.
The shell is carinate in its entire length on the lower edge of the whorls. The aperture is small, ovate, but slightly connected with the last whorl. The height of the shell is 12.7 mm (½ inch).
Zospeum robustum has an average shell height of ca. 1.6 mm and an average shell width of ca. 1.1 mm. The shell is transparent and has an ovate-conical shape, showing a high variability in shape.
The aperture is roundly ovate, slightly longer than broad and rounded anteriorly. The peristome is not continuous. The peristome is sharp, simple, slightly reflected near the columella, suggesting a faint umbilicus. The suture is slightly impressed.
All of the stamens are fertile. The filament is 1mm long and swollen. The anthers are linear and 5.3mm long. The apical glands are 0.5mm long, ovate in shape, and end in a somewhat sharp apex.
It is a resinous tree, up to tall. Grayish bark is smooth in texture. Leaves are simple and alternately arranged, peltate, orbicular-ovate, apex is acuminate, and palmately 8 to 9-nerved. Unisexual flowers are dioecious.
The aperture is ovate, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved, reflected, reinforced by the base, and provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
The length of the shell attains 3.5 mm, its diameter 1.5 mm. (Original description) The small, solid shell is narrowly ovate. Its colour is uniform white. It contains six whorls, including a smooth two-whorled protoconch.
By the end of the flowering season, the flowers dry out and become papery and brown. The 1-1.5 cm leaves are ovate and obtuse; they are fragrant but not as aromatic as other oregano species.
Protoconch is smooth. The shell has 6.5 whorls, that are hardly convex. The suture is slightly impressed. The aperture is elongate- ovate, margins somewhat converging; 1.59 times as long as wide, 0.25 times the total height.
The ovate aperture is characterized by a marked lip edge. The dark brown to almost black head shows white spots on the tentacles and on the neck and a black spot in front of each eye.
The columella is brown, coated with a smooth enamel, oblique below the middle. It is slit above the submedian liration. The siphonal canal is short, very little recurved. The operculum is ovate, pointed at the base.
The sessile, ovate pistil in long and has three carpels and three locules. The pistil is lined with elongate oil vesicles. The three styles are about half the length of the ovary. The stigmas are capitate.
The dark reddish aperture is ovate and contracted below. It measures about 2/5 of the total length. The siphonal canal is broad and slightly oblique. The narrow outer lip has a wide sinuation above the middle.
Ovate or rhomboidal in shape with three or four teeth on each side of the leaf. Leaf tip and teeth sharp and pointed. Leaves stiff, hairless and pale on the underside. Leaf stalks around 3 mm long.
Small branches fairly thick, dark grey though more green at the end. Leaves alternate on the stem, simple, oblong-lanceolate in shape. Sometimes ovate oblong in shape. 5 to 10 cm long, 1.5 to 5 cm wide.
The length of the shell varies between 35 mm and 67 mm. The smooth shell is ovate, oblong and ventricose. Its ground color is whitish with some slightly apparent, transverse-brown bands. The epidermis is reddish brown.
The length of the shell attains 5.5 mm, its diameter 2.5 mm. (Original description) The cylindrically ovate shell is elongate. The sutures are rather indistinct. The apex is sharp and pointed, a beautiful deep mauve colour throughout.
Amaranthus grandiflorus is an annual plant, reaching up to tall. The leaves are ovate to lanceolate, and up to , with an acute tip. The flowers are clustered into inflorescences, borne in the axils. The petals are long.
This is a perennial herb growing from deep rhizomes. The stem is 40 centimeters to just over one meter tall. The ovate, pointed leaves are oppositely arranged. The blades have wavy margins, reddish midveins, and hairless undersides.
This three- tier system mirrors the three degrees found in British Traditional Wicca. Other groups eschew any division into bard, ovate, and druid. OBOD primarily educates its members in its form of Druidry through a correspondence course.
Melhania phillipsiae grows as a shrub up to tall. The ovate leaves are tomentose and measure up to long. Inflorescences are two to six-flowered on a stalk measuring up to long. The flowers have yellow petals.
They have deeply cordate bases. Each leaf is three-lobed. The central part or lobe is rhombic-ovate or rhombic, itself deeply incised into three sections (3-fid), which are incised-lobulate to dentate at their margins.
It has a long rhizome system. It has short, flat, spiral-arranged leaves. At the top of the stem is an inflorescence of ovate, pointed spikelets, each on a long peduncle. The spikelet has many hairy bracts.
Preserved stamens which were dislodged from the flower during entombment in the resin show two rows of bilocular anthers on their upper surfaces. The possibly elliptic-ovate petals distinguish the species from the living species Hymenaea courbaril.
Rosette and lower pitchers are up to 7 cm high and 3 cm wide. They are ovate in the lower third, becoming cylindrical or conical above. The peristome is approximately cylindrical and up to 5 mm wide.
The ovate to lanceolate tepals are white with a green stripe on the back, mostly three-veined, but sometimes five-veined. Schoenolirion wrightii flowers between March and May, occurring in sandstone outcrops, wet pinelands, and boggy places.
Selkirkia species are perennial, either a shrub (S. berteroi) or decumbent, ascending or erect herbs to subshrubs. The leaves are ovate to lanceolate, and mostly occurring along the stem, not in rosettes. The corolla is white (S.
They are rounded, the last forming the greater part of the shell. The ample aperture is rounded-ovate and somewhat dilated below. It is shining within, concolored with very translucent white bands. The right margin is acute.
The pseudobulbs are reduced. The obtuse, fleshy leaves are 9 cm long. They are broadly elliptic to ovate- lanceolate. The large, showy flowers grow basally on a short peduncle in a single-flowered to few-flowered raceme.
The small shell has an ovate to fusiform shape. The protoconch is small and smooth. The teleoconch is covered with axial ribs. There is a conspicuous tooth-like blunt nodule on the midpoint of the outer lip.
The size of the shell varies between 23 mm and 70 mm. The ovate shell is smooth and ventricose. The spire is formed of six slightly convex whorls. The body whorl is very large and slightly canaliculated.
Leptoxis compacta lectotype. Scale bar is 5 mm. This species was originally described by the American naturalist and malacologist John Gould Anthony in 1854. The shell of Leptoxis compacta is ovate-conic, smooth, thick and yellowish-green.
The dextral shell is ovate and somewhat ventricose with convex whorls margined round the upper shell. The shell has six whorls. The spire is rather short and obtuse at the apex. The columella is callous and twisted.
The teleoconch has up to 3 smooth, inflated, convex, rapidly descending whorls. The suture has abutting whorls. The shell surface is smooth, glazed, and lacking spiral and axial sculpture. The aperture is ovate, narrow posteriorly, broad anteriorly.
Leaves simple and alternate, ovate in shape, 7 to 20 cm long. Glossy green above, rusty and hairy underneath. Leaf stalks hairy being 5 to 20 mm long. Leaf veins visible on both upper and lower sides.
The thick shell is broadly ovate or globular and low-spired. It has a smooth surface. The shells are spirally ribbed or show some axial sculpturing. The ventral side has a large columellar callus or parietal wall.
The aperture is large, ovate. The postenor angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is moderately strong, strongly curved, decidedly reflected, partly reinforced by the base and provided with a fold at its insertion.
The elongate-ovate shell is light yellow. It measures 5.5 mm. The nuclear whorls are decollated. The six post-nuclear whorls are inflated, slightly rounded in the middle, more so toward the suture, and the appressed summit.
The small shell measures 3 mm. It is elongate-ovate, somewhat translucent, bluish-white. The nuclear whorls are small, very obliquely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The five post-nuclear whorls are well rounded.
The length of the ovate, dirty white shell attains 6.5 mm, its diameter mm. It contains whorls. The outer lip is conspicuously thin, very dilated laterally and slightly sinuate on top. The columella has a slight callus.
Leaves are ovate to lanceolate, cordate at the base and acuminate at the apex, pubescent especially beneath and on the veins of the lower surface; by maturing, hairs remain only on the veins and along the margin.
Branchlets are thick, grey or brown and hairy, with easily visible leaf scars. The new shoots are densely covered in fine fur. The mature leaves are pale green and ovate, long. Hairy and veiny on the underside.
The laminae are light green, while the midrib and tendrils may be green to red. Rosette and lower pitchers are either wholly ovate or only ovate in the basal half of the pitcher cup and narrower above. They measure up to 14 cm in height by 6 cm in width. The hip, which is only faintly visible, is positioned either in the middle or in the upper half of the trap. A pair of wings (≤8 mm wide) runs down the ventral surface of the pitcher cup, bearing narrow fringe elements.
Nepenthes kampotiana also lacks an indumentum, being glabrous throughout. The terrestrial traps of N. chang are typically wider than they are deep, while those of N. kampotiana are uniformly ovate. The two species also differ in the shape of their aerial pitchers: those of N. chang are tubulose throughout, whereas those of N. kampotiana are obovate or ovate in their basal half. In lower pitchers of N. chang, the peristome is often wider at the sides, whereas that found in the traps of N. kampotiana tends to be uniform in width.
Flowering stem is long, is white powdered at the top and can elongate up to when fruits appear. Flowers are wide, are pinkish lilac in color with orange-yellow throat, appear out of solitary umbel in a few or many and grow on a long tube. Bracts, while producing wide stalked leaves, are linear to lance-shaped, glandular, hairy and are long. The pedicel of a flower is long while the species' sepal is ovate to ovate-oblong, bell-shaped, long and is as white powdered as the flowering stem.
The larger, lower part is folded over its mid vein, about ½ cm long, ovate or almost circular, split into left and right lobes, and concave. The smaller, upper or inner part, which is often referred to as appendages, also consists of two ovate lobes of about 3 mm long. All four lobes have an entire margin which carries teeth-like hairs that are bent slightly inwards for the large lobes and outward for the small appendages. Each pair so resembles a trapleaf of the carnivorous Venus flytrap Dionaea muscipula.
Begonia elnidoensis is an endemic species of Begonia discovered in El Nido, Palawan, Philippines. The species was compared to Begonia wadei, in that both species have thick-trunked stem, differing in the widely to very widely ovate or subtriangular leaves, with the latter having obliquely ovate leaves, 3-4 secondary leaf veins where the latter has 6 on each side of the midrib, with glabrous petioles compared to latter having puberulous to tomentose, an inflorescence measuring 20–40 cm in length compared to only 6–20 cm, and the differently-sized bracts and capsules.
Buddleja polycephala is a dioecious sprawling shrub 1 - 5 m tall. The young branches are quadrangular and tomentose, bearing ovate or ovate-lanceolate membranaceous leaves 9 - 25 cm long by 4 - 10 cm wide, initially thickly tomentose but later glabrescent above, but remaining tomentose below. The yellowish white inflorescences are 15 - 40 cm long, and as wide at the base, with leafy-bracted primary and secondary branches perpendicular to each other. The flowers are borne as compact heads, approximately 1 cm in diameter, each with around 20 flowers, the corollas 3 mm long.
The pedicels are patent The Stamens, which are hidden amongst the perianth lobes where they are inserted at the base have ovate-acuminate (oval, tapering to a point at one end) filaments that are cylindrical and adnate to the perianth tube, merged at its end (occasionally free). The ovary may be black, green or yellow and or ovoid or cylindrical. The style is filiform (thread like) and white, with a stigma that is glandular and somewhat trilobed. The fruit capsule is lanceolate, cylindrical or ovate and acute, and wider in its basal third.
Lianas or reclining shrubs with lanceolate to ovate leaves. The flowers are in terminal pseudo-racemes or racemoids, with white corollas that are strongly zygomorphic (bilaterally symmetrical) with the very large bottom petal differentiated into a claw and blade and saccate (pouch like) at the base. On the five stamens, the filaments are weakly connate with the two lowest anthers weakly calcarate (spurred) and possessing a large dorsal connective appendage that is entire and oblong-ovate. In the gynoecium, the style is filiform (threadlike) to clavate (club like).
The forewings are pale yellow with a brown crescent patch under the apex, with a brownish-black ovate spot inside. The antemedial line is greyish brown and punctuate and the postmedial line is brown and punctuate. The discal spot and mid-cell spot are greyish brown, and there is a white strip ringed with brown, as well as two big round greyish-brown patches near the lower angle of the cell, each with a dark brown ovate spot inside. The hindwings have antemedial and postmedial lines that are similar to those on the forewings.
The columella is obliquely attenuated in front, gyrate, and with a minutely pervious axis. The siphonal canal is narrow and slender. The operculum is yellowish, ovate and has an apical nucleus.United States National Museum, and William Healey Dall.
Rhododendron sikayotaizanense (志佳阳杜鹃) is a rhododendron species native to Taiwan. It is a shrub, with small, leathery leaves that are oblong to ovate- oblong, 0.4–1.4 × 0.2–0.6 cm in size. Flowers are red.
The length of the shell varies between 7 mm and 12 mm. The acuminate ovate-turreted shell contains 6 smooth whorls. It is shortly plicately ribbed, transversely striated, angulated next the simple suture. The outer lip is sharp.
264: 126-163. The forewing length is 9.4–12.9 mm for males and forewing length 9.2–12.5 mm for females. The costal area of the forewings is dark gray and ferruginous. There is a distinct ovate basal spot.
The outer lip is thick, incurved, serrated on the edges at the termination of the transverse striae. The ovate aperture has no denticles. The siphonal canal is short and slightly recurved. The colour of the shell is white.
The length of the shell attains 10 mm, its diameter 4.25 mm. The white oblong-ovate shell is sparsely maculate with red dots. The spire is acutely conical. The shell contains 6 convex, rounded whorls, subtly spirally striated.
S. nanchuanensis var. nanchuanensis has leaves that are 1–2 pinnately compound, with terminal leaflets that are ovate to lanceolate. S. nanchuanensis var. pteridifolia has leaves that are 3–4 pinnately compound, with terminal leaflets or lobules linear.
The shell grows to a length of 11 mm. The smooth, obtusely ovate shell is thick and solid. Its color is very dark brown, the nodules are whitish. The whorls are oblique and nodosely plicated round the middle.
The upper whorls and the nucleus are eroded in our examples. The epidermis is yellowish horn color and closely adherent. The shell is bluish white within the aperture. The operculum is well-developed, ovate and dark horn-colored.
The ovate, cream-colored aperture points upwards and is deeply emarginated at its base. The white, thick outer lip is flaring and turns bac. It is and slightly emarginated at its upper part . The siphonal canal is short.
The small shell measures 2 mm. It is oblong, ovate, milk- white. The nuclear whorls are decollated. The five post-nuclear whorls are rather high between the sutures, moderately rounded, strongly shouldered at the summit, which is subtabulated.
The length of the shell attains 5.5 mm, its diameter 2.5 mm. (Original description) The small, solid shell is ovate-lanceolate and acuminate. The shell contains 7 whorls, including a two-whorled protoconch. Its colour is uniform lilac.
The shell of the winged floater is quite thin, and elliptical or ovate, with the back dorsal showing the prominent "wing" shape. The nacre has white or blue-tinged tone. Individuals may reach a size of up to .
Fairly smooth but with darker lenticels. Small branches also fawn with prominent lenticels. Leaf scars also noticeable. Leaves are 4 to 10 cm long, though juvenile leaves are up to 15 cm long, elliptical or ovate in shape.
The surface has a fine sculpture with minute spiral lines mingled with coarser lines. The aperture is ovate and oblong and its interior is brownish ochraceous. The outer lip is white.Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences, vol.
C. argyrosperma has ovate-cordate (egg-shaped to heart- shaped) leaves. The shape of C. pepo leaves varies widely. C. moschata plants can have light or dense pubescence. C. ficifolia leaves are slightly angular and have light pubescence.
American pikas, known in the 19th century as "little Chief hares",Mearns, B & R. John Kirk Townsend: Collector of Audubon’s Western Birds and Mammals. Page 108. Retrieved from on 2009-10-06. have a small, round, ovate body.
The axial ribs are initially arcuate and in later whorls opisthocline, numbering 12 on the penultimate whorl. The dense, spiral threads are very small. The aperture is oblong-ovate. The wide anal sinus has an U-shaped form.
They grow in a cluster of 2 and are subequal. Glumes are shorter than a spikelet and thinner than fertile lemma. The lower glume is ovate and have a pubescent surface. Its apex is acute and 1 awned.
Camellia yunnanensis is a 1.3–7 m tall shrub or small tree. Its leaves are elliptic to broad-elliptic or ovate-elliptic, bluntly acute. They are deep green.Camellia yunnanensis Cohen Stuart Its flowers is white, perulate and solitary.
Attractive golden colour with a red blush on the cheeks, when fully ripe. Fibrous juicy fruits are slightly sour. Fruit is medium in size and ovate oblong in shape. Fruit quality is medium and keeping quality is good.
The pitcher lid is ovate and lacks appendages. It bears a short but distinct keel and often has a very broad insertion. A simple or bifurcate spur (≤12 mm long) is inserted near the base of the lid.
Novon 3:321-323. Aristolochia stevensii is a liana climbing over other vegetation. Stems are woody, up to 2 cm in diameter, the bark tomentose when young, corky when older. Leaves are ovate, up to 17 cm long.
Astragalus cedreti grows close to the ground. It has grayish pinnate leaves, long, with lanceolate stipules. The leaves are pinnately-divided into 20 to 25 leaflets having a smooth contour. The peduncle supports a dense ovate wide raceme.
Novon 11(2):197-199. Memecylon tirunelvelicum is a tree up to 4 m tall. Leaves are opposite, ovate to lanceolate, pointed at the tip, up to 9 cm long. Flowers are blue, about 1 cm in diameter.
The length of the shell varies between 22 mm and 80 mm. The solid, imperforate shell has an ovate-pointed shape. Its color pattern is whitish, or greenish, maculated with brown and olive. The conic spire is acute.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are somewhat inflated, well rounded. They are marked like the space between the sutures. The aperture is large, oblong-ovate, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is very obtuse.
The shell is convoluted, ovate, cylindrical, generally transversely striated. The aperture is oblong, entire, somewhat effuse at its base. It shows one or more folds upon the columella. The outer lip is thin, sharp, never having a varix.
The hindwings, in general, are uniformly gray. The eggs of the Indian-meal moth are white, ovate, and very small. It is difficult to see them with the naked eye. Newly-hatched larvae are equally difficult to see.
The inflorescence is a cluster of flowers on the ends of stalks. The bracts are mostly ovate with teeth or lobes but sometimes entire. Sepals are . The orange to yellow petals are generally with red to orange bases.
It is a scrambling shrub, growing to 1 m in height. The ovate leaves are 2–3 cm long and 1–1.6 cm wide. The inflorescence is less than 1 cm long, bearing 1–3 very small flowers.
The dextral shell is ovate-oblong, spiro-conic, solid, striatulate. The shell is more obsolete toward the apex and with slightly convex whorls. The shell has six whorls. Shell colors are glossy white ornamented with varying brown bands.
Molloy (1995)Molloy A. W. (1995). "Studies of the endangered Chittenango ovate amber snail (Novisuccinea chittenangoensis) and related species of the Chittenango Creek watershed". Unpublished MS thesis. State University of New York, College of Environmental Sciences and Forestry.
Isodon atroruber is a perennial herb with stems growing to around 50 cm. Stems little branched and four angled, glandular hairy. Leaves ovate, acuminate, base rounded-truncate with the lamina slightly decurrent on petiole. Leaf margin serrate-dentate.
A small tree, up to 5 metres tall, often encountered as a shrub half that size. This plant features grey furry leaves. 2 to 5 cm long, 1 to 2 cm wide. Reverse ovate or elliptic in shape.
The base of the shell is marked with very fine, and very approximate striae. The ovate aperture is elongated, of a whitish color. The outer lip is rounded and striated internally. The columella is arched and smoothKiener (1840).
The length of the shell attains 10 mm, its diameter 4.5 mm. (Original description) The white shell has a fusiform, ovate shape. The whorls are somewhat concavely, widely angulated around the upper part. They are longitudinally plicately ribbed.
The large body whorl contains an unequal line and one or two intermediate lirulae in the interstices. The ovate aperture is silvery within. The peristome is greenish, somewhat fluted. The columella is dilated and produced at the base.
Oval, elliptic or narrow-ovate in shape. Pale violet flowers occur throughout the year, but are most often seen in spring or autumn. The red berry is around 7 mm in diameter, mostly covered by the calyx lobes.
The small shell measures 4.4 mm. Iti is elongate ovate, yellowish white. The nuclear whorls are small, almost completely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The five post-nuclear whorls moderately well rounded, with rounded summits.
The size of the shell varies between 4 mm and 7.5 mm. The thin, minute shell has a low ovate-conic shape and is amply umbilicated. Its color is ashy white, pearly beneath. The six whorls are convex.
The elongate-ovate shell is semitranslucent. Its length measures 2 mm. The whorls of the protoconch are deeply obliquely immersed, the tilted edge of the last only being visible. The whorls of the teleoconch are rounded, somewhat inflated.
The lip is three-toothed, with each tooth almost equal in length, 0.7mm. All of the stamens are fertile. The anthers are linear and 2.6mm long. The apical glands are ovate and somewhat less than 0.3mm in length.
The white shell is ovate, conic, subvitreous, and shining. It measures 2.2 mm. The 1½ whorls of the protoconch are obliquely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The 4½ whorls of the teleoconch are well rounded.
The length of the shell attains 4.2 mm, its diameter 2 mm. (Original description) The small, rather solid shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. Its colour is uniform pale buff or uniform pale lilac. It contains six whorls.
Anthurium clarinervium is a species of plant in the family Araceae, endemic to Chiapas, Mexico. It has ovate, deeply-lobed leaves with whitish veins, atop stems that are 1–2 cm thick. It grows naturally as an epiphyte.
The calyx lobes are triangular. The petals are ovate and 1.5 to 2.5 mm long. There are 8 to 15 stamens, none of which is opposite the petals on curved filaments. The flat-topped ovary has two cells.
The sessile male flower has a scent reminiscent of gardenias. The pollen grains have a diameter of 22 micrometres. The female flower is pedicellate. The fruit is broadly ovate nut, 3.5 cm in diameter and 3.0 cm long.
Vicia dumetorum can reach a height of . This herbaceous perennial, erect plant is quite rare and variable. Leaves are pinnate, with 3-5 pairs of ovate leaflets, long. It produces stalked clusters with 3-12 bluish-violet flowers.
The hollow stem grows to a height of , branching to umbels of small white flowers. Flowering time is mid spring to early summer. The tripinnate leaves are long and have a triangular form. The leaflets are ovate and subdivided.
The aperture is ovate. The outer lip forms a small varix, ascending the previous whorl and enclosing a C-shaped sinus. The outer lip is dentate at the margin and tuberculate within. The siphonal canal is short and wide.
The ovate shell has an acuminate apex. The color of the shell is red with white ribs in the middle. The fine apical whorls are small and produced suddenly into a cone. The shell contains 9 slightly convex whorls.
It grows tall with the leaves being linear and wide. Both inflorescence and lanceolate are long. Its utricles are either pale green or orange-brown. Female specimens have pale orange-brown glumes which are ovate and are in length.
The pollination is done by bees and other insects. They have berries named drupes. The seed is a drupe varied in size and shape from oblong to ovate or date shape. The fruit is seated on the perianth tube.
There is also a large ovate greyish patch before the middle of the posterior margin and a longer median costal olive- brown area including a minute discal spot. The apical area is olive brown, divided by an oblique line.
The ovate aperture has a marked siphonal canal and a weak anal canal. The aperture is closed off by a thin, corneous, cerithioid operculum that is multispiral and almost circular. The outer lip is thin. The columella is concave.
The cauline leaves are smaller, ovate, toothed, or lobed. The flowers are borne in spring in dense terminal clusters above the foliage. They are long, with four bright yellow petals. The flowering period extends from about April through July.
The root is a branched tap root. The stem is aerial, erect, green, cylindrical and branched. The leaf is simple, with alternate phyllotaxy and is petiolate. The leaf shape is ovate, the tip is acute and margin is serrated.
The height of the shell attains 0.5 mm and its diameter 1.5 mm. The thin, whitish shell is depressed and a deep umbilicus. It contains four whorls with the last one rapidly increasing in size. The aperture is ovate.
The umbilicate, reddish yellow shell has an ovate-conoid, trochiform shape. It is thick, slightly elevated, and below subdepressed. The spire is obtuse. It contains 5-6 slightly convex whorls that are longitudinally and obliquely striate, spirally granose-lirate.
The length of the shell attains 5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. (Original description) The small, very solid shell has an ovate-acuminate shape and is turreted. Its colour is faded to a uniform gray. It contains 6 whorls.
The peduncles are long and there are 4 sepals. There are about 12-24 petals on each flower. The petals can be described as oblong-ovate, apex obtuse, and white. The outer petals are shorter than the inner ones.
The height of the shell attains 5 mm, its diameter also 5 mm. The small, depressed shell has an ovate-conical shape. It has an ocher or rufous color. The five convex whorls are tessellated near the channeled suture.
The fern has a wiry, creeping rhizome, with adpressed, reddish brown hairs. Its 3- or 4-pinnatifid fronds combine a 2–7 cm long stipe with a triangular-ovate lamina 4–6 cm long and 2–5 cm wide.
The width of the shell is up to . The height of the shell is up to . The length of the aperture is up to . The operculum has the color of horn with golden shining and it is widely ovate.
Type locale is in the mountains near the City of Xalapa.Tropicos Picramnia xalapensis is a shrub to small tree. Leaves are evergreen, thick, leathery, pinnately compound, lacking stipules. Leaves are numerous, ovate to lanceolate, gradually tapering at the tip.
The fruits are roundish to broad ovate, 6 to 8 millimetres long and 5 to 6 millimetres wide. The seeds are narrowly winged and 2 to 3 millimetres long.Andreas Roloff, Andreas Bärtels: Flora der Gehölze. Bestimmung, Eigenschaften und Verwendung.
The height of the shell attains 12 mm. The small, solid, imperforate, whitish shell has an ovate-conic shape. The whorls are a little convex, subimbricating, and separated by profoundly canaliculate sutures;. They are finely crenulated below the sutures.
The ovate clubshell (Pleurobema perovatum) is an extinct species of freshwater mussel within the family of Unionidae. This species was endemic to the Mobile River Basin in Alabama and Mississippi and was not seen since the early 20th century.
Their shells are ovate, with a short spire, and a large elongated body whorl. The outer lip of the aperture is thin, but the inner lip has a smooth parietal callus, thickened into a pad over the parietal wall.
Leaves are in length and wide and narrowly cuneate. Inflorescences are axillary or terminal on short shoots with 16 to 36 flowers. These form obliquely ovate fruit, long and wide. The fruit are black- pusticulate, with horns approximately long.
The size of the shell attains 55 mm. The smooth shell is ovate and oblong. Its ground color is whitish, marked with longitudinal reddish lines. The epidermis which covers it, is pretty thick, and of a beautiful chestnut color.
The small, semi-transparent shell has an ovate-discoidal shape. Its colour is white and entirely devoid of coloured markings. The 3½ convex whorls increase rapidly in size with deeply marked sutures. The body whorl has a spherical periphery.
The length of the shell varies between 35 mm and 52 mm. The solid, ovate shell is inflated. It is covered with a fawn colored or reddish epidermis. The short spire is slightly obtuse and pointed at its summit.
Canthium coromandelicum is a shrub, usually with opposite horizontal thorns a little above the leaf. Sometimes the shrub is nearly unarmed. Leaves are ovate, smooth, and often fascicled on young shoots. Short, few flowered racemes arise in leaf axils.
Siebert 2003. There are other strains that are not as well documented, such as the Luna strain (possibly Bunnell) isolated from a Hawaiian patch of Salvia divinorum clones, featuring unusually serrated and rounded rather than ovate leaves.Siebert, 'Luna' Clone.
The solid, subventricose, imperforate shell has an ovate conic shape. Its color pattern is yellowish, longitudinally flammulated. The acute spire is elevated. The convex whorls are sloping above, minutely obliquely striate, encircled by wide flattened ribs, alternating with smaller.
They are marked with lines of growth and very fine spiral striations. The periphery of the body whorl is well rounded. The base of the shell is slightly protracted, well rounded, very narrowly umbilicated. The aperture is elongate ovate.
The yellowish white shell is very elongate ovate, and umbilicated. It is thick and robust. Its length measures 6.4 mm. The whorls of the protoconch are very small, obliquely, almost completely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns.
All of the stamens are fertile. The filament is 0.28mm long, broad and thin. The anthers are linear-elliptic and 4.2mm long. The apical glands are 0.28mm in length, ovate in shape and with a somewhat rounded tip (subobtuse).
The aperture is irregularly ovate and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The thin outer lip is angulated by the keels, showing the external markings within. The columella is strong, curved, without visible fold in the aperture.
The base of the shell is well rounded. It is marked by three subequal spiral cords and a plain area about the umbilicus. The grooves separating these cords are marked by many slender axial threads. The aperture is ovate.
The aperture is very large and very broadly ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is stout, strongly curved, reflected, reinforced by the base and provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
Flowers appear from June to October, being cream or yellow in panicles. The fruit is an egg shaped drupe. Black and shiny, 2 to 3.5 cm long. The single seed is ovate and pointed 25 to 30 mm long.
Salvia caymanensis grows tall. The strictly erect stem is canescent above and woody below. The ovate-lanceolate leaves long and a wide. The leaves are pale and tomentose on the underside and pilose and dark green on the upperside.
The spores are white, ovate, amyloid, and approximately 8 by 5 µm in size. The flavour of the uncooked flesh is mild, but has a faint acrid aftertaste. The smell is not strong. The mushroom is often attacked by insects.
The whorls of the protoconch are not preserved in any of the holotype specimens. The aperture is short and narrow-ovate. The outer lip is expanded below the suture, then regularly rounded and thin. The posterior sinus is broad and shallow.
The plant is a shrub of four to seven meters. The smooth, greenish purple bark peels off in irregular thin shreds. The hard wood is whitish. The broadly ovate and shortly acuminate leaves are clustered at the end of the branches.
The length of the shell attains 7 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The ovate shell has a shining aspect. It is white. The pale dot on the last rib is so small and indistinct that it might easily be overlooked.
Shiso grows to tall., pp. 245- It has broad ovate leaves with pointy ends and serrated margins, arranged oppositely with long leafstalks. Shiso seeds are about 1mm in size, and are smaller and harder compared to other perilla varieties. Encycl.
Notes on Bornean Plants. Acta Phytotaxonomica et Geobotanica 22(1–2): 7–9. Pitchers bear the characteristic thorns of N. bicalcarata, although they are greatly reduced in size. The mouth is round and the lid is ovate-cordate in form.
The length of the shell attains 40 mm. The elongate, ovate-fusiform shell is turreted. The dark white shell has a red band around the suture. It contains 12 whorls of which three, smooth and convex whorls in the protoconch.
The length of the shell attains 8 mm, its diameter 3.75 mm. (Original description) The ovate, rather solid shell is angled at the shoulder, constricted at the base. Its colour is white. It contains five whorls, plus a two-whorled protoconch.
Columnea hirta grows to a maximum height of . Their trailing stems are covered with small red hairs. Their velvety leaves are dark green in color and ovate in shape. The profuse tubular flowers are orange to red-orange in color.
The height of the shell attains 2½ mm, its diameter 1½ mm. The minute, rather solid, narrowly perforate shell has an ovate-turbinate shape. It is ornamented with raised spiral striae. The four whorls are depressed somewhat in the center.
The length of the shell varies between 3 mm and 7 mm. (Original description) The shell is somewhat fusiformly ovate. It is longitudinally stoutly ribbed every alternate black and white and latticed with fine transverse ridges. The interstices are shallow.
There are twenty-eight of these wrinkles on the margin of the penultimate whorl. The space above the shoulder is distinctly excavated, especially on the spire. Theis suture distinct and, on the earlier whorls, almost Channelled. The aperture is ovate.
The plant is long. The leaves are lanceolate, ovate, are long and wide. It leaf blades are and have obscure cross veins with an apex which is acuminate or slightly acute. O. compositus have a raceme which is composed from inflorescence.
The length of the shell varies between 40 mm and 80 mm. The ovate-conical shell is ventricose. Its color is of a reddish white, marked with undulated brown spots with red edges. The epidermis has a bright brown color.
Erect shrub or small tree that grows 2–6 m in height. Its leaves are 5–16 cm long with 5-18 narrowly ovate, oblong, or sublinear lobes. Flower color: perianth white; style cream-white or occasionally greenish yellow; tip green.
Flowers during July - November.Greeting Cards, Tropical Botanic Garden & Research Institute, Pacha, Palode, Trivandrum - 695 562. 1997 Leaves dense, fleshy, 1-1.5 x 0.6-0.8 cm, elliptic-ovate, obtuse to round at apex, attenuate at base; margins thin; midrib prominent.Exacum travancoricum Bedd.
The last whorl is shortly deflexed in front in adult specimens. The aperture is rotund-ovate, being slightly narrowed above, but not angular there. The aperture is not modified in form by the preceding whorl. The aperture is moderately oblique.
The aperture is broadly ovate, oblique, milky white within. The peristome is acute, sinuous above and slightly so below, much reflected at umbilical margin. The columellar margin is very oblique and descending. The width of the shell is 16.2-23.5 mm.
Selysia bidentata is a species of the genus Selysia native to Panama. It is high similarity to S. smithii. It has ovate seeds and there are 6–9 in each fruit. The fruits turn from green to red at maturity.
Stamens are inserted near base of corolla tube and the anthers ovate. Ovary ovoid, 3 X 2 mm, stellate tomentose except for lower third; stigma subcapitate. Capsules ellipsoid, stellate tomentose, approximately 4 X 3 mm. Seeds unwinged, ovoid to ellipsoid.
Trees up to 27 m tall; trunk up to 48 cm in diameter. Leaves compound, 7–8 pairs of oblong or ovate-oblong leaflets. Inflorescences are axillary panicles, 10–14 cm long; flowers small, with petals up to 2.5 mm long.
The upper glandular stalk is stalk-round, sometimes woody to the middle. The opposite leaves are simple, elliptic or ovate to broad- lanceolate, sometimes linear and usually bleak. Leaflets are missing.Erich Oberdorfer: Plant sociology excursion flora for Germany and adjacent areas .
The leaves are pinnate and alternate, of one to four un-toothed leaflets. However, usually of two leaflets, hence the common name. Leaflet shape varies, being ovate-oblong, lanceolate or elliptical. The leaf tip can be notched or fairly blunt.
They are ovate and flattened and have moderately long, lateral lobes lined with elongated feathery lobules on all the thoracic segments and the first eight abdominal segments. The head and the posterior abdominal segments are relatively small and dark-coloured.
The second and the third whorl are cancellate. The subsequent whorls contains few, rounded ribs, crossed everywhere by 3 - 4 rough, spiral lirae; nine ribs and in the body whorl. The ovate-shaped aperture is narrow. The sinus is not deep.
The slit fasciole present on the last 1½ whorls is very narrow. Its edgesare pinched up into a strong keel. It terminates about ½ mm or ¾ mm behind the peristome in a long, narrow slot. The ovate aperture is very oblique.
Hernandia nymphaeifolia is a tree with 5–22 m high. The leaves are narrowly or broadly ovate or subcircular. The 5-9 veins are palmate. The flowers are white or greenish, hermaphrodite, with fragrant odour; male and female are separated.
The lower sterile floret of the lemma is ovate and is 1 length of a spikelet which is also emarginate, membranous and mucronate. The fertile lemma is coriaceous, keelless, oblong, shiny and is long with involute margins and acute apex.
The shell has an elongate- ovate shape, with a large central tubercle and radiating striae on a smooth mantle. The shell grows to a size of 80 mm. The oral appendages are simple, subulate and retractile.G.W. Tryon (1882) , Systematic Conchology vol.
Corolla has five white petals. Calyx is composed by five fused, sharp-pointed sepals. Leaves are opposite, ovate to lanceolate and short-stalked. Fruits reach a length of about 5 cm and contain many seeds showing a tuft of white hairs.
Dicliptera maclearii is an erect herb with small pink flowers growing to 1 m in height. Its leaves are lanceolate to ovate, acuminate or spine-tipped, 20–70 mm long and 5–30 mm wide. It closest relative is D. ciliata.
Flowers Fruits Melochia umbellata is a shrub or small tree, growing to 2–15 m in height. It grows rapidly and is able to colonise disturbed land.Starr et al. (2003). It has large, broadly ovate, leaves 90–300 mm long.
The aperture is elongately ovate with thick parietal callus. The columella is short with fasciole ridge rounded. Color ranges from dark cream (very light brown) to white, with yellow apex, sometimes white. Locality: New South Wales to South Australia, on sand.
Leaves alternate with a finely toothed edge. 4 to 9 cm long, ovate shaped with a long pointed tip. Leaf stalk 6 to 12 mm long. Leaf veins prominent on both sides, more evident underneath, particularly the lateral veins in threes.
The aperture is ovate. The color of the shell is white, variously painted with pink lines and blotches. These lines are fine, oblique, and extend over a portion of the whorls. They are sometimes flexuous and cover the whole surface.
W. mirabilis is a branching tree up to 5 m tall. Leaves are broadly ovate to lanceolate, thick, and leathery. Flower heads have a large urn-shaped receptacle with whitish, tomentose phyllaries tapering toward the tip. Flowers are wind-pollinated.
There is often a gap of several millimetres separating the two lobes of the peristome directly below the lid. The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate to orbicular and typically has a cordate base as well as a frilled margin.
The anthers are dorsifixed. The three-loculed ovary have many ovules per locule. The styles are arranged into a column. The three- angled fruits are broadly cylindrical capsules and when ripe release many small, flat, ovate to orbicular shaped seeds.
The panicle is equilateral, linear, open, is long and carry 3–4 fertile spikelets. The main panicle branches are indistinct and almost racemose. Spikelets are ovate, solitary and are long. They also have fertile spikelets that have filiformed and pubescent pedicels.
The panicle is linear, open, is long and carry 3–6 fertile spikelets. The main panicle branches are appressed. Spikelets are ovate, solitary and are long. They also have fertile spikelets that are hairy and have filiformed and pubescent pedicels.
The apical whorls of the protoconch are lacking through decollation. The opening is then sealed with a calcareous plug. The sculpture of the ovate fusiform shell shows scattered sigmoidal axial ribs that are crossed by spiral cords. The whorls are broad.
The length of the shell varies between 20 mm and 45 mm. The imperforate shell is globosely ovate, with the suture excavated. The 5–6 whorls are convex and carinate. The body whorl is ventricose, with erect tubercles at the suture.
Salvia cyanocephala is an uncommon perennial that is endemic to Colombia, typically found near streams in bushy areas at elevation. It grows up to high, with ovate cordate leaves, and a blue flower from long with an unusual 'gaping calyx'.
The shell grows to a length of 20 mm. The imperforated shell is somewhat pyramidally ovate. The sutures of the spire are excavated. The whorls are spirally squamately ridged, slanting around the upper part, sharply angled, erectly squamate at the angle.
Lycaste aromatica has ovate pseudobulbs, deciduous lanceolate leaves and erect flowered spikes about long. Flower are yellow-orange and fragrant, about wide. The flowering period extends from late Spring through-Summer. It is a terrestrial orchid growing on mossy branches (epiphyte).
The upperside of the body and wings are olive-brown. There is a small, rounded or ovate, upper silver discal spot on the forewing upperside. Adults are probably on wing year round. The larvae have been recorded feeding on Guettarda macrosperma.
The lid or operculum is ovate- elliptic. An unbranched spur, up to 5 mm long, is inserted at the base of the lid. Nepenthes hispida has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle is up to 5 cm long and 1.5 cm thick.
Stems elongated, rising in the water or creeping and rooting at the nodes. Submerged leaves (if present) basal, linear; floating or aerial leaves elliptical to ovate. Flowers hermaphrodite, long-pedunculate in the axils of the floating or aerial leaves. Stamens 6.
The size of the shell varies between 30 mm and 81 mm. The rather thin shell is ovate and ventricose. The conical spire is slightly muricated (= covered with short, sharp points). The four whorls near the edge are the widest.
The size of the shell varies between 40 mm and 110 mm. The ovate shell is a little ventricose. The spire is slightly elongated and submuricated. The 12 to 14 whorls are flattened above, surmounted by ribs which are continued.
The trees have characteristic straight, smooth barked stems. Leaves are narrow-ovate to elliptic in shape, and have slightly serated margins. Leaves are also stalked and alternately arranged. On the adaxial surface, leaves are dark green with deeply impressed veins.
Eucomis schijffii is a short summer-growing bulbous plant. The smallest of the species of Eucomis , it is about tall. Its bulb is globular, across. Three to four ovate leaves emerge from the bulb and lie flat on the soil.
Adenodolichos rhomboideus grows as a subshrub. The leaves consist of three ovate leaflets, measuring up to long, puberulous above and pubescent below. Inflorescences are terminal, featuring crimson or purple flowers. The fruits are oblanceolate or falcate pods measuring up to long.
Garrya ovata is a shrub up to tall and wide.NPIN The leaves are thick and leathery, ovate, up to long, tomentose on both sides when young, at maturity glabrous above but tomentose below.Bentham, George. 1839. Plantas Hartwegianas imprimis Mexicanas 14.
Bauer, U., C.J. Clemente, T. Renner & W. Federle 2012. Form follows function: morphological diversification and alternative trapping strategies in carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plants. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher mouth is ovate and has an oblique insertion.
Racemes, flowers are very small (less than 1/8 inches) but numerous and dense, elongating in fruiting stage; sepals ovate, about 1 mm long. Petals absent or reduced to filamentous, only 1/2 the length of sepals; style are very short.
The dextral or sinistral shell is ovate-conic, and colored glossy yellow, green, olive or chestnut; often banded with green or chestnut. The shell has 6 whorls. The color pattern is extremely variable. The height of the shell is 19.0 mm.
Scented cream coloured flowers form on panicles from February to April. The yellow pear shaped capsule is on a stalk 6 mm long. It matures from October to December. The capsule usually contains two black ovate shaped seeds, 9 mm long.
The ovate pebblesnail, scientific name Somatogyrus excavatus, is a species of very small freshwater snail with an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Hydrobiidae. This species is endemic to the United States, and its natural habitat is rivers.
Acheulean hand axes from Kent. The types shown are (clockwise from top) cordate, ficron and ovate. It was the longest-used tool of human history. The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to prehistoric technology.
Rhus ovata ranges in height from and it has a rounded appearance. The twigs are thick and reddish in color. Its foliage consists of simple, dark green, leathery, ovate leaves that are folded along the midrib. The leaf arrangement is alternate.
Pyrgulopsis neomexicana at pages 54-55. and its aperture is ovate. The body, head, snout and tentacles are dark gray to black in color. The tentacles range from black or dark gray at the base, to pale gray at the tips.
These are slightly flattened below the sutures. The long-ovate aperture is somewhat pyriform and forms usually less than half the total length of shell. The outer lip is thin. The columella shows more or less a white shining callus.
"Avocado Tree's Demise Is the Pits for Growers; Fitting farewell sought for 'mother'". Los Angeles Times, 7 September 2003. 'Hass' trees have medium-sized (), ovate fruit with a black, pebbled skin. The flesh has a nutty, rich flavor with 19% oil.
The shell has an elongate-ovate shape. Its length measures 1.8 mm. The whorls of the protoconch are tumid, obliquely immersed. The four whorls of the teleoconch are flattened, strongly tabulated, shouldered at the summit, and strongly contracted at the periphery.
The length of the shell attains 7 mm, its diameter 3 mm. (Original description) The wholly white shell has an oblong, ovate shape. The spire is rather short, turreted and acute. The whorls are angulated at the sutures, longitudinally ribbed.
In East Asia, the flowering time is usually in August. Terminally on the false stem is an inflorescence stem, long, containing many flowers. The bracts are light green and ovate to oblong with a blunt upper end with a length of .
Schizolaena isaloensis grows as a tree up to tall. The bark is thick and spongy. Its subcoriaceous leaves are elliptic to ovate or obovate in shape and coloured dark green above and pale green below. They measure up to long.
Melhania angustifolia grows as a suffrutex (subshrub) or shrub up to tall. The ovate to oblong leaves measure up to long. Inflorescences are two or three-flowered, on a stalk measuring up to long. The flowers have bright yellow petals.
They are marked by slightly retractive lines of growth, and exceedingly fine, closely placed, wavy spiral striations. The periphery of the body whorl is well rounded. The base of the shell is short, inflated andmoderately umbilicated. The aperture is ovate.
The base of the shell is moderately long, well rounded and marked by four spiral keels which grow successively weaker anteriorly. The aperture is irregularly ovate. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within.
Melhania latibracteolata grows as a suffrutex (subshrub) up to tall. The elliptic to ovate leaves are tomentose and measure up to long. Inflorescences are two to five-flowered, on a stalk measuring up to long. The flowers have pale yellow petals.
Leaves alternate, linear-oblong, ovate with a tapering tip. Flowers show raceme inflorescence type, which are small, pale purplish in color. The fruit is a hairy legume. It is widespread in all South Asian, East Asian, and Southeast Asian countries.
Alangium rotundifolium grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth to scaly bark is white to pale grey. The fragrant flowers are white or cream to yellow. The ovate-ellipsoid fruits are reddish when ripe.
They are well rounded, having their summits closely appressed to the preceding whorl. The suture is moderately well impressed. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded. The ovate aperture is rather large, and white within.
The milk-white, shining shell is small and measures 3.1 mm. It is heavy, elongate-ovate. Its whorls increase regularly in size. The whorls of the protoconch are small, almost completely obliquely immersed in the first of the succeeding volutions.
They are marked by the undiminished continuations of the axial ribs, which extend to the umbilical chink. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thin. The slender columella is curved, and provided with a moderately strong fold at its insertion.
The thin, soiled yellowish white shell is very elongate and has an ovate shape. Its length measures 4.3 mm. It is umbilicated. The whorls of the protoconch are small, smooth, very obliquely, deeply immersed in the first of the succeeding turns.
The inflated base of the shell is rather short, narrowly umbilicated and marked like the spire. The aperture is broadly ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, and strongly curved in the middle.
The elongate-ovate, yellowish-white shell is imperforate. Its length measures 9.5 mm. The whorls of the protoconch are decollated. The six whorls of the teleoconch are strongly rounded, moderately contracted at the sutures and narrowly flatly shouldered at the summit.
In subspecies lanceolata, these bristles are shorter than the leaves, while in the subspecies nebrownii they are longer. It has a branched inflorescence with broadly ovate petals, 30-45 stamens per flower and angular seeds. The flowers are pink or white.
The mealycup sage reaches stature heights of 60 to 90 cm. The shape of the leaf blade varies from ovate- lanceolate to lanceolate. The inflorescence axis forms a blue, rarely a white hair. The truncated calyx has very short calyx teeth.
Macrosolen parasiticus is a parasitic shrub with thickened stem at nodes, like mistletoe. The oppositely arranged, ovate-lanceolate leaves have sharp tips and rounded bases. The leaf stalk (petiole) is 6–12 mm long. The flowers are few and stalkless.
The living animal is brownish-beige throughout, including the tentacles. The shell is umbilicated, ovate-pyramidal, thin, translucid and shining. The color is pale buff, with elegant longitudinal narrow tawny streaks. The shell has 6 whorls, that are a little convex.
It may appear green, yellow, orange or red. The fruit has four persistent calyx lobes. Leaves are opposite on the stem, broad ovate, 1.5 to 5 cm long, 8 to 25 mm wide. An intra-marginal leaf vein is usually absent.
The shell is perforate, ovate-conic, very thin, pellucid, scarcely shining, obsoletely and closely decussated by growth striae and delicate spiral lines. The shell is pale corneous in color, sometimes fulvous. The spire is conoid. The apex is rather acute.
The pedipalps are long, moderately curved, and porrect. The thorax and abdomen area is deeply purplish to grey brown. The forewings are nearly ovate with and have curved grey-brown costa with seven pale markings. The apex and termen are round.
The median segment is fan like and dilates towards the apex. Females have a pointed terminal segment. The thorax is smooth, the metathorax is whitish, and the abdomen is greyish brown. The deeply grey-brown forewings are oblong and nearly ovate.
Prunus microcarpa is a deciduous bushy shrub with rigid branchlets. Its glabrous leaves are ovate to elliptic. Prunus microcarpa produces white to pale pink hermaphrodite flowers in April. The flowers are solitary or in pairs and are 1 cm across.
The length of the shell varies between 10 mm and 20 mm. The thick, ovate shell is oblong and smooth. It is of rosy white color. It shows transverse striae varying in number at the base of the body whorl.
They have purple or red corollas and corona lobes that are yellow or orange. Flowering occurs nearly year-round. The long, fusiform shaped fruits are called follicles. The follicles contain tan to brown seeds that are ovate in shape and long.
There are a couple distinct features to identify Corylus colurna. Leaves are alternate, simple, broadly ovate to obovate, doubly serrate, glabrous above, and pubescent veins below. Corylus colurnas buds are 1/3 inch long, green tinted brown. and softly pubescent.
Inflorescences are panicles or corymbs produced terminally and axillary with many flowered branches. The flowers have no petals but have greenish colored, 1.8–4 mm long sepals sometimes tinted purple. The sepals are ovate to obovate or oval in shape.
The plant is perennial and caespitose with culms. The ligule is going around the eciliate membrane. Leaf- blades are flat and are broad, while their venation have 13 vascular bundles. The panicle is open, ovate, inflorescenced and is with pilose branches.
It is a tropical, evergreen, monoecious shrub growing to tall and has large, thick, leathery, shiny evergreen leaves, alternately arranged, long and broad. The leaf blades can, for example, be ruler-lanceolate, oblong, elliptic, lanceolate, ovate inverted, ovate spatulate, or violin-shaped and coloured green, yellow, or purple in various patterns, depending on the variety. The petiole has a length of 0.2 to 2.5 cm. The inflorescences are long racemes, long, with male and female flowers on separate inflorescences; the male flowers are white with five small petals and 20–30 stamens, pollens are oval approximately 52x32 microns in size.
Cosmos bipinnatus flowers in Sivas, Turkey The very conspicuous cup-shaped inflorescences have a diameter of usually 5 to 7 (rarely 8) cm and contain tongue and tubular flowers, which are surrounded by bracts. The outer bracts are usually eight and are ovate to lanceolate-tail-shaped, 7 to 15 mm long, 3 to 5 (rarely 6) mm wide. The inner bracts are ovate-lanceolate and 8 to 12 mm long. They are translucent with many black stripes and a clear edge up to 1 mm wide, sometimes with yellowish or pink pigments, the tip is ciliate.
Nepenthes lamii is quite morphologically distinct from all other Nepenthes of New Guinea and is thus easily identified in the wild. Its pitchers are somewhat reminiscent of those of N. murudensis and the giant form of N. tentaculata, but both of these taxa are restricted to Borneo. Furthermore, although similar, the traps of N. lamii differ in that they have a round, as opposed to angular, pitcher mouth, and mature specimens never have filaments on the upper surface of the lid. In addition, the lower pitchers are ovate to ovate-cylindrical in N. lamii and possess a wider peristome.
Fissurina is a genus of unilocular (single chambered) calcareous forams, similar in general form to Lagena, but included in the nodosariacean family Ellipsolagenidae, Lagenida. The test is rounded to ovate in outline, oval to lenticular in section, and may have one or more peripheral keels. Wall calcareous, hyaline, finely perforate, surface smooth, with random or regularly aligned punctae. Aerture terminal, ovate to slitlike, within a slightly depressed fissure at the test apex, provided internally with an entosolenian tube that may be central or may curve toward one side of the test and may be attached to the inner wall.
In general, this tree can grow up to 10 m or longer to 15 m tall. It has rough and short branches which can stretch to 150 cm in diameter. The shape of apical leaf is broad-ovate to ovate-oblong or rounded with smooth margin. The yellow-green leaf is thick and its width can be 5–12 cm long by 4–5 cm wide, the leaf often be glossy and grow as alternative type, one side can be a little longer than the other side at base sometimes, this is one of the typical characters.
The herring scad is an ovate shape, commonly blue green above and silver belowThe herring scad has a body profile very similar to other members of the genus Alepes, having a strongly compressed, ovate body. The ventral and dorsal profiles of the fish are almost evenly convex, joined anteriorally by a pointed snout. There are two separate dorsal fins, the first containing 8 spines while the second has a single spine followed by 24 to 27 soft rays. The anal fin consists of two anteriorally detached small spines followed by a single spine connected to 20 to 23 soft rays.
The lateral sepals spathulate, broadly ovate-lanceolate and petals ovate with a single or sometimes multiple red stripes. The labellum is prominently trilobed with a raised yellow plate near the base of the middle lobe, yellow at the base, with rows of white calli extending from either side of the plate and the lateral lobes suffused with pink, long. The column is curved over the raised central plate, yellow, with prominent, white, lateral wings. This Caladenia is similar to C. flava fragrant white versus yellow flowers with prominent red stripes and spots on the dorsal sepal and lateral petals.
The inflorescence of H. stylosa is a corymbose cyme, 5–10 cm wide (2–4 in). The sterile flowers of the species have three to four sepals which are broadly ovate to broadly elliptical in shape, unequal, and roughly 0.5–2 cm (0.12-0.78 in) in size some with denticulated margins. Flowers which are fertile have campanulate calyx tubes which are ovate to suborbicular in shape, 1–1.5 mm (0.04-0.06 in) in size, and with obtuse apexes. After flowering, the 2.5-3.5 cm (1-1.4 in) oblong, blue, and slightly unequal petals of H. stylosa reflex.
A Ficus amplissima (Pimpri) tree leaf with veins visible Ficus amplissima is a large evergreen or semi-deciduous tree with a widely spreading crown of over . It can grow up to a height of in natural conditions and has a moderate to dense spread of aerial roots which are generally wrapped around top of the trunk. It has a trunk diameter of up to . The leaves are broadly ovate elliptic-lanceolate to ovate-oblong in shape with a blunt or acute tip and an entire margin; the leaf base is acute-cuneate or rounded in shape.
The length of the shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The small, slender and narrow shell is elongately ovate and turreted. It is dark white to slighly straw colored. It contains 6 whorls of which two reddish whorls in the protoconch.
Schizolaena parvipetala grows as a shrub or small tree up to tall. Its twigs are glabrous, occasionally pubescent with small lenticels. The leaves are elliptic to ovate in shape. They are coloured medium brown above and light brown below, measuring up to long.
The adult shell grows to a length of 5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The small shell is fusiform-ovate. It has a reddish color and a darker reddish color at the sutures. The body whorl has a red band in the middle.
The length of the shell varies between 4.5 mm and 7 mm. The shell is oblong-ovate. The sutures of the spire are rather deep. The shell is longitudinally crossed by bold, sinuous ribs, interstices between the ribs latticed with conspicuous striae.
The lateral segment has a filiform appendage enclosed in the long recurved spur. The leaves are ovate cordate with bristly crenatures with numerous weak hairs above and glabrous below. Petioles are generally shorter than the leaves. Scapes much longer than the leaves.
Agave guiengola reach a diameter of . The leaves are thick, broad, whitish-green to bluish-colored, ovate to lanceolate, irregularly arranged, about long and wide. The dark brown margins of the leaves are densely toothed. The year-old slender inflorescence is high.
Ferulago campestris can reach a height of about .Acta Plantarum This perennial herb has a branching stem and repeatedly pinnate leaves. They are ovate-triangular, petiolate, 30–60 cm long. It produces large, flat, yellow inflorescences, with a diameter of 6–18 cm.
The filaments are red and up to 1 cm long and the anthers are yellow to orange. The stamens are around 22 mm long. The divided leaf segments are ovate, cuneate, and often are oblique and abruptly cut off at the base.
These are globose, semidiaphanous, white, shining, the third being microscopically longitudinally striate. The subsequent whorls, all impressed suturally, are closely longitudinally ribbed. These ribs are close, shining, and smooth, obliquely flexuose, with the interstices finely spirally striate. The aperture is ovate- oblong.
The length of the shell attains 6.5 mm, its diameter 3 mm. (Original description) The small shell is rather solid and has an ovate-conic shape. Its Colour is uniform buff. The shell contains six whorls, of which two compose the protoconch.
The shell has an ovate-oblong shape. It is more or less inflated, generally pretty thin, enamelled, and provided with parallel, longitudinal, inclined and acute ribs. ; The body whorl is much larger than all the others together. The spire is slightly elevated.
The length of the shell attains 30 mm, its diameter 14 mm. The white, ovate-fusiform shell contains about eight whorls (the upper ones are broken off). The remaining whorls are concave on top and somewhat convex below. They contains slightly angulate whorls.
The lip is three-lobed. The lateral lobes are elliptic- obovate, obtuse-rounded and erect-incurved forming a cylinder. The mid-lobe is oblong-ovate with the base hastate to subauriculate. The apex is notched with the lanceolate lobules elongate and recurved.
They are spirally many keeled and between the keels thickly and slenderly longitudinally lirate. The protoconch consists of two subinflated whorls which are spirally and equally striate. The aperture is shorter than the spire, elongately ovate. The outer lip is thin and sinuous.
This species grows to 60 cm high. The leaves are hairless and serrate and ovate-lanceolate. They are mostly positioned opposite and have short stalks. The flowers are pale mauve and about 8 mm across with a 4-lobed stigma in terminal racemes.
These folds are crossed by very fine and very numerous transverse striae, colored with articulated, elongated, brown and whitish spots. The striae of the base are more strongly prominent. The whitish aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thick and denticulated internally.
The apical whorl is minute, regularly increasing. The aperture is elongated, ovate-fusiform; The outer lip is thin, sharp and regularly curved. The inner margin is regularly arched. The columella is somewhat elongated, its margin sinuous and somewhat excurved at the tip.
The very thin shell is elongate-ovate, subdiaphanous, milk-white, and shining. It measures 4 mm. The nuclear whorls are almost completely obliquely immersed in the first post-nuclear whorl. The eight post-nuclear whorls are rounded, rather inflated, and moderately shouldered.
Corolla cream with yellow center. Disk cupular with many seeds, ovate-shaped, compressed, with scanty endosperm, with a tuft of hairs at one end, dark brown. The plant is widely grown as a fence cover.Ellison, Don (1999) Cultivated Plants of the World.
Medeola virginiana shoots consist of two tiers of whorled leaves. The lower tier typically bears between five and nine (occasionally up to 12) lance shaped leaves. The upper tier bears three to five ovate leaves. The leaves have an entire (smooth) margin.
The tree was said to have ovate leaves, rounded or subcordate and not usually strongly oblique at the base. Host said the leaf was biserrate. The catalogue of the Späth nursery, Berlin, describes 'Tiliifolia' [:'Tiliaefolia'] as having smooth shiny dark green leaves.
The length of the forewings is 8 mm. Adults are similar to Paracraga argentea, but smaller and without silvering inside the brown forewing ovate outline. Adults have been recorded on wing in June., 1994: Systematics of the Neotropical moth family Dalceridae (Lepidoptera).
The shell is minute, imperforate, obliquely ovate, light brown. The surface of the shell is smooth except for slight growth-lines. The shell is composed of 3½ very convex whorls separated by unusually deep sutures. The apex is obtuse and often eroded.
Small sized with spreading habit and thick rhizomes (these up to 3 cm in diameter). Green ovate leaves; green triangular stems; upright spikes with flowers of yellow petals with a wide red margin; staminodes are long and narrow, edges regular; capsules globose.
Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Sagittaria subulata Sagittaria subulata is a perennial herb up to 40 cm tall. Leaves are submersed or floating, narrowly linear to ovate, not lobed. Inflorescence floats on the surface of the water.Buchenau, Franz Georg Philipp. 1871.
The shell size varies between 7 mm and 25 mm. The oblong-ovate shell is spirally peculiarly rudely ridged. The ridges are very irregular and rather scaly, somewhat smooth next the perforations which are slightly tubiferous and distant. The coloration is reddish-orange.
The simple leaves are alternate, ovate or elliptic, and long. Flowers are in lateral cymes and are in diameter. The five-lobed corolla is white and the five stamens have yellow anthers. The fruit is a yellow berry in diameter with many seeds.
Form follows function: morphological diversification and alternative trapping strategies in carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plants. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher lid or operculum is very narrowly ovate in shape and has a distinctive basal crest on its lower surface.
Narrow lanceolate leaves up to 15 cm long, with serrate margin and light green color, in temperate climates, it turns yellow in autumn. Catkins 4–10 cm long; male flowers yellowish green, with an ovate-lanceolate bract, six stamens; female flowers green.
Erythranthe peregrina has a high level of pollen and seed fertility. Its vegetative and floral characteristics are intermediate between its two ancestral species, E. guttata and E. lutea. E. peregrina is a perennial herb high. The leaves are generally variable, ovate-oblong .
Psittacanthus calyculatus is hairless, with nearly terete branches. The leaves are opposite and ovate or lanceolate, having almost no petiole, and without veins. The inflorescences are terminal and in groups of three yellow to scarlet flowers which have cup-shaped bracts under them.
G. Reichenbach "Orchides" item 193 in C. Müller, Ed. Walpers. Annales Botanices Systematicae 6(1861)367. Berlin. subtended by maroon, 5 mm long bracts. The ovate-acute sepals are 3 mm long, as are the filiform petals, which are slightly dilated distally.
The subsequent five whorls are impressed at the suture and longitudinally incrassate (12 on the body whorl). The spiral lirae are few, in the last whorl they are absent just in the centre. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is thin.
Macmillan . They are herbaceous plants or small shrubs growing to 1–4 m tall. The leaves are opposite, simple ovate to lanceolate, with an entire or crenate margin; they are often aromatic. The blue or white flowers are pollinated by butterflies and bumblebees.
The species' culms are prostrate and are long. The leaf-blades are ovate and are long and wide. It has an obscure cross veins venation. The species also has 3–4 unilateral racemes which are located along the central axis, and are long.
The corolla is pink, with 4 or sometime 5 lobes. The corolla remains after anthesis and is often reflexed. The stamens are inserted below sinus and the filaments are longer than the anthers. The anthers are ovate-circular with very thin scales.
The upper glume is as ovate as the lower one and is long. Both glumes are membranous, are purple in colour, have no keels, and are 5-veined. The apex of the upper glume is either acute or acuminate. Flowers have 3 stamens.
The panicle is open, ovate and is long. The main branches are spread out, with the panicle axis being scabrous just like the branches. Pedicels are curved, filiform, glabrous and have fertile spikelets on them. Spikelets are compressed, obovate and are in length.
Pelargonium exstipulatum is a tall, quite woody, 'shrublet' which grows up to metre high and 50 cm wide. It has small pink flowers and its leaves are waxy, green and ovate with a slight fringe. Its leaves have a sweet, slightly spicy scent.
The stipules are ovate and 6–10 mm long. It flowers in terminal racemes, with clusters of buds enclosed on broad bracts. The calyx is silvery (from the hairs) and 4–5 mm long, with teeth which are 1–1.5 mm long.
It is distinguished by regular longitudinal flame markings becoming small, paler, and more zigzagged, below the somewhat angled periphery, and all uniting round the umbilicus in a red band. The aperture is ovate-triangular. The lip is simple. The columellar margin is thickened.
Pekin lilacs have arching branches and ovate dark green leaves that are long. They have yellowish-white flowers that bloom in panicles up to long. The panicles change over to loose clusters of brown capsules. The bark is a red-brown color.
The herb flowers from July to September. H. mutilum subsp. mutilum has an apical internode that is shorter than the rest of the internodes. The leaves are variable in shape but are most commonly broadly ovate or suborbicular, and have a pale underside.
The subspecies only occurs in scattered populations in low grounds and coastal mud from New Jersey to Florida and west to Texas. H. mutilum subsp. boreale has shorter or absent apical internodes. The broadly ovate to elliptic leaves have no pale undersides.
The leaves are big and blade-shaped, ovate, light green with cordate base. The petioles are 0.3–1.0 m long, with the lower parts clasped around the stem. The plant is a member of the genus Alocasia, and is thus related to taro.
Abutilon listeri is a common shrub on Christmas Island, growing to 1–3 m in height. The leaves are circular to broadly ovate, either entire or weakly crenate, and about 90–160 mm long. The yellow flowers occur in loose, terminal panicles.
Hempnettle could grow up to 1 meter high. Its leaves and flowers are hairy. Leaves are simple, 1 to 5 inches long, opposite, margins are serrate and ovate in shape, pubescent on both sides. The stem is swollen below the leaf nodes.
The leaves can lance-shaped to ovate, and are smooth-edged. They measure up to 4.5 centimeters long. The flowers range in color from white and pale pink to light bluish-purple. The inflorescence is a head, which can be from 10 mm.
The involucre is cylindrical two to four rowed, with the inner involucral bracts twice as long as outer bracts. The receptacle is flat and glabrous. The corolla is yellow, whitish yellow or azure blue. The stamens have saggitate anthers and ovate appendage.
The length of the shell varies between 13 mm and 28 mm. The imperforate shell has an ovate-conical shape. It is nearly smooth. Its sculpture consists of very fine dense spiral striae, leaving narrow and shallow grooves between them, sometimes nearly obsolete.
The height of the shell varies between 2 mm and 5 mm. The minute shell is thin, shining and has an ovate shape. It has a uniform deep rosy color throughout. The four whorls are somewhat flattened at the upper part, then convex.
The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate to sub-orbicular and has a somewhat cordate base. It lacks appendages. A spur measuring up to 5 mm in length is inserted near the base of the lid. It may be unbranched, bifid, or trifid.
They are infundibular throughout and may or may not have fringed wings. They bear a wide, flattened peristome (≤10 mm wide) which is contracted in the middle. Ribs are barely discernible, except at the front of the peristome. Terrestrial pitchers have ovate lids.
Gardenia brighamii is a small tree, reaching a height of . The glossy, dark green leaves are ovate, long and wide. The petals of the solitary, white flowers are fused at the base to form a tube in length and have six lobes.
The aperture broadly ovate and the outer lip is thin. The inner lip is raised anteriorly with a slight umbilical chink between it and the body-whorl. The columella-plait small and oblique. The protoconch of one whorl that is smooth and polished.
The size of the shell varies between 35 mm and 50 mm. The imperforate, solid shell has an ovate-conic shape. Its color pattern is whitish, streaked and maculated with brown or green, the darker color often predominating. The conic spire is acute.
Leaf scars evident. Leaves are opposite on the stem, ovate to oblong in shape. 4 to 12 cm long, 2 to 7 cm wide with a long pointed tip. The upper surface is green without hairs, the underside pale grey in colour.
The length of the shell varies between 35 mm and 80 mm. The subperforate, solid shell has an ovate-pointed shape. Its color pattern is brownish or white, marbled with chestnut. The six whorls are convex, spirally lirate and longitudinally regularly sublamellose striate.
The exposed bark gives the common name, "Orange Bark". Leaves are 10 to 80 mm long, 2 to 13 mm wide, narrow lanceolate to ovate in shape. Leaf edges are curved over, sometimes with toothed edges, other times entire. Leaf tip sometimes curved.
Eogenes hindwing with rounded distal margin, especially in the male, the anal angle being effaced. Vein 2 of the forewing towards the middle of the cell. Antennae with ovate club, which is elongate and has no pointed tip. Third segment of palpi prominent.
The epithet "palmata" notes its characteristic, palmately lobed leaves (3–5 lobes per leaf, acuminate with rounded sinuses). These are ovate, and typically about 10–15 cm long and wide, usually lacking hairs. Its tendrils are branched. Its flowers appear in late Spring.
Cephalanthera damasonium is a herbaceous plant, reaching a maximum height of about 60 cm. Leaves are ovate, becoming narrower higher up the stem, with parallel venation. It has white flowers which never fully open. Each shoot can carry up to 16 flowers.
Ilex guayusa is an evergreen dioecious tree which grows tall. The leaves are ovate, elliptic, oblong or lanceolate; long, wide; with serrate or dentate margin. The flowers are small and white, arranged in thyrses. The fruit is spherical and red, in diameter.
Sideritis barbellata is a small erect shrub, laxly branched, whitish-yellow tomentose. Leaves are generally green-glabrescent above, ovate-lanceolate, the base cordiform. Inflorescences are erect, verticillasters, branched with 1–3 series of sterile bracts subtending the branches, and with slightly curved flowers.
It is furnished internally with several rows of hooks. The foot is ovate, large, fleshy, bordering all parts of the shell. It is rounded, widened, lobed and dilated before, with a horizontal furrow. The posterior extremity has no trace of an. operculum.
Upper pitchers are smaller than lower pitchers, growing to 12.3 cm in height and 2 cm in width. Their wings are reduced to ribs. The pitcher mouth is ovate to rounded and bears a rounded or slightly flattened peristome (≤4 mm wide).
Shells of Cymbiola aulica Shells of Cymbiola aulica can reach a size of . These large shells are solid to thick, ovate, completely smooth, with subconical spire and sharp nodules on shoulders of whorls. Siphonal notch is narrow and deep. Columella shows six plaits.
The height of the shell attains 15 mm. The ovate-pyramidal shell is solid. The color of the shell is a uniform olive or a brownish-olive, belted with numerous reddish spiral bands. The shell is smooth except for faint growth lines above.
Salvia keerlii is a herbaceous perennial that is native to Mexico. It freely branches, reaching up to tall and wide. The ovate-lanceolate leaves are grayish, reaching , and aromatic. The lilac flowers grow in whorls on short inflorescences, blooming midsummer to autumn.
The size of the shell varies between 3 mm and 10 mm. The small, solid, elevated shell has an ovate-conic shape. It is white, with a series of about 10 rufous spots near the suture. The five whorls form a conical spire.
The penultimate whorl has 4 spiral cinguli, a minute riblet interposed in each interval. The pits between the longitudinal and spiral riblets are oblong and quadrilateral. The body whorl is convex beneath, with close radiating lamellae . The ovate aperture is sulcate inside.
The herbaceous sepals are oblong to narrowly ovate with acute apices, measuring long and wide. Each sepal has three to five veins. The petals are a coppery yellow, measuring long and wide. The 50 to 80 stamens are irregularly spaced, the longest measuring .
The erect ovate shaped fruit are long and wide with a corky texture, no beak and ending in a sharp pointed tip long. The seeds within are around in length with a wing surrounding the seed's body. Flowering occurs from August to September.
This is a terrestrial orchid which grows on dry hills at around 1800m. It grows to 30-50cm in height. Pseudobulbs are irregular and the flowering scape is erect and ridged with clasping sheaths. Clasping sheaths are distant and ovate-lanceolate in shape.
It is a bulbous perennial geophyte, reaching a height of , rarely . There are usually one, rarely two leaves present. These are long and 1 to 3 cm wide, upright, wide and linear to ovate-lanceolate. They are drawn together and often hood-shaped.
This is the largest shell in the genus Phansianelle, with its height varying between 40 mm and 100 mm. The rather thin shell is elongatedand has a pointed-ovate shape. The conical spire is elevated. The shell contains 7-8 somewhat convex whorls.
They have long stamens; they carry a strong, sweet scent similar to petunias. The leaves are bright green and ovate. The trunk grows to be about tall. Like many members of the genus, the plant contains toxins in all parts of the flower.
The length of the shell attains 5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. The turreted shell has a subquadrate-ovate shape. It contains 6 whorls, of which the first two are smooth and convex. The third whorl shows many longitudinal and spiral striae.
The six whorls are, convex, more or less prominently shouldered above. The ribs are obsolete around the axis. The aperture is white within and measures over half the length of shell. It is ovate, angled posteriorly and at position of the carina.
The ovate-oblong shell is very elongated and shaped like Haliotis. It is slightly convex, and strongly striated all over the rather flat back. The striae are deep and rather wide apart. Its color is red varied with orange, light yellow and brown.
Melhania dehnhardtii grows as a suffrutex (subshrub) up to tall. The elliptic to ovate leaves are tomentose and measure up to long. Inflorescences are solitary or two or three-flowered, on a stalk measuring up to long. The flowers have bright yellow petals.
Melhania annua grows as an annual herb, up to tall. The pubescent leaves are ovate to obovate and measure up to long. Inflorescences are solitary or two or three-flowered, on a stalk measuring up to long. The flowers have yellow petals.
Schizolaena masoalensis grows as a liana or tree. Its papery leaves are elliptic to ovate in shape and are coloured grayish green above, tinted orangish below. They measure up to long. The inflorescences bear many flowers, each with three sepals and five petals.
Rhodolaena altivola grows as a small to medium-sized tree. It has medium, ovate leaves. The inflorescences have one or two flowers on a long stem. Individual flowers are very large with five sepals and five purple-red petals, measuring up long.
The length of the shell attains 7.5 mm, its diameter 3 mm. The small, thin shell is translucent, glossy and narrow-ovate. Its colour is white, with a few faint rusty spots. It contains 5½ whorls, two of which compose the protoconch.
The small shell measures 2.5 mm. It is, ovate, very thin, semitransparent, light yellow. The nuclear whorls are deeply immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The four post-nuclear whorls are very strongly, tabulatedly shouldered at the summit, moderately rounded.
Blossom The Victoria plum is a type of English plum. It has a yellow flesh with a red or mottled skin. This plum is a cultivar of the egg plum group (Prunus domestica ssp. intermedia). The fruit shape is oval or ovate.
Restrepia falkenbergii, commonly called the Falkenberg's Restrepia, is an epiphytic orchid, found at altitudes between 1,000-2,000 m in Colombia. This large orchid lacks pseudobulbs. The erect, thick, leathery leaf is elliptic- ovate in shape. The aerial roots seem like fine hairs.
Schizolaena charlotteae grows as a shrub or tree up to tall. Its twigs are glabrous with small lenticels. The subcoriaceous leaves are elliptic to ovate or obovate in shape. They are coloured chocolate brown above and more orangish below, measuring up to long.
The cream-colored shell has an elongate-ovate shape. Its length measures 2.3 mm. The whorls of the protoconch number at least two. They form a smooth, depressed helicoid spire, which is obliquely three-fifths immersed in the first of the succeeding turns.
The length of the ovate, dirty white shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2.5 mm. A white, fusiform, very delicately-striated shell, with six swollen whorls, impressed at the sutures, obscurely longitudinally ribbed. The aperture is oblong. The outer lip is effuse.
Petioles are short, about 8 mm long. Spines are shorter than the leaves, about 3-5½ cm long. Bracts are broadly ovate, subtruncate, and lacerate-denticulate. The plant is monoecious, and thus has both male flowers and female flowers on the same individuals.
The Field Museum. Chicago, IL. racemose inflorescence grows from a terminal ancipitous spathe, 5.5 cm long. The sepals are ovate and acute, the dorsal 5 mm long, the laterals oblique and larger than the dorsal. The linear-acute petals are three-veined.
The length of the ovate-fusiform, pink to purple, semitransparent shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2½ mm. It contains 6 whorls. The aperture is small. The outer lip is much thickened and slightly sinuate on top..The columella has a slight callus.
Rumex alpinus is a perennial plant with a creeping rhizome. It can reach a height of . The stem is erect, striated and unbranched until just below the inflorescence. The leaves are very large, ovate-round, with long stout leaf stalks and irregular margins.
The thorax has four transverse, irregular dark brownish-grey bands. The abdomen is a lighter brownish grey. The forewings are pale orange to tawny with an oblong to almost ovate shape. The forewing costa are curved and the apex is obtusely rectangular.
The length of the shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2.7 mm. (Original description) The small, rather thin shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. Its colour is buff, clouded with pale brown on the periphery. The shell contains 6 whorls , including two of the protoconch.
The length of the whitish, ovate-fusiform shell varies between 7.5 mm and 13 mm. The aperture and the spire have about the same length. The shell contains five whorls. These are longitudinally eroded with angulated and nodulose plicae and transversely by obscure grooves.
The aperture is oblong-ovate and is rather large. The columella is nearly straight, somewhat prolonged, its inner edge forming a slight sigmoid curve. The siphonal canal is short, broad, narrowed at the tip and not recurved. The outer lip is sharp and thin.
It is ovate to oblong in shape and has a distinct keel running down the middle, with two prominent lateral veins. Schmid-Hollinger, R. N.d. Kannendeckel (lid). bio-schmidhol.ch. The spur at the back of the lid is approximately 20 mm long and unbranched.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate and typically obtuse. Often, numerous filiform appendages are present on the upper surface of the lid, concentrated near the edge. However, some forms of the species lack these structures altogether.
Bauer, U., C.J. Clemente, T. Renner & W. Federle 2012. Form follows function: morphological diversification and alternative trapping strategies in carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plants. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate, lacks appendages, and is often slightly cordate.
The size of an adult shell varies between 25 mm and 50 mm. The ovate shell is short and ventricose. It is clothed with a thick, dark olive-colored epidermis. The whorls are angulated above, the angle having a row of scale-like tubercles.
The smooth shell of Bulla is ovate and expanded, with a deep, sunken involute top. Since there is little difference between the shells and in the morphology of the radular teeth, there is some uncertainty about the exact taxonomy of the species in Bulla.
There is a not well-defined ovate spot. The hindwings have a marginal shading of dark gray and the veins are heavily highlighted in dark gray. The areas between the veins are white. The anal fold is white with a dark-gray striped pattern.
The length of the shell of this species attains 3.5 mm, its diameter 2 mm. (Original description) The ovate shell is narrowly perforate. It has a pale yellowish horn colour. The shell is very finely spirally striate and rather coarsely grooved towards the ends.
The length of the shell attains 20 mm, its diameter 8 mm. (Original description) A thin, delicately sculptured, acuminate-ovate shell with an acute spire. It contains 8½ whorls, including 2 smooth whorls in the protoconch. The other whorls are convex and obtusely angulate.
The anal fasciole occupies a shelf on the summit of the whorl and is sculptured by crescentic threads. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip is dentate from the revolving sculpture. The inner lip shows a thin callus, at the posterior angle a slight sinus.
At maturity, each plant has one or two flowering scapes, each in length. The specific epithet ovatum means “egg-shaped,” which refers to the petals, not the leaves. The latter are generally ovate-rhombic, long by wide. The flower sits on a pedicel in length.
Bauer, U., C.J. Clemente, T. Renner & W. Federle 2012. Form follows function: morphological diversification and alternative trapping strategies in carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plants. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25(1): 90–102. The pitcher lid or operculum is ovate and up to 8 cm wide.
The erect, perennial shrub grows 1.5 m to 2 m tall. The leaves are ovate to oblong with pinnate venation and wavy margins. It flowers from October to December. Each small, white pea-shaped flower is enclosed by a pair of reniform flower bracts.
The size of the shell varies between 10 mm and 20 mm. The ovate, oblong shell is smooth, shining, and of a reddish or whitish yellow. It is ornamented with small longitudinal lines, waved, vermiculated or flexuous, of a chestnut color. The epidermis is greenish.
Villi minutissime denticulati; articuli eorum plerique suo diametro > aliquoties longiores. (translation) > I am here solely because of Drummond's specimens: 99 and 221 (PERTH 782289, > MEL 0235383A collected in 1845). The topmost leaves are nearly always ovate > and shortly petiolate. The spikes are randomly paired.
The body whorl has a few fine, transverse striae near the base. The aperture is white and ovate, pretty strongly emarginated, and oblique at the base. The depth of the cavity is chestnut-colored. The thin outer lip is white and very finely striated internally.
These striae are interrupted by elongated white or reddish spots, often presenting grayish flammules upon the upper whorls. The ovate aperture is elongated, attenuated at its two extremities. Its interioris bluish. The whitish columella is smooth, almost straight, and a little twisted at its base.
Hibernacula are absent. The plant possesses 4-6 loblong to ovate-oblong leave, forming a rosette. Flowers small, at 13-15 mm long, including the spur (which is 2-3 mm in length). Plants flower in July, and fruit in November among remaining flowers.
Foliage of Cinnamomum glanduliferum Cinnamomum glanduliferum is an evergreen tree reaching a height around . Leaves are shiny, dark green, alternate, petiolated, elliptic to ovate or lanceolate, long and wide. Flowers are yellowish and small, about wide. Fruits are black, globose, up to in diameter.
The leaves are alternate, very variable in shape, ovate, oblong and truncate or cordate at the base. The flowers are large, axillary and solitary. Fruit is a capsule with conspicuous enlarged sepals and thickened pedicles. It is actually not a purgative but a mild laxative.
Hosta nigrescens can reach a height of about and a diameter of . The basal mid-green leaves are simple, ovate and petiolate. The plant produces racemes of about 30 cm with 15-25 funnel-shaped white or light purple flowers. They bloom in August.
The base of the shell is ornamented with six or seven furrows. The ovate aperture is, white, fawn- colored within. The thick outer lip is arcuated towards the base, elevated exteriorly into a thick, very prominent margin. Within it is striated throughout its whole length.
Leaves thin, heavily veined on the underside, narrowly ovate, acuminate, to 8 cm wide and 32 cm long. The inflorescence is produced from the base of the pseudobulb, erect, stout, surrounded by 2 to 4 sheaths, 3 to 5-flowered, to 22 cm long.
The shell contains 13 convex whorls that are set back at the top. The aperture has a flesh colour. It is ovate at the top and ends in a mediocre elongated and recurved siphonal canal. It measures about 3/7 of the total length.
Melastoma sanguineum are erect shrubs or small trees up to 2 to 4 m tall. Leaves are ovate-lanceolate 10 to 20 cm long. Fruit in the form of berries 15 mm long with 6 cells and many small seeds. Chromosome number 2n = 56.
It is reported to be naturalized in some woods in Southeast England, but is found in few gardens. The flowers have five broadly ovate white petals. The flowers appear in late spring, are hermaphrodite, pollinated by bees, and self-fertile. The flower is wide.
The fruit is an ovoid berry, black when mature. Leaves have 5 to 17 cm long, petiolate and alternate. Form available variables: ovate elliptic oblong lanceolate ... and leathery, deep green and glossy, more for the beam on the underside. It is a dioecious species, i.e.
The length of the shell attains 11.5 mm, its diameter 7.5 mm. (Original description) The small, short shell has an ovate-fusiform shape. it is moderately stout, with slightly shouldered, convex whorls, and a regularly tapered, acute spire. The Suture is shallow, but well-marked.
Salvia paohsingensis is a perennial plant that is native to Sichuan province in China, growing in forests at elevation. It is related to Salvia maximowicziana. S. paohsingensis grows on slender, ascending to suberect stems, from tall. The triangular-ovate leaves are long and wide.
The length of the shell attains 6.5 mm. The shell has an ovate shape, attenuated at both ends. It is smooth, transparent, shining and its sculpture consists of longitudinally cloes ribs. Its color is whitish, brown at the base, sometimes with three narrow, interrupted bands.
The epidermal cells are lignified, the surface carries a thick cells however secrete. The flowers occur in the leaf axils. The species is monoecious - male and female flowers on one plant. The flowers are yellowish- orange with long petals and the fruits are ovate.
The oblique aperture is ovate and of moderate size. The outer lip is sharp, and broadly convex. The inner lip spreads a short distance over the body, and forms a sharp angle with the outer lip. The columella is concave truncated below, and slightly callous.
Leaves are alternate, simple entire, ovate to lanceolate or elliptic. Leaves have a noticeable hard point, and at the other end they gradually taper to the base. Glossy dark green above, and paler below; long, wide. There is considerable variation in leaves of this species.
Vigna hosei is a twining or creeping legume, often forming a thick ground cover. Its leaflets are ovate to elliptic, with thin, long hairs on both sides. The terminal leaflet is by . The pod is long, black, and generally containing one to three seeds.
Leaves are ovate-lanceolate, about 6" long by 2" wide, with a spiral bud arrangement. Leaf color is medium green. This species is dioecious, with male and female flowers on separate plants. Flowers are insignificant: small, yellowish and appearing in spikes at leaf axils.
Lippens fruit has an ovate to oblong shape and averages about a pound in weight at maturity. The apex is rounded and lacks a beak. The skin is yellow at maturity and develops a pink or crimson blush. The flesh is deep yellow in color.
After flowering thin and flat seed pods form that have a length of about and a width of that are flat with a narrowly oblong shape. The subnitid dark brown seeds inside the pods have a broadly elliptic to ovate shape with a length of .
Begonia samhaensis is a species in the family Begoniaceae. Similar to Begonia socotrana but separated by the asymmetrically ovate leaves and the unequal tepals in the male flowers; outer tepals broadly orbicular, 1.5–2.2 × 1.7–2.5 cm; inner obovate elliptic, 1.4–2.0 × 0.8 × 1.4 cm.
The species is tall with its petioles being long. The leaf-blades are lanceolate, oblong, ovate and are long by wide. Pedicels are and carry triangular shaped bracteoles which are as long as the petiole. It also have five sepals that are long and orbicular.
The length of the shell varies between 5 mm and 6 mm; its diameter 2½ mm. (Original description) The oblong-ovate shell is white, shining and sparsely blotched with dark chestnut-brown. It is longitudinally ribbed and transversely elevately striated. The whorls are convex.
In male plants, the rachis reaches 10 cm in length, while in female plants it rarely exceeds 7 cm. Pedicels lack bracteoles and are up to 10 mm long. Sepals are lanceolate-ovate and around 4 mm long. Fruits are up to 40 mm long.
A cordiform biface as commonly found in the Acheulean (replica). Acheulean hand-axes from Kent. The types shown are (clockwise from top) cordate, ficron, and ovate. Terra Amata hut in Nice, France as postulated by Henry de Lumley dated to 400 thousand years ago.
The foliage is dimorphic. According to a recent description "short shoots bear broadly cordate or reniform, palmately veined leaves with crenate margins; long shoots bear elliptic to broadly ovate leaves with entire or finely serrate margins."Peter K. Endress. 1993. "Cercidiphyllaceae" pages 250-252.
Stems are round in cross-section, hairless. Leaves are broadly ovate, up to 14 cm long and 10 cm across. Flowers are green, about 5 mm in diameter, borne in compound cymes up to 6 cm across, with minutely hairy peduncles.Lombardi, J. A. 1997.
The rear of the pitcher is elongated into a pronounced neck. The waxy zone of the inner surface is reduced. The pitcher mouth is ovate and concave, and has an oblique insertion. The peristome is glossy and more-or-less cylindrical in cross section.
The tepals twist spirally after flowering and later fall. There are six stamens which are attached to the base of the perianth. The filaments are 3–6 mm long with tufts of clavate hairs below the anthers (which are ovate, and 0.6–0.9 mm long).
Leaves are of a dull green colouration and lanceolate, or broad ovate, shaped. They are small, typically 5-15mm long and 2-5mm wide. The leaves are also without hairs and display clear reticulate venation underneath. Leaf margins are typically flat or slightly recurved.
It is round-ovate, angled above, dilated and subchannelled below. The columella is thickened, somewhat flattened and grooved below the narrow deeply perforating umbilicus. T The operculum is flat inside with 5 whorls. Its nucleus is situated one-third the distance across the face.
The shell grows to a length of 75 mm. The solid, imperforate shell has an ovate- conic shape. Its color pattern is dirty white or greenish, maculate or tessellate with dark. The six whorls are convex, rounded, more or less angular around the upper part.
The length of the shell varies between 10 mm and 35 mm. The acute, elongate, imperforate shell has an ovate-conic shape. The six whorls are rounded, transversely lirate, radiate and finely striate. The body whorlscarcely exceeds the balance of the shell in length.
The length of the shell varies between 75 mm and 240 mm. The large, solid, imperforate shell has an ovate-conic shape with an acute spire. The color of its epidermis is castaneous or olive. The eight whorls are rounded and increase regularly in size.
The length of the shell varies between 20 mm and 54 mm. The imperforate shell has an ovate-conic shape. Its color pattern is brown, olive or gray, above radiately marked, below irregularly maculated with snowy white, sometimes dark, unicolored. The conic spire is acute.
This species grows to a length of up to 9 cm. The solid, large shell has an ovate-pointed shape. This is a very variable species. The color pattern of the shell is cream, irregularly maculated with greenish and brown, and broken lines of black.
The periphery shows several prominent squamose or spinose lirae. The base of the shell is somewhat flattened, with close squamose lirae separated by deep interstices. The aperture is silvery within, transversely ovate, very oblique, its margins fluted. The columella is extended, oblique, and arcuate.
These are 5 to 6 mm long and measure 3 mm in diameter. They are oblong-elliptic and angled. The surface is dark brown and grained like a net. The embryo is 4 mm long, almost straight, the cotyledons are 1.5 mm long and ovate.
The yellowish shell has an ovate shape. Its length measures 4.3 mm. The whorls of the protoconch are small, deeply immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The five whorls of the teleoconch are well rounded, faintly roundly shouldered at the extreme summits.
The typical height of S. perfoliatum plant ranges from . The stem is stout, smooth, slightly hairy (glabrous) strongly 4-angled square, like mint plants. The leaves are opposite, toothed and ovate. The petioles are widely winged and fused around the stem, forming a cup.
The minute flowers are coloured golden-yellow or cream. The sepals are ovate in shape, and are coloured a cream tipped in red. The in- curved petals are coloured cream, are oblong in shape, and their apex is blunt and thickened. The anthers are white.
E. kingii is a medium-sized trilobite with a smooth sub-ovate carapace that is tapered towards the rear. Thorax is usually 13 segments. Pygidium has four axial rings and a long terminal piece. Posterior margin of the pygidium has a long broad medial notch.
Two fringed wings, up to 3 mm wide, run down the front of the pitchers. These wings are often absent in upper pitchers. The opening or mouth of the pitcher is ovate and oblique. The peristome is rounded and up to 12 mm wide.
G.W. Tryon (1888), Manual of Conchology X; Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia The imperforate shell is acutely ovate. The convex whorls are spirally lirate and longitudinally striate. The columella is callous, and toothed below. The outer lip is smooth or toothed within, and varicose exteriorly.
The plant has a dwarf, tufted habit with broadly ovate–cordate leaves, which are glossy bluish-green above and purplish beneath, with a slightly lobed serrated margin; the flowers are rich orange-scarlet in colour, arranged in threes on erect red-coloured scapes to high.
Preview (PDF) the Russian Far East, Korea and Japan. The wingspan is 10-11.5 mm. The forewings are yellowish white, irrorated with dark brown scales and with a large ovate yellowish white patch near the end of the cell. The hindwings are pale grey.
Close-up on a flower of Gentiana cruciata Gentiana cruciata is a hemicryptophyte scapose plant of small size, reaching on average in height.Pignatti S. - Flora d'Italia – Edagricole – 1982. Vol. II, pag. 331 It has erect stems, the leaves are large, ovate-lanceolate, semiamplexicaul, about long.
The fruits have narrow wings, of which the nontransparent edge becomes wider at the top, and on which spikes are mounted on a broad base each. The transparent half of the edge is narrow. The top stipules are ovate, with a peaked top.N.K.A. 51.
Small ovate leaves up to 2.5 inches (6.5 cm) and 1.5 inches broad (4 cm) with a sharp tip and cordate base, on stems of equal length to the leaves. Rather thick and stiff in texture. In colour the leaves are a dark olive-green.
The thinly coriaceous glabrous seed pods that form after flowering have a narrowly oblong shape and have a length of up to and a width of . The seeds within have an oblong to ovate-elliptic shape with a length of and a thick black aril.
Two shells of Radix auricularia The shell is thin, roundly ovate and very inflated, such that the last whorl comprises 90% of its volume.Clarke, A.H. 1981. The freshwater molluscs of Canada. National Museum of Natural Sciences, National Museums of Canada, Ottawa, Canada. 447 pp.
Environmental Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Duluth, Minnesota 55804. 144 pp. The aperture is very large, ovate, occupying four-fifths of the length of the entire shell. It is rounded above and flaring in old specimens below.
The length of the shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2 mm. This species has no very marked distinctive character. The white oblong-ovate shell contains 7 whorls, of which 3 smooth and convex whorls in the protoconch. The subsequent whorls are slightly convex.
The plant produces twining stems up to long. It has lateral branches with alternately arranged leaves and small branchlets with oppositely arranged leaves. The ovate leaves are up to centimeters long and are usually coated with short hairs. Solitary flowers occur at the branch tips.
Shells of Mitra papalis can reach a length of about . The form of these large shells is similar to a Papal mitre (hence the common name). They are elongate to ovate, fusiform and smooth but without axial streaks on the surface. Sutural coronations are present.
Close-up on flowers Gentianella campestris is a plant of small size, reaching on average in height.Pignatti S. - Flora d'Italia – Edagricole – 1982. Vol. II, pag. 343 It has erect stems, simple or branched at the base and the leaves are opposite, ovate-lanceolate and unstalked.
Leaves are pointed; ovate to elliptic in shape, 6 to 13 cm long, 2 to 6 cm wide. Glossy above and pale grey below. The leaf stem is green, between 12 and 20 mm long. Leaf veins are prominent, with three to five lateral veins.
The aperture is ovate. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thick within and thin at the edge. The columella is very short, very strongly curved, somewhat revolute, reinforced by the attenuated base and provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
Subspecies auriculata is still considered a valid and separate species by some authorities. The major difference between the subspecies involve seed shape and sepal pubescence. D. peltata subsp. peltata has ovate (egg-shaped) seeds and the sepals are hairy or pubescent, whereas D. peltata subsp.
Guizotia jacksonii is a low, creeping, perennial plant with ovate leaves and yellow flowerheads belonging to the daisy family. This species is endemic to Kenya, and grows in along roads and other open treaded places in the forest zones the central highlands of Kenya.
The small shell is ovate, vitreous and semitransparent. Its length measures 2.2 mm. The five whorls of the teleoconch form a spire with almost straight sides, slightly rounded, feebly contracted at the suture, appressed at the summit. They are marked only by lines of growth.
The shell is elongate-ovate, very narrowly umbilicated, yellowish-white. It measures 3.2 mm. The nuclear whorls are very obliquely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns. The four post-nuclear whorls are very high between the sutures where they are very moderately rounded.
This epiphytic orchid lacks pseudobulbs. The single, erect, thick, leathery leaf is elliptic-ovate in shape. The aerial roots seem like fine hairs. The flowers develop one at a time at the base of the leaf and reach a length of about 2.3 cm.
Dragon tongue bean is a flavorful, juicy bean whose seeds are encased in a buffed colorful pod with mottled burgundy patterns throughout the shell's surface. The shelled beans are pale pistachio green in color, their size, petite, and their shape, ovate and slightly curved.
They are marked by exceedingly fine, almost vertical lines of growth and microscopic spiral striations. The sutures are strongly impressed. The periphery and the rather long base of the body whorl are well rounded, marked like the spire. The aperture is very large, regularly ovate.
The ovate, milk-white shell lacks axial or spiral sculpture excepting microscopic growth lines. The length of the shell is 1.1 mm. The whorls are flattened. The whorls of the protoconch are large, oblique and two- thirds immersed in the first of the succeeding turns.
Asura synestramena is a species of lichen moths of the family Erebidae, subfamily Arctiinae. It is found on Borneo and Bali. The habitat consists of lowland forests. The species has distinct forewing markings, particularly the ovate marking with an eyebrow shape in the medial zone.
Illecebrum verticillatum produces procumbent or decumbent (trailing) stems that may be up to high. It has ovate leaves arranged in opposite pairs along the stem. The small flowers are clustered in the axils of the leaves; their petals are much smaller than the white sepals.
The leaves are pinnately compound, with 3 to 7 leaflets per leaf. The leaflets are coarsely-toothed to entire or ovate to linear-lanceolate and 1–5 cm long. The leaves have a gray-green color. The leaves have an opposite arrangement on the stem.
The length of the shell varies between 15 mm and 33 mm. The shell is ovate, turreted, polished, pointed at its summit, indistinctly striated in its whole length. The spire is composed of ten slightly convex whorls. The withish body whorl is a little swollen.
Distinguished from other North Island Mecodema species by: # the overall pronotal shape being ovate; # numerous punctures between pronotal foveae; # elytral striae 1–4 with obsolescent punctures, striae 5–8 with punctures more impressed; # the distinctive shape of the apical portion of the penis lobe.
Distinguishable from other North Island Mecodema species by having: # vertexal groove shallow, defined entirely by obsolescent punctures; # overall shape of pronotum ovate, prothoracic carina setae to sinuation; # proepisternum with numerous punctures in short grooves (deep wrinkles); # distinctive shape of apical portion of the penis lobe.
The flower stems also bear leaves spaced alternately along the lower half of the stem. These hug the stem and are ovate to lanceolate. The leaves are heavily densely beset with both glandular and non-glandular hairs. The flower heads are 4–6 cm.
The size of the ovate shell varies between 8 mm and 20 mm. It is thin and whitish. The apex presents an appearance as if an embryonic tip (perhaps spiral) had fallen and been replaced by a peculiarly blunt ovate apex, which in the young shell is nearly marginal, posterior and to the left of the middle line, but in the adult is considerably within the margin, curved downward and backward and much more asymmetrical. The sculpture of the shell shows faint grooves radiating from the (smooth) apex and reticulated by the stronger concentric lines of growth, beside which the extremely inflated arch of the back is somewhat obscurely concentrically waved.
The upper petal is basally prolonged into a spur and ends with two upturned wings, while the lower one has two narrow, spreading or erect wings. The stigma bears three lobes of which the central one is distinctly smaller than the others. There are two sepals laterally attached to the corolla that are whitish with a green midrib, ovate to broadly oblong, dentate at margin in lower two thirds and measuring 3-5 mm (0.12-0.2 in) long and 1.5-3 mm (0.06-0.12 in) wide. The fruit is an achene which is globose to broadly ovate with an almost smooth to slightly rugose (wrinkled) surface.
The 'typical form' is found from the Lower Blue Mountains north to Singleton. It is a single- stemmed shrub with ovate leaves that end with a marked tapering apex. Forms around the Hunter River have narrower leaves. It lacks a lignotuber and regenerates after fire by seed.
Vincetoxicum nigrum is a perennial, herbaceous vine bearing ovate leaves with pointed tips. The leaves are long, and wide, occurring in pairs on the stem. The flowers have five petals, and are star- shaped with white hairs. The flowers range in color from dark purple to black.
Pinguicula acuminata is a perennial rosetted herb bearing stiff, ground-hugging ovate to cordiform acuminate 22–92 mm. (½-3½ in.) long leaves. These are borne on unusually long petioles (20–58 mm or ½–1 in), which allow the stem base to remain buried slightly underground.Luhrs, Hans.
The length of the shell varies between 10 mm and 25 mm. The white, ovate-fusiform shell contains 9 whorls. The superior half of the whorls is concave, the lower half slightly convex. The deep pinkish-brown line above the suture is most apparent between the ribs.
Cistus ocreatus has ovate leaves with three main veins and a short stalk (petiole). The flowers are purple, with styles longer than the stamens. It resembles Cistus symphytifolius, but has smaller flowers, and its leaves have a whitish appearance due to a covering of fine hairs.
Flower and foliage of M. grandiflora Magnolia grandiflora is a medium to large evergreen tree which may grow tall.Gardiner, p. 144 It typically has a single stem (or trunk) and a pyramidal shape. The leaves are simple and broadly ovate, long and broad, with smooth margins.
The white shell is oblong ovate, somewhat acuminated, longitudinally closely ribbed, corded with fine transverse ridges. The interstices are deep. The shell contains six flat whorls, encircled at the suture with black, showing plainer on the back of the body whorl. The brown apex is acute.
The interstices between the ribs are deeply concave, wider than the ribs, and perfectly smooth, except the faint lines of growth. The outer lip shows a broad shallow notch, below the suture. The ovate aperture is rather small. The siphonal canal is short, narrow and straight.
The body whorl is as large as all the others, striated at base, and surrounded, towards the middle, with small, distant spots, articulated by a reddish line. The aperture is ovate. The outer lip denticulated within, and thickened outwardly, even to the base of the shell.Kiener (1840).
Melhania velutina grows as a herb or subshrub up to tall, rarely to . The ovate leaves are tomentose above and measure up to long. Inflorescences have a solitary flower or two to four- flowered cymes, on a stalk up to long. The flowers have yellow petals.
Length: 60 mm Narrow, smooth shell with a long, pointed spire, usually light yellow or creamy, often tinged with violet or yellow. The large, oval foot is offwhite. The operculum has serrated margins. Movement of the Bullia digitalis The ovate shell is elongated, subturreted, smooth and polished.
The length of the shell varies between 15 mm and 20 mm. The thick shell is smooth, ovate, somewhat gibbous upon the back of the body whorl, flattened and widened upon the sides. The spire is short and acute. It is formed of five or six whorls.
Arctostaphylos pallida grows to around in height. The branches on the shrub are reddish or grayish (more reddish) and they have twigs that tend to be bristly. The ovate to triangular leaves are bristly, strongly overlapping and clasping. They are 1.0 to long and 0.8 to wide.
The sutures are pretty apparent, edged with small black and white slightly elongated spots. The brownish aperture is narrow and ovate. The outer lip is thin and delicately striated within. The columella is slightly arcuated and smooth, forming a small siphonal canal, emarginated at its base.
Melhania volleseniana grows as a herb up to tall. The ovate to elliptic leaves measure up to long. The leaves are pubescent above and lanate (woolly) below. Inflorescences may have a solitary flower or have two or three-flowered cymes on a stalk up to long.
The length of the shell attains 4 mm, its diameter 2.8 mm. (Original description) The shell has an ovate fusiform shape with the spire rather depressed. Its colour is white, with a chestnut- brown protoconch. The shell contains six somewhat convex whorls with a suture well-marked.
The length of the forewings is 11.5 mm. The forewings are light brown, with a yellow costa at the apex and outer margin. There is a silvery ovate spot surrounded by a thin brown line just above the anal angle. The hindwings are white with brownish suffusion.
The three only grown at the base petals are ovate-blunt, pink to purple and 5 to 9 mm long. The six equally sized stamens are violet hairy. Three carpels have become a top permanent ovary grown. They form capsule fruits that contain gray-brown seeds.
The broad ovate leaves are long and wide, with the upper side dark green and pilose, and the underside grey tomentose. The inflorescence has terminal racemes, with a long corolla that has a blue upper lip and a dark violet lower lip with a white throat.
Pimpinella major reaches on average in height. The stem is hollow, deeply grooved, mostly glabrous, and generally branched and leafy. The leaves are dark green, slightly glossy, ovate or oblong, short-stalked, feathery, more or less deeply cut, and usually pointed. Basal leaves have a petiole long.
Their often quadrangular stems are unbranched or branched, erect, ascending or spreading. Most leaves and stalks are arranged across opposite sides of the stem. The leaf blades are elliptic, lanceolate, ovate or circular. The leaf blades usually have three to five, rarely up to seven veins.
The sepals are narrowly ovate, the petals narrowly elliptical. The carnose trilobate lip is united to the column to its apex, and bears a keel down the middle from the apex of the column to the midpoint of the lip. The sides of the lip curl upward.
Erythronium dens- canis produces a solitary white, pink or lilac flower at the beginning of spring. The petals (growing to approx. 3 cm) are reflexed at the top and yellow tinted at the base. The brown spotted leaves are ovate to lanceolate and grow in pairs.
The single erect flower-stem is often tinged red and is clasped near the base by a pair or ovate-orbicular glossy green leaves. The small flowers which look deceptively simple in structure for an orchid, are purple-green in colour with a somewhat swollen calyx.
The leaf blades are ovate with rounded teeth and are larger than those C. menthifolium subsp. ascendens. The lipped flowers are also larger and darker, with the corolla lobe at least twice as long as the hairy calyx. Clinopodium menthifolium subsp. ascendens grows to about in height.
The size of an adult shell varies between 35 mm and 55 mm. The thin, yellowish brown shell has an elongate to ovate-quadrangular shape and shows anterior spiral grooves. The shell is wider on the front side. The white aperture becomes narrower at its top.
The length of the shell attains 14 mm, its diameter 5 mm. The small, ovate shell is semi-translucent with very dilute golden yellow spots. It consists of about 9 whorls, of which three in the protoconch. The spiral lirations are very numerous and beautifully minutely beaded.
Helianthus eggertii may grow to over tall, with erect, hairless stems. The leaves are borne on the stem, mostly in opposite pairs. These leaves are lanceolate to ovate, long by wide, narrowing towards the base. Each stem carries 1–5 flower heads, each on a peduncle long.
Basal leaves are entire, leathery and broadly ovate. One or two bract-like cauline leaves (not shown) may be present, also. The root of Lewisiopsis is reddish, fleshy, and extremely thick. The root can grow to be two to three feet long although some are much shorter.
They are usually rounded adaxially, i.e. towards their upper-side, but are sometimes low-keeled. Their shape is unequal and broadly ovate or oblong to oblanceolate, lanceolate, or linear. The bases of the phyllaries are indurate, or hardened, and rarely wholly foliaceous, meaning leaf-like in appearance.
P. bryantwalkeri is a small snail that has a height of and globose to ovate-conic shell. Its differentiated from other Pyrgulopsis in that its penial filament has a very weak lobe and short filament with the penial ornament consisting of a weakly developed terminal gland.
They may grow high, and occur on a variety of broken terrain types. The twigs are green with some wart-like growths. Leaf shape is somewhat variable, either blunt-tipped ovate or broadly lanceolate. The foliage is bluish-green but sometimes interspersed with some bright orange leaves.
Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are filiform, oblong and are long. Fertile lemma is chartaceous, keelless, ovate, pallid, is long and 7-veined. It surface is asperulous, while it margins are ciliated and hairy on the bottom. The apex of the lemma is obtuse.
There are two pairs of stamens and a double-lobed style in the flower's throat. The fruit is a cluster of four smooth to shiny nutlets which are dark brown to black in color. They are round to ovate, with a length of 2 to 4 millimeters.
The globular to obloid flowerheads have a diameter of around and contain 45 to 60 flowers. Narrowly oblong seed pods form after flowering with a length of around and a width of . The ovate shaped brown seeds within have a length of around and are arranged longitudinally.
The species is prostrate or decumbent with ovate to spatulate leaves which are covered with hairs when young. The flowers are white with a slight pink tinge and yellow with age. These are followed by capsules which contain shiny, black seeds to 1 mm in length.

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