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1000 Sentences With "pedicels"

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

The panicle has 2 to 6 spikelike, erect, puberulent, and 3-angled branches. The ultimate branchlets are one-sided. The pedicels are paired and congested. Some spikelets are on short pedicels that are , while others are on longer pedicels .
The fruit are born on 9-15 millimeters-long pedicels. The fruit are attached to the pedicels by 2-3 millimeters-long stipes.
Around 180 flowers are produced. These are borne solitarily on pedicels measuring 3–8 mm in length. The pedicels often bear a bract in their basal half. This structure is up to 1.5 mm long and is bent inwards relative to the pedicels.
Podocytes have foot processes, pedicels, that wrap around glomerular capillaries. These pedicels interdigitate with pedicels of adjacent podocytes forming filtration slits. There are two poles in the renal corpuscle, a vascular pole and a tubular pole. The vascular pole is a location of the glomerulus.
The podocytes have long foot processes called pedicels, for which the cells are named (podo- + -cyte). The pedicels wrap around the capillaries and leave slits between them. Blood is filtered through these slits, each known as a filtration slit or slit diaphragm or slit pore. Several proteins are required for the pedicels to wrap around the capillaries and function.
Both the peduncles and pedicels are densely covered in gold colored hairs. The pedicels are subtended by a triangular, 1.5-2 millimeter long bract that is covered in dense gold colored hairs. The pedicels have a second oval to triangular bract at their midpoint that is 2-4 millimeters long and covered in dense gold colored hairs.
The pedicels often bear a bract in their basal half. This structure is up to 2 mm long and is bent outwards from the pedicels. The androphore is up to 1 mm long.
Species in this family have sporangiola borne on dehiscent pedicels.
Its flowers are extra-axillary, and occur alone or in pairs. The flowers are on long pedicels. The pedicels have 1–2 bracteoles. Its sepals are partially fused to form a 3-lobed calyx.
The bush bears rounded, lantern-shaped white flowers on drooping pedicels.
The species is with its fertile shoots long. Its pedicels are long.
Spikelets are obovate, solitary, long and are pediceled. The pedicels are filiform. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex. The sterile florets are also present and are barren, cuneate and clumped.
The panicle is contracted, linear, long. The main panicle branches are indistinct, scaberulous and are racemose. Spikelets are oblong, solitary, long and have linear pedicels. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex.
Its drooping, solitary flowers are born on pedicels in axillary positions. The pedicels are 0.9-1.1 centimeters long with 2 basal bracts. Its membranous, hairless, oval, green sepal are 0.7–1.9 by 0.5–1.5 centimeters with pointed to tapering tips.
The pedicels (flower stalks) are short, 1–5 mm long. There are two spathes.
The pedicels are up to long when in flower. Flowering occurs in early spring.
At first glance Mimulus alatus is often confused with Mimulus ringens, or the square-stemmed monkey-flower, because M. alatus occurs in several of the same habitats that M. ringens does. However, close examination of the two monkey-flowers can help differentiate them. M. ringens has sessile leaves (no petiole) and pedicels that are greater than 1.2 cm in length, whereas M. alatus have winged petioles and its pedicels are much shorter than 1.2 cm. The flowers of M. ringens are borne on pedicels longer than its calyx and for M. alatus, it is the opposite – its pedicels are shorter than its calyx.
The inflorescence, flowered in April–May, is an umbel composed of 1-5 flowers. Pedicels are 30 to 45 mm long, glabrous. Bracteoles, located at the base of the pedicels or slightly above, are linear, glabrous and 2 to 15 mm long.
Its solitary flowers are born on 5 millimeter-long pedicels in axillary to supra-axillary positions. The pedicels have minute lance-shaped bracts. Its 3 hairless, triangular to oval sepals are 4 millimeters long with edges that touch but are not fused.
Its solitary flowers are in axillary positions and born on pedicels that are 1-1.5 centimeters long. The pedicels are covered in tawny, matted hairs and have 2-3 oval bracts, also covered in tawny, matted hairs, that come to a point at their tips.
The flowers are on pedicels that are 1.5-2 millimeters long. The pedicels have a bract at their midpoint. Its round to oval sepals are warty on the outside, smooth on the inside, and 1.5 centimeters long. Its flowers have two rows of leathery petals.
Its petioles are 7-14 by 1.7-2.4 millimeters and hairless or sparsely hairy. Its solitary flowers are axillary and droop downwards. Its flowers are on densely hairy pedicels that are 12-14 by 1.7-2 millimeter. The pedicels have up to 5 bracts.
Individual flowers have jointed pedicels and tepals forming a tubular shape. The seeds have conspicuous hairs.
Its flowers have 24-80 stamen. Its carpels have linear oblong ovaries covered in red hairs, thick style and two thick stigma surfaces. Its fruit are born on pedicels that are 4-8 millimeters long. The fruit are connect to the pedicels by 2-3 millimeter stipes.
Its solitary flowers are born on 6-10 by 1-1.9 millimeters pedicels in axillary to supra-axillary positions. The pedicels are hairless to slightly hairy and have 2-3 bracts. Its oval to triangular, pink to red sepals are 3.5–10 by 3-6.5 millimeters.
Inflorescences are usually on a terminal of the short lateral branches, with long flowers. Pedicels usually lack bracts and fall off early. Bracteoles are the same size and shape, which alternate along pedicels about . The lower bracteole buds occasionally, and are long and a little hairy.
They are grouped into inflorescences at the end of long pedicels. They bloom from July to August.
There are 1-5 female flowers at the base of the raceme, on quite long, slender pedicels.
Its fruit are on pedicels that are 2 centimeters long. The fruit are 1.5-1.8 centimeters long.
This species is very similar to E. crebra, differing only slightly in the dimensions of the pedicels.
The stigma and styles together are 2.6-2.8 millimeters long. The floral calyx remains attached to the fruit. The fruit are born on sparsely hairy pedicels that are 16-22 by 3.5-4.5 millimeters. The fruit are attached to the pedicels by 3-8 by 3-5.5 millimeter stipes.
Blooms first appear in early summer and continue into early fall. Fruit: A shiny dark purple berry held in racemose clusters on pink pedicels with a pink peduncle. Pedicels without berries have a distinctive rounded five part calyx. Fruits are round with a flat indented top and bottom.
The species' pedicels are long while the stems are slender and weak with round and flat leaves and yellow colored flowers. The flowers of Sedum debile have sepals which are pale green and glaucous in color. The lanceolate and equal leaves are . Pedicels are long while the leaves on them are .
The leaves have 14-21 pairs of secondary veins that emanate from the midrib. Its solitary flowers are in axillary positions on 10-13 by 2-3 millimeter pedicels. The pedicels have 5-9 bracts. Its flowers have 3 green, oval sepals that are 5.5-7.5 by 7-9.5 millimeters.
Nepenthes merrilliana produces the largest pitchers in the Insignes group and, unlike N. sibuyanensis, has two-flowered pedicels. Furthermore, its pitchers bear a pair of well developed fringed wings. Nepenthes sibuyanensis has also been compared to N. insignis. The former produces one-flowered pedicels, whereas those of N. insignis are two-flowered.
The pedicels are curved, filiform, pubescent, scabrous, and hairy above. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex. The sterile florets are also present and are long, barren, elliptic, and clumped. Its rhachilla have an elongated plant stem which goes between the glumes and is .
The flowers are borne on pedicels and are strongly zygomorphic, meaning there is only a single plane of symmetry. Bracteoles occasionally subtend the pedicels, but they are usually absent. The flowers are either bisexual or male. There are three unequal sepals, which may either be free or the two lateral ones may be fused.
Its petioles are 8-18 by 2-2.4 millimeters and mostly hairless. Its solitary flowers are born on pedicels that are 13-16 by 2.5 millimeters. The pedicels are in axillary positions, have sparse hairs, and have about 5 bracts. Its broad, oval sepals are green with red highlights and 6 by 9-10 millimeters.
Unlike with other Polistes species, ants do not often attack the nests of P. biglumis. Accordingly, P. biglumis releases a very reduced amount of anti-ants substance on to the pedicels of the nests. In most Polistes species, this substance is secreted via abdominal glands on pedicels to prevent ant invasion of the comb.
Another distinguishing feature in the infructescence is the pedicels, which elongate, spread apart, stiffen and ultimately radiate equally in all directions.
Anthers sinuate, in a globose head. Pollen unknown. Female flowers 1–3 clustered (strongly reduced raceme). Pedicels 0.6–1.2 cm, glabrous.
Terminal corymbs inflorescence. Pedicels are short, about 3–4 mm in length. Petals 5, white. Hypanthium with long furs, triangle shaped.
Burs usually have 15-43 spines, in spikelike racemes, with pedicels swollen. Leaf sheaths are inflated, and blades are usually folded.
The xylem of anthesis flower parts and pedicels consists exclusively of tracheary elements with helical bands, and rarely, with annular bands.
The flowers occur in groups of 3 or fewer on a rachis. Flowers are attached to the rachis by fleshy, densely hairy pedicels that are 4.5-9 by 0.8-1.5 millimeters. The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 1.5 by 2 millimeters, and another upper bract that is 1-2.5 by 1.5-2.5 millimeters.
Its flowers are yellow, solitary, axillary and have a weak fragrance. The flowers are born on 1 centimeter long pedicels that are covered in fine copper-colored hairs. The pedicels have 2-3 oval bracts that are 2 millimeters long and come to a shallow point at their tips. The bracts are covered in fine hairs.
Its solitary flowers grow on 5-11.5 by 1.2-3 millimeter pedicels slightly above axillary positions. The pedicels are hairless or sparsely hairy and have 3-8 bracts. It has 3 greenish-red to purple, oval to triangular sepals that are 6-30 by 4-12.5 millimeters. The margins of the sepals can sometimes be fused at their base.
The fruit is a cup-shaped to cylindrical capsule long, wide on pedicels long and with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
U. vanderystii is a monoecious shrub, with strictly cauliflorous inflorescences. Its petals are joined at the base, with flowers having distinct pedicels.
A shrub 1-2m tall, it differs from P. gracilis in having larger leaves with coarser serrations, and in having glabrous pedicels.
Male flowers have short pedicels with younger ones subsessile. S. pavoniana has cryptic fruit with hard capsules. Each fruit has three sections.
The plant is glabrous aside from its pubescent capsules, sparsely pilose sepals, and slightly hairy pedicels. Blooming takes place from February to May.
The plant can be distinguished from its most similar cousin I. patula by its orbicular-obovate dorsal petal, shorter pedicels and larger seeds.
Its inflorescences have 1–2 flowers and are emerge from extra-axillary positions. Its white flowers are on 2 centimeter long, erect, hairless, warty pedicels. The pedicels have a 2 millimeter long bract at their base and about halfway up their length. Its round to triangular sepals are 15 by 15 millimeters and come to a point at their tip.
The leaves can grow to between tall and wide. They veins are not noticeable, and the leaves tend to flop over. It has flattened, (bamboo) cane- like stems,Holly Kerr Forsyth (Editor) that can grow up to between tall. It has 5–8 slender flower branches (or pedicels) near top of the plant. The stiff pedicels are 1.5–2 cm long.
Leaves 40 – 50 cm long, blades ovate or oval, at the tip blunt, at the base decurrent or abrupt, 7.5 – 19 cm long x 3 – 10 cm wide, trimmed with very distinct pellucid lines. Stem prostrate, 80 – 90 cm long, proliferous. Inflorescence racemose, having 4 - (6) whorls. Bracts shorter than pedicels, 0.8 - 1.5 cm long, shallowly connate, pedicels about 4.5 cm long.
Bracts shorter or longer than the pedicels. Pedicels 1 - 2.5 cm long, sepals broadly ovate, ribbed, 4 – 6 mm long, petals white, corolla 3 – 4 cm in diameter. Stamens usually 24. Aggregate fruit globular, shortly echinate, achenes compressed, 3 mm long x 1 mm wide, having 3 - 5 ribs and 3 glands placed usually in one row, beak 0.4 - 0.5 mm long.
The pedicels are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex and have pubescent callus as well. The sterile florets are also present and are long, barren, elliptic, and clumped. Both the upper and lower glumes are hairy on the bottom, keelless, membranous, ovate and have puberulous surfaces.
Its solitary (rarely in pairs) flowers are in axillary positions and on pedicels that are 1.27 centimeters long. The pedicels are thicker at their apex, curved downward and have two bracts at their base. Its flowers have 6 petals arranged in two rows of three. The leathery, oblong to lance-shaped outer petals are 1.7-2.5 by 0.8-1.4 centimeters with shallow tips.
Bracts lanceolate, densely ribbed. Bracts in the first whorl as long as the pedicels, in the other whorls they are a third shorter. Pedicels 1 - 3.5 cm long, sepals broadly ovate, leather-like, densely ribbed, 5 – 6 mm long, petals white, obovate, 15 – 18 mm long, stamens 20 - 24, filaments longer than the anthers, pistils numerous, style longer than the ovary.
The flower stalks (pedicels) are 10–18 mm long. The style is just longer than the stamens. The six-lobed ovary is disc-shaped.
Pedicels filiform, spreading-erect, sometimes recurved at apex. Calyx lobes ovate- Ianceolate, 2–3 mm. Corolla blue and white, 8–15 mm in diameter.
It is similar to the species Bossiaea buxifolia, but may be distinguished by its longer leaves, petioles and pedicels and more distant leaf spacing.
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).
Petioles are about 75% as long as the blades. Pedicels are . Sepals are and have five triangular teeth. The flowers are yellow with red spots.
It is very similar to Actinodaphne obovata but can be distinguished by the glabrous branchlets, leaves and buds; and smaller fruits with more slender pedicels.
The pedicels on which the berries grow are thicker than those of the related species, red baneberry (Actaea rubra). This is the reason for the specific name pachypoda, which means "thick foot", from Ancient Greek "thick" and "foot". The pedicels thicken and become bright red as the berries develop. The berries ripen over the summer, turning into fruits that persists on the plant until frost.
Diagram showing the basic physiologic mechanisms of the kidney Podocytes are found lining the Bowman's capsules in the nephrons of the kidney. The foot processes known as pedicels that extend from the podocytes wrap themselves around the capillaries of the glomerulus to form the filtration slits. The pedicels increase the surface area of the cells enabling efficient ultrafiltration. Podocytes secrete and maintain the basement membrane.
The leaves have a pointed base, come to a short blunt point at their tips and have slightly rolled margins. The leaves have 10-12 lateral veins emanating from either side of the midrib. Its solitary flowers are in axillary positions on 1.2 millimeter long pedicels. The pedicels are subtended by 3 bracts that are 1-1.5 millimeters long and come to a point at their tips.
Its leaves have 10-13 pairs of veins emanating from midribs. Its 0.7 - 1 centimeter long petioles are covered in minute fine hairs and have a channel in their upper surface. Its solitary flowers are on 6 millimeters long pedicels that grow in axillary positions. The pedicels are covered in fine hairs and have two narrow oblong bracts that are also 6 millimeters long.
American pokeweed, each supporting many small pedicels. Agave with emergent peduncle. The flowers have not yet emerged from the buds. Note bracts and branches at nodes.
London: Wheldon & Wesley. The leaves are alternate and fascicled. They are simple and more or less linear. The flowers are solitary, born on pedicels in axils.
The flowers are orange-red (rarely yellow), glossy, and are born on 20–25 mm pedicels, on capitate or subcapitate racemes, on a branched inflorescence (panicle).
Podocin is localized on the membranes of podocyte pedicels (foot-like long processes), where it oligomerizes in lipid rafts together with nephrin to form the filtration slits.
They have membranous edges and acuminate ends. The stems hold 2 terminal (top of stem) flowers, between May and June. They are held on very short pedicels.
The pedicels bearing the flowers are abundantly coated in stalklike glandular hairs. Each small flower is lavender with a white or yellowish throat and tiny protruding stamens.
Its petioles are 3-7 by 1.2 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The flowers are on fleshy, densely hairy pedicels that are 2.5-5 by 0.5-0.9 millimeters. The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 1 by 1 millimeters, and another upper bract that is 1-1.5 by 1-2 millimeters. Its flowers have 3 oval sepals that are 1.5-2 by 2-2.5 millimeters.
Its dark red flowers grow in clusters, or fascicles, from the trunk or on branches below the leaves. The flowers are on 1.5-2 centimeter-long pedicels that have sparse rust-colored hairs. The pedicels are subtended by oval to oblong bracts that are 2-2.5 millimeters and covered in dense fine hairs. Its round to oval sepals are 1 by 1 centimeters have rounded or shallow, slightly tapered tips.
An undesirable trait is that it has weak pedicels supporting the flowers, which leads to the pendulous habit of the fruits. It is hardy to USDA Zone 4a.
Flowers sessile or subsessile on pedicels 2 – 4 mm long. Sepals about 5 mm long, with usually 18 ribs, corolla white. Aggregate fruit globular, 5 – 7 mm in diameter.
It pedicels are oblong and are 0.5 mm long while its lemma is long and is both apical and geniculate. The column of lemma's awn is hispidulous and twisted.
Fruit are on pedicels 5-21 millimeters in length. The fruit consists of up to 6 monocarps. Each mature monocarp is a 24-34 by 23-30 millimeter ellipsoid.
Its fruit are on pedicels that are 1.9-3.6 centimeters long. The elliptical fruit are 0.9-1.2 centimeters wide. The hairless seeds are 1.2-1.7 by 0.8-1.1 centimeters.
The inflorescence is an open array of flowers on short pedicels. Each flower opens into five pointed lobes, each about a centimeter long and dark rose pink in color.
The inflorescence is coiled in bud, but generally elongates in fruit. The pedicels are generally 0–1 mm, and the flower is bisexual with the sepals fused below the middle.
The panicle is open, lanceolate, and long. The main panicle branches are widespread and almost racemose. Its spikelets are cuneated, pendulous, solitary and are long. Fertile spikelets have filiformed pedicels.
The umbel contains only a few flowers, with long pedicels. Tepals are white with reddish midveins.Richard, Achille. 1850. Tentamen Florae Abyssinicae seu Enumeratio Plantarum hucusque in plerisque Abyssiniae 2: 330.
The Pedicels are covered in orange hairs. Its flowers are fragrant and have a nodding habit. Its flowers have 3 (sometimes 4) triangular sepals that are 8-10 millimeters long.
The inflorescence is coiled in bud, but generally elongates in fruit. The pedicels are generally 0–1 mm, and the flower is bisexual with the sepals fused below the middle.
Polygala lutea is an annual or biennial herbaceous plant which has a height between . Its flowers are orange-yellow and long. Its pedicels are long. It flowers between April and October.
Pedicels are up to 35 mm long and most have filiform bracteoles. They are one- to three-flowered. Tepals are oblong-lanceolate and approximately 4 mm long. The ovary is sessile.
Umbel has up to 45 flowers, the pedicels unequal in length. Flowers are bell-shaped, pale yellow tinged with pink. Anthers are yellow, ovary green.Pierre Edmond Boissier & Theodhoros Georgios Orphanides. 1882.
Its petioles are 4-13.5 by 1-3 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The 3 or more flowers occur on woody rachises positioned opposite leaves. The rachises have 3-8 branches. Flowers are attached to the rachis by fleshy, densely hairy pedicels that are 5-12.5 by 0.6-1 millimeters. The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 2-2.5 by 1-2 millimeters, and another upper bract that is 1.5-3.5 by 1.5-4 millimeters.
Bracts absent, or rarely 1-2; bracteoles 5-8, shorter than pedicels, ciliate, eventually deflexed. Flowers white; sepals absent; outer petals not radiating; styles with enlarged base, forming stylopodium. Fruit usually , slightly laterally compressed, oblong but narrowing toward apex, constricted at commissure; mericarps having broad, rounded ridges; carpophore present; vittae solitary, conspicuous; pedicels without a ring of hairs at apex; styles roughly as long as stylopodium, recurved; stigma capitate. Cotyledons tapered gradually at base without distinct petiole.
They contain the highest amount of DNA. The two broad-leaved groups are also distinguished by the absence of filamentous appendages and glabrous pedicels, although two of the species have hairs on the pedicels, but these are minute or sparse. The first group (the evergreens) can then be considered to have three subgroups corresponding to DNA groups A, B and C but also by other characteristics. N. marincowitzii is an outlier being summer growing but narrow-leafed.
The flowers can be hermaphrodite or female. The pedicels are 1-4mm in length and are covered in minute hairs. The calyx is 1.5 – 2 mm long oval in shape and blunt.
Fertile spikelets have ciliated, curved and filiform pedicels. Margins of lemma are ciliate. The lemma itself though is long and have obtuse apex. Fertile lemma is chartaceous and is long and wide.
Like other barleys the spikelets come in triplets. There is a large fertile central spikelet about a centimeter long and two smaller, often sterile spikelets on pedicels, each 3 to 5 millimeters long.
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.
Its spikelets are elliptic and are long. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are curved, filiform and are long. Florets are diminished. Its lemma have long hairs and have villous surface.
The main panicle branches are indistinct and almost racemose. Spikelets are oblong, pendulous and solitary. They are also long and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are filiform, curved, and puberulous.
The flower stem is long with flattened white hairs. The smooth pedicels are long. The perianth is either pink or white and long, smooth, bluish-green with a powdery film. The style long.
Fertile spikelets have hairy, pubescent, curved and filiformed pedicels. Florets are diminished with callus being pubescent as well. The species have a smooth rachilla. Its lemma have long hairs and have villous surface.
The pedicels are long, fleshy, triangular-shaped lobes are about long and smooth. The dry fruit are smooth, about high and the surface finely corrugated with a rounded apex. Flowering occurs in spring.
The flowers are wide with long pedicels. The sepals are purple and the four petals of each flower are purple or white with purple veins. The ovoid seeds are about long and wide.
Pedicels 1.5 - 2 – 3 cm long. Corolla white, 1 - 1.5 cm in diameter, stamens 18, achenes 1 - 1.5 mm long, having usually 3 glands in oblique row in the upper part of the body.
They have a reddish purple, or lilac margins. It has a brown-purple, short perianth tube, which is about 1.5–4 cm long, and slightly flared upward. It also has short pedicels (flower stalks).
Clarke, C.M. 2001. A Guide to the Pitcher Plants of Sabah. Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu. The inflorescence of N. × trusmadiensis may be up to 50 cm long and has two-flowered pedicels.
Leaves are attached to petioles that are long. The inflorescence is cymose and all parts are glabrous to puberulous with a length of . The pedicels are long. The calyx lobes triangular with ciliate margins.
Flowers are on short pedicels (stalks). The calyx is 7 mm long with lobes that are oblong and acuminate (tapering to a point). The corolla tube is urn-shaped and 7 mm long.Jacobsen, Hermann.
Oregon Department of Agriculture. It grows up to 90 centimeters tall from a network of tubers. The inflorescence is pyramidal, with the lower pedicels much longer than the upper. Flowering occurs in April through June.
Its spikelets are orbicular, solitary and are long. Fertile spikelets have hairy, pubescent, curved and filiformed pedicels. Florets are diminished with callus being pubescent as well. The species are bisexual and have a scabrous rachilla.
The stipes are attached to a pedicels that is 9-17 by 1.5-4.5 millimeters and sparsely covered in fine hairs. The fruit have 5-10 seeds that are 10-12 by 7-9 millimeters.
Leaves are toothed with a sharp point. There are one or two inflorescence per axil with 14 to 20 flowers on each raceme. Flowers are devoid of a nectar-producing gland. The pedicels are smooth.
The panicles have filiform and pubescent pedicels. The spikelets are solitary while it florets are diminished at the apex. Its fertile lemma is chartaceous, lanceolate and is long. The glumes are different from each other.
The margins of the leaves recurve. Its solitary flowers are in axillary positions on 8-19 millimeter long pedicels. Its 3 oval sepals 11–18.5 by 8–15.5 millimeters and have hairs on both surfaces.
The leaves have 7-9 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its petioles are 6-8.5 by 1.4-2 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The flowers occur in groups of 3 or fewer on a rachis positioned opposite leaves. Flowers are attached to the rachis by fleshy, densely hairy pedicels that are 12-20 by 1.1-1.5 millimeters. The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 3.5 by 2.5 millimeters, and another upper bract that is 1.5-2.5 by 2-4 millimeters.
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.
The cream, yellow and red flowers appear in profusion in axiliary clusters in the upper smaller branches. The pedicels are smooth long. The style long. Fruit are smooth long and wide with a short pointed beak.
The peduncle may be up to long. The rachis grows to in length, although it is usually shorter in female inflorescences. Pedicels are bracteolate and up to long. Sepals are oblong-lanceolate and up to long.
Fertile spikelets have hairy, pubescent, curved and filiformed pedicels. Florets are diminished with callus being pubescent as well. The species have a smooth rachilla. Its lemma have ribbed lateral veins, long hairs and have acute apex.
Plants in the genus, Fontainea, are shrubs or small trees. They are monoecious or more often dioecious, and they exude a colored latex. The leaves are alternate, entire and have pinnate venation. The flowers have pedicels.
Its cylindrical fruit are on pedicels that are 5 millimeters long. The contour of the fruit is constricted around its seeds. The fruit contain 2-3 flattened, brown, shiny seeds that are 6 by 12 millimeters.
Its pistils lack styles and its stigmas are 2.8-3.6 millimeters long. Its fruit are on 14 by 4 millimeters pedicels. The elliptical, smooth, green fruit are 27-56 millimeters long and have 1-3 seeds.
These, too, are covered in densely brown velvety hairs. The peduncles are 0.9-7.5 cm long and the pedicels 2-6.1 mm long. The sepals are linear, strongly reflexed and covered in a dense mat of hairs.
The flowering culms are tall. The inflorescence is an open panicle with solitary spikelets on narrow pedicels. Each spikelet has between two and six florets. The glumes have pointed tips and are narrower than the fertile lemma.
In addition, the flowers of these species are almost always borne on pedicels, unlike those of Ridley 16097, which mostly have two-flowered partial peduncles.Shivas, R.G. 1984. Pitcher Plants of Peninsular Malaysia & Singapore. Maruzen Asia, Kuala Lumpur.
The rachis is attenuate, angular in cross section, and up to 46 cm long. Pedicels are two-flowered and lack bracts. They may be up to 22 mm long. The oblong tepals are approximately 4 mm long.
Its flowers have 126-180 stamen. Its flowers have 15-32 carpels. Each carpel has 1 ovule, a straight style, and a 2-3 lobed stigma. Its fruit are on pedicels that are 0.8-2.0 centimeters long.
Leaves are long and narrow, with long white hairs clearly visible to the naked eye. Umbel is hemispherical, with 15-20 flowers on long pedicels. Flowers are white with yellow anthers.Josef August Schultes & Julius Hermann Schultes. 1830.
The leaves have about 6-19 pairs of secondary veins that emanate from their midribs that curve near the leaf margin. Its petioles are 6-16 by 1-3 millimeters and either hairless or sparse with fine hairs. Its flowers occur in crowded clusters on long pedicels that extend from warty outgrowths, or tubercle, that grow from the base of the trunk close to soil level. The tubercles are woody and covered in fine hairs. The sparsely hairy pedicels are 1.5-11 centimeters by 1.2-1.9 millimeters and have 3-10 small bracts.
The tentacles also bear four rows of suckers, the largest of which have 14-17 conical teeth in their rings alternating with square plates. The rings of the suckers on the arms have large distal teeth which alternate with very small teeth. The distal two fifths of the fourth right arm of males is hectocotylised and has thick pedicels rather than suckers which are almost entirely connected by the ventral protective membrane; the dorsal row of pedicels is flattened. The body is a dark purplish brown in colour.
Plants annual, 10–60(–80) cm. Taproot 2–3 mm thick. Stem solitary, striate, scabrous. Lower petioles 3–8 cm; blade ovate-lanceolate, 3–8 × 2–5 cm, 2–3-pinnate; ultimate segments linear to linear-lanceolate, 3–10 × 1–1.5 mm, veins and margins scabrous. Umbels 2–3(–5) cm across; bracts 6–10, linear to linear-lanceolate, 2–3 mm, persistent, margins narrowly white membranous, very finely ciliate; rays 8–20(–30), 5–20 mm, unequal; bracteoles 5–9, linear, nearly equal pedicels, margins ciliate; umbellules 15–20-flowered; pedicels 3–5 mm.
The species was described as new to science in 1873 by Miles Joseph Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis, from specimens collected in Wisconsin. In their short description, they emphasize the short pedicels (tube-like extensions) on the spores, and indicate that these pedicels—initially about as long as the spore is wide—soon break off. According to the nomenclatural authority MycoBank, taxonomic synonyms (i.e., having different type specimens) include Pier Andrea Saccardo's 1882 Bovista tabacina, Job Bicknell Ellis and Benjamin Matlack Everhart's 1885 Mycenastrum oregonense, and Andrew Price Morgan's 1892 Bovista montana.
Scadoxus membranaceus is very similar in many respects to Scadoxus puniceus. The two species were shown to be closely related in phylogenetic analyses based on morphological features carried out by Nordal and Duncan. They differ in only three of the 25 characters used in the study: S. membranaceus lacks a pseudostem, S. puniceus has one; S. membranaceus has exactly four bracts below the umbel, S. puniceus has more than four; S. membranaceus has pedicels less than 1 cm long, S. puniceus has pedicels more than 1 cm long.
This plant has numerous pink or purple flowers. The leaf base is deeply 2-lobed with a broad sinus. The scape and pedicels are very long and slender. The wings are 3-partite bearded on the inner face.
It was described by Joseph Gaertner. The tree grows up to 15 m high. Its bark is thin and brownish-grey color. Leaves are 1–6 mm long and yellowish-white flower's pedicels are 3–4 mm long.
The standards are narrowly obovate, long. They are self-fertile. It has articulated pedicels, that are long. It has a small perianth tube, 1–1.5 cm long, 2.5 cm long stamen, milky white anthers, 3 cm cylindric ovary.
The species is 1-5 flowered from terminal nodes without any flowering branches below. The pedicels that hold the flowers are long. The bracts are small and are black and denticulate. The flowers are wide with rounded buds.
The species is either , , , or tall. The leaves are either , , or by . It have 2-4 sepals each one of which is bell-shaped and long. Pedicels are either long or can be as long as it sepals.
Its pedicels are approximately 1mm long and apart in open flowers. The flowers are narrowly cyathiform, while the calyx and corolla are a dark red colour, x 5mm and covered with simple hairs long. The fruit strongly resupinate.
Bracts are long while its pedicels are long. Its legume is coiled in 0.5 to 1.5 spirals which are wide and are pubescent at the center. The corolla is of orange colour and is . The seeds are long.
Fruit are on pedicels 12-17 millimeters in length. The fruit consists of up to 3-6 monocarps. Each mature monocarp is a 6-8 by 6-8 millimeter globe. The mature monocarps have a distinctive equatorial ridge.
The type species is Leptopus cordifolius.Leptopus In: Index Nominum Genericorum. In: Regnum Vegetabile (see External links below). The name is derived from two Greek words, leptos, "thin, slender, or small", and pous, "foot", a reference to slender pedicels.
Eucalyptus longissima was first formally described in 2005 by Dean Nicolle in Australian Systematic Botany. The specific epithet (longissima) is the superlative form of the Latin word longus, hence "longest", referring to the juvenile leaves, peduncles and pedicels.
The five sparsely pubescent sepals alternate with the petals. The small flowers and conical fruit have short pedicels. The seeds have hook-like projections and are clustered in a bell-like shape. The glabrous calyx measures while fruiting.
Eremophila lactea was first formally described by botanist Robert Chinnock in the journal Nuytsia in 1985. The specific epithet (lactea) is derived from the "Latin lactea, milky; referring to the extruded white resin on the branches, leaves and pedicels".
Flowering takes place in the spring or summer through fall. Fruiting pedicels are 5–10 mm in length. The fruit is a hard, globose capsule approximately 8–10 mm in diameter, on which calyx remnants form an equatorial ring.
Its flowers can be green, but it is a rare occurrence. Each flower has a labellum that is wide, flat, and nearly translucent. The labellum is pale purple and has darker veins. The fruit is smaller than the pedicels.
The one to five flowered inflorescence is terminal, arising on short lateral shoots. The peduncles and pedicels are long. The star-shaped flowers are wide. The sepals are long and wide, each with five to seven distally branched veins.
It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. The cultivar E. bicolor 'Alba' has plain white flowers and lacks any purple coloration. It resembles Eucomis autumnalis but can be distinguished by the long flower stalks (pedicels).
Atropa pallidiflora differs from Atropa belladonna chiefly in its glabrescence (lack of hairs), also in its narrower leaves, its smaller yellow flowers with shorter pedicels and its smaller berries (always yellow, in the fresh state?) \- from Atropa komarovii in its most often ovate- lanceolate leaves and its flowers often produced in pairs and having puberulent-glandulose pedicels. \- and from Atropa acuminata in its leaves with very wide bases, its narrower (acuminate to hair-like) calyx lobes, the shorter pedicels of its flowers and the fact that, when in the early stages of fruiting, the calyces cover the berries to a lesser degree. Atropa pallidiflora is closer in its morphology to A.acuminata than to any of the other species in the genus. The description of A. pallidiflora as a shrub in Flora Iranica is curious, given that all the other Atropa species are herbaceous perennials of the type rhizomatous hemicryptophyte.
Florence 33: 505, Allium agrigentinum Allium agrigentinum has a light brown bulb up to 20 mm long. Scape is up to 40 cm tall. The umbel is hemispherical with uneven pedicels. Flowers are narrowly bell-shaped with pinkish-purple tepals.
The hindwings are dingy greyish white. Larvae were reared from either fruit, fruit pedicels, or young green branches of Persea americana. They have a cream pink body and amber head. Full-grown larvae reach a length of 6–7 mm.
It produces compact, narrow inflorescences 8 to 10 centimeters long and purplish in color. Like other barleys the spikelets come in triplets. It has two small, often sterile lateral spikelets on pedicels and a larger, fertile central spikelet lacking a pedicel.
The central part of the inflorescence axis is long. It also has angular rhachis which bottom is glabrous. The spikelets grow in pairs and are apart from each other. They are also fertile, pedicelled, and sessile, with pedicels being oblong.
Their panicle is open and is in length. The main panicle branches are ascended or spreadout, while spikelets are pendulous and solitary. Fertile spikelets have filiformed pedicels, are cuneate and are long. They have 1 fertile floret which is diminished.
Flowers on curved pedicels in erect, axillary, bracteate racemes. Corolla, 7–10 mm, globose to campanulate, the lobes very short. There are often five broad rose stripes on the white corolla. Berries up to 12 × 10 mm, ripening blue-black.
I.asprella female flower White flowers in axillary umbels with slender pedicels, dioecy. Male flower: 2 to 5 flowers each inflorescence, 2.5 to 3 mm in diameter, glabrous; 4 or 5 suborbicular petals, margin erose, corolla rotate, base slightly connate; stamens ca.
The membrane is eciliated, long and is lacerate. The panicle itself is open, linear, is long and carry 4–6 fertile spikelets. Spikelets are obovate, solitary, long and have pediceled fertile spikelets. The pedicels are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy above.
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.
Tendrils simple or bifid. Probracts up to 2.5 mm long, glabrous, apex rounded. Male flowers in few-flowered racemes, likely sometimes accompanied by a single flower. Common peduncle up to 1 cm, pedicels in racemose flowers 2–4 mm, glabrous.
The unpleasantly scented flowers have six dark reddish purple tepals and purple stamen filaments, and are either sessile or have very short stalks (pedicels). The ovary, and the inflated capsule that develops from it, are greenish, generally with some purple shading.
The scar flaps on the back are swollen. The pods are compressed, their flaps are flattened. Leaves whole or slightly sinuate, lanceolate, attenuated on a short petiole. Pedicels are 10-12 mm in anthesis, 12-17 mm in fruiting, erect- patents.
This hairy sheath is open and surrounds the culm. The culm is pilose (long, soft, hairy), and typically has 4 to 5 nodes. The ligules are blunt, long. The grass has drooping narrow long spikelets of flowers on very short pedicels.
The pedicels are long and densely covered with short, soft, matted white hairs, some flattened extending onto the lower part of the flower. The perianth is long. It blooms from August to October. Leaves are up to long by wide.
They carry 2 fertile florets which are oblong and long. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are curved, ciliate and filiform. Florets are diminished at the apex. Its lemma is pubescent and have hairy veins with asperulous surface.
The strongly scented flowers are in clusters in the leaf axils. The pedicels are long and densely covered with flattened silky white hairs that extend onto the long perianth. The pistil is long. The large rounded fruit are long and wide.
Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are curved, ciliate, hairy, and filiform. Florets are diminished at the apex. Its lemma have ciliated margins that have a hairy middle. It fertile lemma is chartaceous, lanceolate, and is long by wide.
The polyp grows singly from a stolon or has a few branches. It has long pedicels and medusa buds develop in clusters on branched stalks. The young medusae have very narrow subumbrellas. The medusa has thick jelly and no peduncle.
Pedicels and perianth are cream-white and smooth. The style long. Flowers are sterile so no fruit is produced and plants can only reproduce vegetatively by suckering roots. Hakea pulvinifera is the only other species reliant on this method for reproduction.
The pedicels are shorter than the main peduncle. The sepals are long during anthesis and long when the plant is fruiting. The white corolla is long and has purplish veins internally on its anterior. The tube and narrow throat are long.
The bracts are similar in size to Iris dichotoma. The stems (and branches) hold between 2 and 4 flowers, between June to August. But normally in June. Leading from the spathes are stiff, pedicels (or peduncles), that are between long.
They can climb up to 2 m high. The inflorescences which can bear 5 to 10 flowers inserted terminally at the nodes of the branches. They are arranged solitary or in fascicles. The finely pubescent pedicels are 4–6 mm long.
There are teeth long that are apart. The flowers are trimerous and have pedicels in length. The flowers themselves are bright or brownish red, sometimes yellow, with a tubular shape. They are up to in length and about in diameter.
The plants are annual or perennial, growing emersed, floating-leaved, or seasonally submersed, leaves glabrous to stellate-pubescent; rhizomes present or absent; stolons absent; corms absent; tubers absent. Roots not septate. Leaves sessile or petiolate; petioles triangular, rarely terete; blade with translucent markings as dots or lines present or absent, linear to lanceolate to ovate, base attenuate to cordate, margins entire or undulating, apex obtuse to acute. Inflorescences racemes or panicles, rarely umbels, of 1-18 whorls, erect or decumbent, emersed; bracts coarse, apex obtuse to acute, surfaces smooth or papillose along veins, apex obtuse to acute. Flowers bisexual, subsessile to pedicellate; bracts subtending pedicels, subulate to lanceolate, shorter than to longer than pedicels, apex obtuse to acute; pedicels ascending to recurved; receptacle convex; sepals recurved to spreading, herbaceous to leathery, sculpturing absent; petals white, entire; stamens 9-25; filaments linear, glabrous; pistils 15-250 or more, spirally arranged on convex receptacle, forming head, distinct; ovules 1; style terminal or lateral.
The whole inflorescence is a pyramidal to subcorymbiform shape. The pedicels are long; the bracts are long. The star-shaped flowers are in diameter, with orange-yellow petals that number about twice the sepals. The sepals are long, with three to five veins.
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.
The mature leaves are hairless above except on the veins, and slightly hairy beneath. Its flowers are on pedicels that are 3-4 centimeters long. Its sepals have long threadlike tips. Its flowers have 3 oval petals about 1.5 centimeters in length.
Inflorescence is fascicled or racimed with pale pedicels which are long. Flowers have a pistillate and are staminate as well. Lobes are narrow-triangular, and are either white, pale yellow-green or just green in colour. Stigmas are obovoid trigonous and are long.
The stem first grows upright, but bends early in development and becomes pendulous. The numerous flowers hang upside down, with the lip upwards. The almost circularly bent pedicels are characteristic of this genus. There are two lateral sepals and one dorsal sepal.
The rachis grows to 10 cm in length, although it is usually shorter in female inflorescences. Pedicels are bracteolate and up to 8 mm long. Sepals are oblong-lanceolate and up to 3 mm long. Most parts of the plant are virtually glabrous.
Inflorescences are terminal and pedunculate, with peduncles measuring 3–5.5 cm. The bracts resemble primary leaves but are smaller. Flowers are subsessile and have pedicels 0.7-0.8 cm in length. Petals are pale pink to white, measure 1 cm, and are clawed.
Phytophthora psychrophila is a semi-papillate plant pathogen that mainly infects European oak. It differs from other species of the genus (like P. ilicis) by its sympodially branched primary hyphae, the high variation in size and shape of the sporangia and shorter pedicels.
Obi-wan conobea is a small plant, growing to around tall, with glandular-hairy foliage. Its deeply dissected leaves may be alternate, opposite, or whorled. The axillary flowers are borne on pedicels. Each pale, lavender flower is tubular, around with 5 lobes.
The ampullate hairs of the pedicels were considered as determinants of A. ampullaceum identification, but after further examination of various samples it was decided that the presence of ampullate hairs was far too variable to be a marker of the fungal species.
Allium carinatum produces a single small bulb rarely more than 15 mm long, flat leaves, and an umbel of purple to reddish-purple flowers. The flowers are on long pedicels and often nodding (hanging downwards).Linnaeus, Carl. 1753. Species Plantarum 1: 297.
A corymb may have a paniculate branching structure, with the lower flowers having longer pedicels than the upper, thus giving a flattish top superficially resembling an umbel. Many species in the subfamily Amygdaloideae, such as hawthorns and rowans, produce their flowers in corymbs.
The inflorescence is a series of zigzagging branches bearing flowers on thin, curving pedicels. There is a single tiny bract at the base of each pedicel. The flower is under 2 millimeters long. It has five red-veined white or purple-tinged lobes.
An unbranched spur, ≤ long, is inserted at the base of the lid. Unusual elongated upper pitcher Nepenthes villosa has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle may be up to long, while the rachis grows to in length. Pedicels are filiform-bracteolate and up to long.
Delphinium parryi may approach in maximum height. It has fuzzy stems and fuzzy, deeply lobed leaves. The inflorescence holds a few to over 60 flowers on long pedicels. The sepals and petals are deep purple to light blue, with the upper petals often white.
The inflorescence has usually over 25 flowers grouped close together at the top of the stem and held on long pedicels. The flowers are white to light blue or light pink, or bicolored, and vary in size. The inner petals may be quite hairy.
It has panicles which are long and wide. Its pedicels are in length while the leaf blades are long and wide. Both the upper and lower glumes are shiny, lanceolate, and membranous. The lemma have a dorsal awn and dentate apex with obscure lateral veins.
The flowers are small, across, with 4–5 narrow, greenish white petals. The pedicels are downy. The 4- or 5-part calyx is downy and imbricate in bud. The corolla has four or five petals which are white, downy, spreading, hypogynous, and imbricate in bud.
The central flower is without a stem (pedicel), while the lateral flowers are on angular pedicels. The corolla is club-shaped. The flowers are pink and red and may be seen from January to April or August to November. The fruit is almost globular.
The leaves are generally described as evergreen, and grow in a broad fan, with arching tips. It has wiry, stout stems that can grow up to tall. The 5–12 short, slender flower-bearing branches, (or pedicels) are near the top of the plant.
When crushed the leaves have an almost pungent smell at times. Inflorescence A solitary terminal raceme, with 10-20(30) flowers, ranging from 25–45 mm in length. The axis is pubescent, with short curved pedicels. Bracts are light red to pinkish, ciliolate, and caducous.
The stalks (pedicels) are brown and darker coloured towards their bases. They are thickest midway along and thinnest near the top. Like many other Drosanthemum species, the pedicel has a layer of cork within it, especially near the base.Vlok, J. and Schutte-Vlok, A.L. (2010).
Pedicels 305 mm in flower, 5–7 mm long in fruit. Bracts deltoid-lanceolate, subulate-acuminate, 3–8 mm. Bracteoles lanceolate, subulate-acuminate, dark greenish-yellow becoming reddish-orange, 7-11mm long x 2–3 mm wide. Flowers resupinate papilionaceous, red, 4.5–6 cm long.
The main branches have 1–6 fertile spikelets which are located on lower branches which are also scaberulous. Spikelets do ascend and have pedicelled fertile spikelets. Pedicels are long and are straight. The fertile floret lemma is both chartaceous and elliptic and is long.
It also has scabrous margins and bottom which is rough on both sides. The panicle is pyramidical and is long. It has secund branches with scabrous axis. Spikelets are solitary with fertile spikelets being pedicelled, pedicels of which are ciliated, curved, filiformed and hairy.
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.
Pedicels erect. Calyx campanulate, 5-lobed, to 10 mm, lobes apiculate, somewhat accrescent. Corolla infundibuliform, up to 25 mm in diameter, twice as long as calyx, having lobes roughly equal in length to tube, green to yellow. Stamens subequal, inserted at base of corolla, exserted.
The panicle is open, linear and is long. The axis of the panicle is dominant while the main panicle branches are appressed. Spikelets are elliptic, solitary, are long and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy above.
The inflorescence consists of two to six individual cream-coloured flowers on a stem long in the leaf axils. The pedicels are long and covered with long, soft hairs. Flowering occurs from April to July. The perianth is long, white-yellow and usually smooth.
The size of the rachis is unknown. Pedicels grow to 8 mm in length. A study of 120 pollen samples taken from the type specimen (Kostermans 14017) found the mean pollen diameter to be 28.9 μm (SE = 0.5; CV = 9.2%).Adam, J.H. & C.C. Wilcock 1999.
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.
Cymopterus gilmanii has a short, fibrous stem from which it bears flat, thick, blue-green parsley-shaped leaves, each leaflet subdivided into pointed triangular segments. The inflorescence is a spread umbel atop a tall peduncle, with white and purple flowers at the ends of pedicels.
Pedicels and tepals are densely and shortly hairy. Stamens are more densely hairy near the base than near the anthers. The stem and lamina are green. Lower pitchers are usually dark green with red blotches concentrated near the peristome, which is dark reddish brown.
The peduncle may be up to 7 cm long, while the rachis reaches 10 cm in length. Pedicels are bracteolate and up to 5 mm long. Sepals are lanceolate and up to 3 mm long. The stem, leaves, and pitchers have a sparse indumentum.
The peduncle reaches 12 cm in length and 4 mm in width. The rachis is attenuate and up to 44 cm long. Pedicels lack bracteoles, reach 55 mm in length, and are one- to four-flowered. Tepals are orbicular-elliptical and around 4 mm long.
The inflorescence is a raceme of up to 35 flowers on long, S-shaped pedicels, often arranged along one side of the stem. The sepals are deep blue to purple, one to two centimeters long, and with a spur up to 2 centimeters in length.
The petioles are concave above and convex below, with about 10 ridges. The flowers are borne in a panicle and are light greenish-yellow in colour. The fruits have membrane-like wings and are about 5 mm long on pedicels (stems) of the same length.
The species is tall while its petioles are in length and are pilose. It pedicels are in length. Its fertile shoots are including 2-3 leaves which are erect and lax at the same time. Corolla is long while its stamen is in length.
Rheum ribes growing in Iran Rheum species are herbaceous perennials growing from fleshy roots. They have upright growing stems and mostly basal, deciduous leaves growing from short, thick rhizomes. They have persistent or deciduous ocrea. The inflorescences are terminal and panicle-like with pedicels.
The inflorescence consists of 16-36 sweetly scented white-cream or yellow showy flowers in axillary clusters. The inflorescence stalk is long with coarse longish hairs. The over-lapping bracts are long and inner bracts rust coloured. The pedicels are long and the pistil long.
The smooth pedicels are long, perianth long and smooth, the pistil long. The large fruit are elliptical to egg-shaped long, wide with darker small blister like protuberances on the surface and ending with two pointed horns long. Flowering occurs from May to June.
The panicle itself is contacted, lanceolate and is long. The main branches are distant and are long. The spikelets are elliptic, solitary, long, and are made out of 2 fertile florets. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are filiform, pubescent and curved.
The panicles have curved, filiform and pubescent pedicels which are hairy above. The spikelets are orbicular, solitary, and are long. They are comprised out of 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex. Its lemma have ciliate margins and scabrous surface with obtuse apex.
The inflorescence is coated in sticky glandular hairs. It has a series of nodes from which arise one to five flowers each on pedicels. The flower is only 4 to 8 millimeters long, with two mostly white upper lobes and three mostly purple lower lobes.
Umbel has only a few flowers, usually less than 10, all on long pedicels and very often drooping (nodding, hanging downward). Tepals are white, each with three thin prominent green veins; anthers cream; ovary at flowering time green.Tenore, Michele. 1811. Flora Napolitana 1: 22.
Within the tribe they included thirteen genera including Leucocoryne s.l. (see Genera). The full taxonomy of tribe Gilliesieae remains unresolved. Of the South America genera, a number have common features (tunicate bulbs, inflorescences with unarticulated pedicels, and one or two bracts subtending the inflorescence).
Brodiaea orcuttii is a perennial producing an inflorescence up to 25 centimeters tall which bears flowers on pedicels each a few centimeters long. The flower has six purple tepals each between 1 and 2 centimeters long. This is the only brodiaea that lacks staminodes.
The inflorescence is a series of branches bearing occasional flowers on thin, curving pedicels. There is a single small bract at the base of each pedicel. The flower is no more than 2 millimeters long with five white lobes fused along the lower half.
The inflorescence is a series of zigzagging branches bearing flowers on thin pedicels which are sigmoid in shape. There is a single tiny bract at the base of each pedicel. The hairy flower is under 4 millimeters long. It has five yellow-tipped white lobes.
The pedicels have sticky glandular hairs. The four sepals are red, egg-shaped, about long and fall off as the fruit develops. The four petals are pink, elliptic, long and glabrous. The eight stamens are hairy on their outer edges and the stigma is small.
Once mature, they produce a volatile chemical attractant which is recognised by female wasps belonging to the species Tetrapus americanus. Female wasps of this species are about long and are capable of producing about 190 offspring. Female fig wasps arrive carrying pollen from their natal tree and squeeze their way through the ostiole into the interior of the syconium. The syncomium bears 500–600 female flowers arranged in multiple layers - those that are closer to the outer wall of the fig have short pedicels and long styles, while those that are located closer to the interior of the chamber have long pedicels and short styles.
Bracts usually absent; bracteoles usually 5 in number, longer than pedicels, simple or irregularly (often deeply) divided. Flowers white; sepals small; outer petals not radiating; styles with enlarged base, forming stylopodium. Fruit 30-70mm, more or less cylindrical, slightly compressed laterally, with strongly dorsally flattened beak 3-4 times as long as and plainly distinct from seed-bearing portion, constricted at commissure; mericarps ribbed and scabrid with forward-pointing bristles on margins; carpophore present; vittae solitary and conspicuous; pedicels almost as thick as rays, glabrous at apex; styles 2-4 times as long as stylopodium, erect; stigma tapering. Cotyledons tapered gradually at base, without distinct petiole.
In shape the leaves are simple, and those of various species vary from elliptic, through lanceolate, to short linear. The flowers may be borne in terminal racemes or spikes, but most species bear numerous solitary flowers on pedicels in leaf axils. The pedicels generally twist in such a manner as to present the three- petalled lip uppermost, though in some species such as Monopsis decipiens the two-petalled lip is usually on top. Consistency on this respect is most likely an adaptation to favour preferred pollinators, as it permits them to perform their functions most efficiently, both for the plant and for their own reproductive success.
It is borne on a side of central axis, is unilateral and is long. The central inflorescence axis long with angular rhachis and is either glabrous or pilose on the bottom. Spikelets come in 2 rows which are fertile, pedicelled, and sessile. The pedicels are oblong.
Flowers sessile or nearly so, having the pedicels only 1 – 2 mm long. Corolla white, usually 2.5 cm in diameter, stamens 20 - 24, anthers as long or broadly shorter as the filaments. Achenes claviform, short- beaked, with 4 - 5 facial ribs and usually 1 facial gland.
Several related and similar looking species occur in the region, such as Senecio aloides and Senecio cotyledonis. Senecio sarcoides is distinguished from Senecio aloides by its flower clusters on the tips of the stems, which are on pedicels that are of a similar length to the leaves.
The flowers are sessile or on pedicels up to 3 mm long. The calyx is entire and 0.5–1 mm long. The ivory-white corolla in mature bud is 10–14 mm long and slightly club-shaped. The fruit is almost spherical and about 8 mm long.
Its solitary inflorescences, by contrast, have shorter pedicels and shorter styles. Its calyx is salmon-colored, and the petals white.Aymard C., G.A. & Cuello A., N.L. 2004. Rosaceae. Pp. 490–496 in Steyermark, J.A. (†), Berry, P.E., Yatskievych, K. & Holst, B.K. (eds.), Flora of the Venezuelan Guayana, Vol.
Anisopus mannii possesses slightly green flowers in globose lateral umbelliform cymes. This description refers to the flower's determinate inflorescences (consisting of multiple pedicels). The species is also observed to be a strong climber. Features are largely conserved among the species of the genus Anisopus (including A. mannii).
Rambling shrub to 2 metres. Branches; opposite, rigid and many. The leaflets on the species are acute to broadly so, having 4 - 10 teeth on a serrated margin, 5 – 15 mm long and 2 –3 mm wide. Flowers on pedicels, erect, but drooping to the ends.
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.
Spikelets are elliptic, solitary, are long and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are curved, filiform, pubescent, and hairy above. Besides being pediceled they also have 1-2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex. Sterile florets are barren, cuneate, clumped and are long.
It spikelets are elliptic, solitary and are long. Fertile spikelets have pedicels which are curved filiform, and scabrous. They also have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex with its rhachilla internodes being scaberulous. The floret callus is pubescent and have hairs which are long.
Flowers are borne solitarily on pedicels (≤10 mm long) with simple bracts. Tepals are elliptic and up to 4 mm long. Female and male inflorescences have a similar structure. A sparse but persistent indumentum of simple, white hairs is present on most parts of the plant.
The exception is the spur, which has persistent stellate hairs. Inflorescences have a very dense indumentum of short, white or brownish stellate hairs. The pedicels, tepals and the ovary are very densely stellate-tomentose. Lower pitchers range in colour from light green to dark purple throughout.
Smaller veins create a fine network that gives the leaves a granular texture. Its solitary, pale green flowers are in supra-axillary positions. Its pedicels are 4-5 millimeters long and covered in sparse red hairs. Its sepals are rounded like the arc of a circle.
Its petioles are 2.5-9 by 1-2.5 millimeters and covered in sparse fine hairs. Its flowers are born opposite the leaves on inflorescences in groups of 3 or fewer. The flowers are on fleshy, densely hairy pedicels that are 5.5-13 by 0.5-3.5 millimeters.
Green flower buds develop in clusters, and small flowers bloom in a whitish green hue. Globe or ovate shaped fruit are typically 1/3-3/8 in diameter; immature fruit is green in color, developing into a deep purple or black. Fruit are clustered on red pedicels.
Pedicels are 1-5mm long, inflorescences 5–25 cm long, 2–13 cm wide, hypanthium 1-1.5mm long, and sepals 1.5-2.1mm long. Fruits are 3-celled capsules. These capsules open via 3 valves. Flowering occurs from October to November, and fruits appear from December to January.
Individual flowers have stalks (pedicels). The sepals form a two-lipped funnel shape, the upper lip having four lobes, the lower lip one lobe. The petals form a two-lipped tube, with an S-shaped basal portion. There are four stamens, whose filaments are not fused together.
Funnel-shaped flowers grow in the leaf axils borne on pedicels up to 2.5 centimeters in length. Each flower has lance-shaped green sepals at the base. The flower petals are dark red at the bases and white at the tips. The stamens are dark red.
The single inflorescence has 16-24 pink-cream sweetly scented flowers in a raceme and appear in clusters in the leaf axils mostly in upper branchlets. The perianth is pink or white, pedicels are pink and smooth. The style is long. Flowering occurs from September to October.
Nepenthes klossii has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle is around 18 cm long, while the rachis reaches 14 cm in length. Pedicels are one- to three- flowered and up to 10 mm long. Tepals are oblong, obtuse, and around 3 mm long by 1 mm wide.
The species' rachis is scaorus while it branches are scabrous. It spikelets are obconic and are violet in colour. It also have filiform pedicels which are curved and puberulent. The species' lower glume is long and wide and is also either obovate or flabelliform and papery-membranous.
They are also pediceled, the pedicels of which are long with spikelerts themselves being oblong and long. Fertile lemma is chartaceous, elliptic, keelless and is long. It margins are ciliated while it apex is obtuse. Sterile florets are barren, clumped, cuneate, and grow 2–3 in number.
Blade margins are thick, with rounded teeth, and appendiculate. The thallus has simple, ramenta-like spiny projections (papillae) thickly strewn on both sides. Coccoid pedicels are in marginal spines emerging from the thallus. C. exasperatus grows the fastest in the summer and slowest near the winter solstice.
The inflorescence, a raceme, appears in summer (late July or early August in the UK) and is borne on a stem (peduncule) tall. Individual flowers have stalks (pedicels) long. The tepals are whitish to purple, the ovary always purple. Most plants have a pleasant coconut-like scent.
Some specimens' wings have less overlap than these. Pistillate (female) flowers are held in 5 to 7 flowered pendulous sessile or peduncled racemes, and are 2 to 3cm long. Their pedicels are 5 to 10mm long. The sepals are elliptic, obtuse, and 5 to 6mm long.
Armeria pungens grows in small shrubs, reaching heights of about . The stems are lignified at the base, robust, highly branched. Leaves are glabrous, linear to lanceolate, pointed, about long and about wide. Flower heads are pale pink, gathered in globose inflorescences at the top of long pedicels.
The species name “thyrsoides” derives from the Latin "thyrsus" (a staff of giant fennel covered with ivy vines and leaves and associated with Dionysus) and refers to the shape of the upright inflorescence of this plant, similar to a panicle with severals flowers on opposite pedicels.
Allium tardiflorum is a plant species found in Israel. It is a bulb-forming perennial producing an umbel of flowers late in the season, in September or October. Flowers are on long pedicels, forming a lax umbel. Tepals are green with purple midveins and purple margins.
The pistil is ovary superior, ovoid, and five-celled; the style is columnar; the stigma is simple; the disk is ten-toothed, and ovules are many. The fruit is a capsule, downy, five-valved, five-angled, and tipped by the persistent style; the pedicels are curving.
The Nature Conservancy. This is a small annual herb forming cushions of foliage at ground level, the stems no more than a centimeter long. The hairy, spoon-shaped leaves are 2 to 3 millimeters long. The inflorescence is a headlike cluster of flowers on hairlike pedicels.
They are blue-green in the shade, but can become reddish in full sun. The flowers are orange-red, born on very short pedicels (1-2mm), on a simple, hardly branched inflorescence, which spreads out horizontally. Carter, S. Flora of Tropical East Africa - Aloaceae. CRC Press, 1994.
The fruit are attached to the pedicels by 2.5-10 by 1.2-2.7 millimeter stipes. Its fruit have 1-3 smooth, flattened, ellipsoid seeds that are 1.3-2.0 by 0.55-1.3 centimeters. The seeds are sparsely hairy with patches of long white or gold- colored hairs.
The flowers are solitary in the upper axils on pedicels 5–20 mm long. The petals are sparsely stellate on both surfaces, about 4 cm long, and mauve. The staminal column is about 17 mm long, with filaments 1–2 mm long. There is a single style.
Box huckleberry flowers in May and June. The flowers are urn-shaped and white, sometimes tinged with pink. Like other huckleberries, the flowers appear on a raceme springing from the leaf axils. Its fruits, which appear in July and August, are blue berries borne on short pedicels.
Pedicels are up to 10 mm long and have a filiform bracteole. Sepals are obovate to oblong in shape and up to 4 mm long. Inflorescences have a dense indumentum of short hairs. Developing pitchers are also densely covered with short hairs, but most of these are caducous.
The flower buds are borne in groups of seven or nine on a thickened peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, wide with a conical operculum long. The flowers are white and the fruit are cylindrical to urn-shaped, long and wide.
The lanceolate spikelets are long and have slender pedicels. The six to twelve florets on each spikelet have concealed bases at maturity. The glumes are either smooth or scabrous. The acute lower glumes are three-nerved and long, and the obtuse upper glumes are five-nerved and long.
Several related and similar looking species occur in the region, such as Senecio aloides and Senecio sarcoides. The flower clusters of Senecio aloides are held up on an inflorescence, above the leaves. Those of Senecio sarcoides are on pedicels that are of a similar length to the leaves.
Amperea xiphoclada, the broom spurge, is a plant species in the family Euphorbiaceae. It is endemic to Australia. It is an erect, rigid shrub growing to between 20 and 90 cm high and is usually leafless in its mature form. Small flowers appear in sessile clusters or on pedicels.
This species produces small, robust, cream-white flowers in May to October (southern hemisphere), on an unbranched inflorescence. The flowers typically do not have pedicels (sessile), and their lobes curve outwards. The peduncle is robust and relatively short. Several large, elongated, veined, sterile bracts appear along the peduncle.
Flowers have 150–200 stamens. The fruit occurs in heads rounded to subcylindric in shape, with pedicels long. The achenes are ellipsoid in shape, not winged, covered with villous hairs, with beaks curved that reflex as they age and long, feather-like. Generally, the fruit persists into fall.
The plant is tall with arched and erect branches which are greenish to purple-black in colour. Fertile shoots are long including two to four leaves. Its pedicels are long and are strigose. The leaves are dull to somewhat shiny and mid-green in colour with light green undersides.
At the base of the raceme, the flowers are borne individually; higher up, a pair of pedicels, each bearing a single flower, emerges from the same three bracts. There are six stamens and a style that protrudes from the flower and is terminated by a three-lobed stigma.
Pedicels are up to 5 mm long and lack bracts. Sepals are ovate and up to 2 mm long. A study of 120 pollen samples taken from two herbarium specimens (J.H.Adam 2401 and J.H.Adam 2405) found the mean pollen diameter to be 32.0 μm (SE = 0.4; CV = 8.7%).
It is shaped like an umbel with up to 30 flowers borne on pedicels 2 or 3 centimeters long. The flower has six green- veined yellow tepals each up to a centimeter long.Flora of North America, FNA Vol. 26 Page 337, Bloomeria clevelandii S. Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts.
Nepenthes aristolochioides has a racemose inflorescence up to 30 cm long. Both the peduncle and rachis may be up to 15 cm long, although the latter is usually shorter in female plants. The peduncle is up to 4 mm in diameter. Pedicels are simple-bracteolate and one-flowered.
Pedicels of male flowers 2–4 mm long, the female flowers sessile. Flowers are white and fragrant. Buxus citrifolia has been considered similar to another species in the family Buxaceae – Buxus laevigata. B. citrifolia differs in the fact that B. laevigata – native to Jamaica – has smaller fruits and flowers.
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2004. Downloaded on 16 September 2015. The flower is stiff and persistent with stout pedicels 5-8 millimeters long and bracts subtending flowers 4-10 millimeters. The flowers grow in an inflorescent pseudo-lateral pattern borne on woody stems below leaves.Brassaiopsis.
The axillary flowers are four merous with a pedicels that are longer than sepals in fruiting material. The sepals are erect with a lanceolate shape and obtuse apex. Petals are striate and brown in colour and shorter than the sepals. The flower base is connate with a hooded apex.
It has un-branched erect, stem, growing up to tall.Stuart Max Walters (editor) It has dark green, linear, lanceolate, acuminate, spathes (leaves of the flower bud). It has unequal pedicels (stem of a single flower). The stems hold 3–5 terminal (top of stem) flowers, between May and July.
The species is while its petioles are in length. It pedicels are with 2-3 leaves including a lax. The fruit is globose and is in length while purple-black in colour. Its calyx lobes are villous with an open navel that have styles which are of long.
Gymnospora is a genus of plants in the milkwort family (Polygalaceae) which is endemic to Brazil. It was first described as a subgenus of Polygala by Robert Chodat in 1891. It was separated into its own genera in 2013. Their flowers are long and its pedicels are long.
The inflorescence consists of 6-12 strongly scented white, pink or reddish brown clusters of flowers. Inflorescence are supported on a stem long covered in long soft hairs. The bracts surrounding the flowers are long. The pedicels are long with white hairs, occasionally with glands on the tips.
The leaflets are narrowly lanceolate, rounded at the base, and acuminate with a slender, curved point. Stipules are narrow and not attached to the stalk, or soon falling. The pedicels are slender. Flowers small and numerous, in a compound umbel or corymb, creamy-white, 1–1.5 cm across.
Some authors and herbaria accept C. opaca as a distinct species and others consider it to be inseparable from C. terminalis and C. tumescens. To the extent that the species can be reliably differentiated, C. terminalis has thinner leaves, larger buds and fruit and thicker pedicels than C. opaca.
The spreading inflorescence nods when it becomes heavy with grain though prior to maturity the panicle is erect. The spikelets are on elongated pedicels, with each spikelet bearing five to fifteen flowers. The spikelets are glabrous or scabrous and become lax when mature. The ovoid spikelets measure long.
The species is perennial and have culms that are long and woody. The species' lateral branches are sparse with leaf-sheaths being scabrous, tubular and closed. It leaf-blades are wide. It panicle is contracted, linear, and is long with filiform pedicels that are located on fertile spikelet.
The stems are a brownish color and grow 50–90 cm high. Connected to the stem are pedicels of simple thin proximal attachments that slightly thicken to 2–8 mm. The light green leaves are arranged alternately on the stem. The common leaf shape of Rumex spiralis is lanceolate.
Flowers in simple axillary racemes, 25–30 cm long, pedicels slender 2.5 cm.long, petals orbicular, yellow, the upper streaked with red, filaments densely wooly in the lower half. Pod oblong, turgid, 3–5 cm long, seeds 2–4. Distribution: Assam, Bengal, Chittagong, Myanmar, Ceylon, Malay Peninsula and Archipelago.
The flowering stem is curved at the apex and is secund. The numerous bracts are arranged in two imbricated rows and have short pedicels. The five sepals are unequal, with two long obtuse, lateral sepals and three other shorter sepals. The lateral sepals are oblong and approximately long.
Persoonia oblongata is a plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to New South Wales. It is an erect to spreading shrub with narrow elliptic to broad egg-shaped leaves and yellow flowers on long, curved pedicels and is found from the lower Blue Mountains, west to Rylstone.
The ovaries are bald, with the exception of a line of gold-colored hairs. The stigma and hairless style together are 3.2-3.6 millimeters long. The stigma are spindle-shaped, hairless and have warty appearance. Clusters of fruit are born on 10-18 by 2.7-2.8 millimeters hairy pedicels.
The flowers are single or in pairs, long, have orange-yellow standards, that are pinkish brown on the back, and purple-brown keels. The pedicels long, bracts long. The seed pods are oblong in shape and between long. Flowering occurs between September and November in its native range.
Small lobed oval leaves under a centimeter long occur at the base of the plant. The inflorescence is a series of branches bearing occasional flowers on thin, curving pedicels. There is a single tiny bract at the base of each pedicel. The flower is only about 2 millimeters long.
Small toothed oval leaves 1 to 2 centimeters long occur at the base of the plant. The inflorescence is a zigzagging series of branches bearing occasional flowers on thin pedicels. There is a single tiny bract at the base of each pedicel. The flower is a few millimeters long.
Boronia dichotoma is a plant in the citrus family, Rutaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, slender perennial herb or shrub with simple leaves and pink, four-petalled flowers. The species is characterised by sticky glandular hairs on the pedicels.
It is a bush reaching 4 meters in height. Its elliptical leaves are 7-18.5 by 2.7-9 centimeters. The bases of the leaves are rounded or notched at the point of attachment to the petioles. The tips of the leaves come to a short tapered tip. The leaves have 10-15 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its petioles are 3-5 millimeters long and covered in dense woolly hairs. Its solitary, fragrant flowers are on 2-8 millimeter long pedicels that occur at extra-axillary or terminal positions. Its pedicels are covered in dense white woolly hairs and have an oval, green bracteole that is 6-8 by 5-7 millimeters.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, and about wide with a hemispherical operculum. The fruit is a woody, oval capsule and wide with the valves protruding but easily broken.
Nepenthes sibuyanensis has a racemose inflorescence. In male inflorescences, the peduncle reaches a length of at least 18 cm, whereas the rachis is up to 15 cm long. Pedicels are one-flowered, up to 14 mm long, and usually lack bracts. Tepals are oblong, obtuse, and approximately 3 mm long.
Inflorescences are tall and have 2 – 3 cincinni, conspicuous bracts, and pedicels approximately 4 mm long. The red flowers have ascending-spreading sepals to 11 mm and pentagonal corollas measuring 19 – 20 × 10 mm. Echeveria peacockii has similar-coloured glaucous leaves, but its leaves are wedge-shaped with mucronulate (pointed) tips.
The top half of the stem is an inflorescence of widely spaced flowers on long pedicels, the longest over nine centimeters long. The flowers are usually deep brilliant blue. The upper two petals may be milky white. The spur exceeds two centimeters in length in the largest of the flowers.
The peduncle is thick and erect. It has inflorescences of three, secund, 30 cm tall or more. There are few bracts on this plant and they are all very close together, are obovate, acuminate, keeled, are 18 mm thick, and are pruinose. Pedicels are very short (up to 3 mm thick).
The leaves are flat, concolorous, dull to slightly glossy green with a base tapering to the petiole. Corymbia eremaea produces white flowers between November and January. The conflorescence is compound and terminal with umbellasters that have seven regular flowers. Peduncles are quadrangular or narrowly flattened or angular with terete pedicels.
Each flower is borne on a long stalk (pedicel), up to 45 or 60 mm long, and has six tepals, 12–20 mm long, with sharp tips, that open widely to form a bell shape. The two spathes are shorter than the pedicels. The style is slightly longer than the stamens.
The peduncle is slender and warty, the pedicels long. The triangular, narrow calyx lobes are smooth on the outside with a stiff apex. The 5 petals are spreading, each petal long, upperside white, underneath pale green, glandular and there are 10 prominent stamens. The fruit is a capsule, long, wide.
The panicle is contracted, linear, long and wide. The main panicle branches are whorled and are long with scabrous axis. Spikelets are solitary and obovate with fertile spikelets being pedicelled, pedicels of which are ciliated, curved, and filiform. The spikelets have two fertile florets which are diminished at the apex.
The panicle itself is contracted, linear, secund, is long and bears a small amount of spikelets. Spikelets themselves are solitary, elliptic, and are long. The species fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are ciliate, curved, hairy and filiform. Florets are diminished at the apex and have a pubescent callus.
Boronia ramosa is a slender, erect, mostly glabrous, woody shrub which grows to a height of . The leaves are pinnate, long and have between three and seven leaflets on a petiole long. The leaflets are long. There are up to three flowers arranged in the leaf axils on pedicels long.
It has branches (or pedicels) near top of the plant. The stem has (scarious) membranous, (or translucent) spathes (leaves of the flower bud). Similar to Iris illyrica, the spathes can have a dirty, rusty markings. The stems (and the branches) hold between 3 and 8 flowers, between May and June.
Its flowers are on pedicels that are 1-1.6 centimeters long. Its leathery, rounded sepals are 1.2-1.6 centimeters long and covered in fine hairs. Its flowers have 6 petals in two rows of three. The very leathery, yellow, broad, lance-shaped outer petals are 3.8 centimeters long with thickened bases.
Lepechinia ganderi is an aromatic shrub with slender branches coated in rough hairs and resin glands. The leaves are lance-shaped and sometimes have toothed edges. The raceme inflorescence bears flowers on short pedicels. Each flower has a base of long, pointed sepals below a white to light lavender tubular corolla.
It is a succulent, erect to decumbent herb, flowering from September to November with white-pink flowers. It grows on sandy and gravelly soils on granite outcrops and slopes. The flowers are on pedicels (stems) which are 0.5–2 mm long and erect when in fruit. The bracts are alternate.
According to a redescription by José Bonaparte in 1976, Pisanosaurus has some distinctive characteristics. The acetabulum, the hip-joint, is open. The pedicels of the ilium are short, resulting in a low axially long acetabulum. The upper region of the ischium is wide, larger than that of the pubic bone.
The spikelets themselves are ovate and are long while the rachilla internodes are long. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are filiform and puberulous. The florets are diminished at the apex. Its fertile lemma is elliptic, scarious and is long while lemma itself is keelless with dentate apex.
Members of the Asphodelaceae are diverse, with few characters uniting the three subfamilies currently recognized. The presence of anthraquinones is one common character. The flowers (the inflorescence) are typically borne on a leafless stalk (scape) which arises from a basal rosette of leaves. The individual flowers have jointed stalks (pedicels).
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven on peduncles, usually paired in leaf axils. The peduncles are long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in February and the flowers are white.
Osa pulchra has large white, trumpet-shaped, pendulous flowers similar to many plants in the family, Solanaceae, such as Brugmansia and Solandra. The flowers are pendent, borne on long pedicels, fused-petals and an elongated corolla. The blooms are highly fragrant at night and are most likely pollinated by bats (chiropterophily).
They are shorter than Iris aphylla. It has a slender stem or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. Compared to Iris aphylla, it branches (or pedicels) from the middle of the stem, (on Iris aphylla, it branches close to the base or rhizome,) it very rarely has 2 branches.
Zoospore release time has been recorded to vary, from release happening immediately after sporangia formation or within hours. Some isolates do not show the ability to produce zoospores. P. hydropathica does produce chlamydospores, present at the end of long hyphae and on short pedicels. Hyphal swelling has also been observed.
Flowers are most commonly borne entirely on one-flowered pedicels, but some plants may have a combination of these and two-flowered partial peduncles. Fruits are up to 8 mm long. As in most Nepenthes species, the seeds are filiform. They are pale brown and measure around 7 mm in length.
They can remain on the plant after the bloom has died. The stems hold 2 terminal (top of stem) flowers, blooming in late spring, between April and May (in Europe), and between June and July. It has very short pedicels (flower stalks). They sometimes can bloom for only 2 days.
The firm and narrow sepals are long and the pedicels are long. The capsules vary in shape from lanceolate to slenderly conic, with three carpels and three styles. The capsules are long and thick. The plant flowers from July to September and fruits from early October to the end of autumn.
Nepenthes tentaculata has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle is up to 15 cm long and the rachis up to 10 cm long, although female inflorescences are generally shorter than male ones. Pedicels are bract-less and reach 10 mm in length. Sepals are oblong- lanceolate in shape and up to 3 mm long.
The basal pair of secondary veins in the leaf are larger than the others. Its inflorescences have 5 flowers in axillary, or sometimes terminal positions. The flowers are on hairless, green pedicels attached to hairless, green peduncles. Its pale green, rounded, hairless sepals are, 2–3.5 millimeters long and fused at their base.
The stamen are arranged in a spiral. Its flowers have 10-12 carpels that are 1.5-1.7 by 0.5-0.6 millimeters. The carpels have 8-12 ovules. Its fruit occur in clusters of up to 8–12 on woody pedicels that are 25 by 4.5-6 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs.
Eucalyptus brevipes was first formally described in 1986 by Ian Brooker and the description was published in the journal Nuytsia from a specimen he collected near Cunderin Hill, between Mukinbudin and Bonnie Rock. The specific epithet (brevipes) is from the Latin words brevis meaning “short” and pes meaning "foot", referring to the pedicels.
The inflorescence occupying the top end of the stem has few widely spaced flowers on long pedicels. The sepals are long and curl backwards or fold upon themselves. They may be dark purple to light blue or rarely white. The lower petals are the same color, while the upper are often white.
Hybanthus (greenviolet) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Violaceae. This genus name is Greek for "humpback flower", referring to the drooping pedicels of plants that are part of this genus. The genus is grossly polyphyletic and may contain up to nine different genera, of which Pombalia Vand., Cubelium Raf.
Pigeonberry is an erect, vine-like herb, reaching a height of . The leaves of this evergreen perennial are up to wide and , with a petiole in length. Flowers are on racemes long with a peduncle in length and pedicels long. Sepals are in length and white or green to pink or purplish.
It is a tall growing species,U.S. Department of Agriculture Office of Information with a stiff stem, or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. It has numerous, or 2–3 lateral branches (or pedicels). The stem has spathes (leaves of the flower bud), which are green, long and scarious above.
The inflorescence contains 1 to 4 flowers that hang on pedicels up to 2 centimeters (0.8 inch) long. The flower is bell-shaped and greenish white. The fruit is a juicy, sweet-tasting drupe which is usually blue but may be black or white. This plant grows on the Atlantic coastal plain.
In 2004, it was transferred to Acis, along with other species of Leucojum, on the basis of a molecular phylogenetic study. It resembles Acis nicaeensis, which has an overlapping distribution, but can be distinguished by several characters, including wider leaves, longer pedicels, and a larger distance between the stigma and the anthers.
Nepenthes edwardsiana has a racemose inflorescence. The peduncle may be up to 30 cm long, whereas the attenuate rachis reaches 20 cm in length. Pedicels are one-flowered, up to 25 mm long, and do not possess a bract. Sepals are round to elliptic in shape and up to 5 mm long.
The inflorescence is a compound cyme and attains a length of 6 to 7 centimeters with a similar width. The erect flowers sit atop 3 to 4 millimeters long pedicels. The corolla tube is approximately 0.5 millimeters long. The triangular sepals are 2 to 2.5 millimeters long and approximately 1 millimeter wide.
They can grow up to long. They often have 2–3 basal (rising from the rhizome) leaves, with one sheathing the stem. It has a flattened stem, or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. It has 2 short branches, (or pedicels), the lowest branch is similar in length to the bract.
Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are hairy, pubescent, filiform and are long. Florets are diminished at the apex. Its lemma have asperulous surface with fertile lemma being herbaceous, lanceolate, keelless and long. Both the lower and upper glumes are keelless, scarious, are long, are grey coloured and have acuminated apexes.
It is a bush with slender branches. Its leaves are arranged in two opposite rows on the branches. Its narrow, smooth, membranous leaves are 6-12 centimeter by 1.2-1.5 centimeters. Its solitary flowers are on 1 centimeter long pedicels that have a small breacteole about half way up from their base.
The margins are smooth or toothed. The pedicels holding the flowers are 4 to 8 centimeters long. The flower has 4 petals, each 1 to 1.4 centimeters long with a notch in the tip. The two petal color morphs are white and yellow, but all the petals have yellow or orange bases.
Guardiola carinata is a rare North American species of plants in the sunflower family. It is found only in northern Mexico in the state of Nayarit.Robinson, Benjamin Lincoln. 1899. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 26: 233 Guardiola carinata is a branching woody perennial, hairless except a few hairs on the pedicels.
The inflorescence is made up of one to three flowers on narrow pedicels. The flower has five to eight oval or rounded shiny yellow petals up to 1.5 centimeters long each around a central nectary with many stamens and pistils. The fruit is an achene borne in a cluster of 17 or more.
The main branches carry 1–5 fertile spikelets and are scaberulous. Spikelets are oblong, solitary, are long and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are pubescent and hairy above. The spikelets have 2-3 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, and clumped.
The panicle is open, linear, is long with scaberulous axis. Spikelets are obovate, solitary and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are filiform, curved, pubescent, and hairy above. The spikelets have 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, clumped and are long.
The first flower is generally borne on a pedicel, sometimes with a simple, lanceolate bracteole (≤1.5 cm long). Subsequent flowers are produced on pedicels or two-flowered partial peduncles, which lack bracteoles. Sepals are ovate and around 4 mm long. Male inflorescences usually bear around twice as many flowers as female ones.
Its leaves have thin secondary veins that arch and connect with one another near the leaf margins. Its hairless, wrinkled petioles are 6 millimeters long. Its solitary (rarely in pairs) are axillary and have a distinctive pink to dark-red color. The flowers are born on pedicels that are 3-5 millimeters long.
The petiole is between ; pseudostipules present or absent, if present then present on most nodes. Inflorescences range between in size, with 8–30 flowers, ebracteate or bracteate on most nodes from the base. Peduncle is between ; pedicels are between , articulated in the upper half. Flowers with the calyx tube are minute, approximately between .
Six to 25 straight pedicels are present, each measuring that support the umbellets (secondary umbels). The umbels and umbellets usually have no upper or lower bracts. The flowers have tiny sepals or lack them entirely, and measure about . They consist of five yellow petals that are curled inward, five stamens, and one pistil.
The panicle is long and is inflorescenced, lanceolate, open and reddish-purple in colour. It have solitary spikelets which carry one fertile floret which have a pubescent callus. The spikelets themselves are elliptic, are long and carry filiformed pedicels. The species carry an oblong fertile lemma which is long and is keelless.
Lepechinia cardiophylla is an aromatic shrub with branching stems covered in resin glands. The hairy, glandular leaves are heart-shaped to oval-shaped and often toothed along the edges. The raceme inflorescence bears flowers on prominent pedicels. Each flower is a cuplike calyx of glandular sepals around a tubular white to lavender corolla.
The groups are on a rachis long and covered with rust-coloured hairs. The rachis has thickly matted hairs or more or less raised short silky rusty coloured hairs, occasionally white hairs. The pedicels are long and scantily covered with mostly white flattened soft silky hairs. The perianth is long and pistil long.
The location is designated as a Natural Park. The Juan García grape variety has medium sized, elliptical berries with dark blue-black skins that grow in compact bunches on short pedicels. Bud break is mostly early, vigor is medium-high, and it is highly productive. The variety shows good resistance to powdery mildew.
Pedicels are long and the star-shaped flowers are wide, with the central flower being the largest. The sepals are lance-attenuate, measuring long and wide. Two sepals are typically longer and wider than the other three. Sepals have three to five veins, with a visible midvein, and lack the punctiform glands.
The spikelets are made out of 4–5 fertile florets which are oblong and long. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are filiform. Florets are diminished at the apex and are bisexual. Its lemma have rugulose surface and obtuse apex while fertile lemma is being coriaceous, elliptic, keelless, and is long.
The leaves have 7-13 pairs of secondary veins emanating from either side of their midribs. Its hairless petioles are 5-7 millimeters long. Its flowers are solitary or in groups of 2-4. The flowers are on 0.7-1.5 centimeter pedicels that are covered in fine hairs and occur in axillary positions.
The inflorescence is a raceme at the end of the stalk. Individual flowers are borne on long pedicels. The banner petal is oblong to circular, typically blue with the center white, long. Lupinus bicolor is a species of lupine known as the miniature lupine, Lindley's annual lupine, pigmy-leaved lupine, or bicolor lupine.
The leaf sheaths on the upper stem are swollen. The stalk of the inflorescence (peduncle) is 20-100 mm long and there are often several at a node. The axis of the inflorescence is 0.6-1.2 m by 0.1-0.3 m. The 10-30 stalks of individual flowers (pedicels) are 0.5 mm long.
Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are filiform and are long. Florets are diminished at the apex. Its lemma have scabrous surface and acute apex with fertile lemma is being chartaceous, elliptic, keelless, and is long. Both the lower and upper glumes are elliptic, keelless, membranous, and have acute apexes.
It is a perennial wildflower growing from a corm. It produces two to three basal leaves up to 40 centimeters long by one wide. The inflorescence arises on a smooth, erect stem up to 40 centimeters tall. It is an umbel-like cluster of many funnel-shaped flowers borne on short pedicels.
Pedicels are long and woody with smooth and obtuse sepals that are long and wide. Corolla is funnel-shaped, yellow in colour with a purple center, have a narrow tube, and is long. Its capsule is globose and is long with the seeds are sized in diameter and are brown in colour.
It flowers from August to October, with flowers that are 8–12 mm long, on pedicels (≤ 7 mm long). The bracts are few, and the bracteoles are about 2.5 mm long. The calyx is 3–4 mm long. The bright yellow petals with reddish markings are roughly equal and the keel is red.
The pedicels are in axillary positions. Its green, oval to triangular sepals are 2-8 by 3-7.5 millimeters with margins that are fused at their base. The sepals come to a point at their tips. The inner surface of the sepals are densely hairy, while outer surface is hairless or slightly hairy.
Brodiaea stellaris is a perennial that produces a short inflorescence only a few centimeters tall which bears flowers on pedicels. Each flower has six blue-purple tepals up to 1.5 centimeters long. At the center of the flower are large white sterile stamens called staminodes which surround the distinctive forked fertile stamens.
Gustavia angustifolia has a gametic chromosome number of n=17. The inflorescence of G. angustifolia is racemose and terminal, occurring at the end of the branches. Each raceme typically has 4–10 flowers and each flower has 8 petals. The pedicels of the flowers range from 35 to 100 mm in length.
This eucalypt was first formally described in 1992 by Ken Hill and Lawrie Johnson and given the name Eucalyptus suggrandis subsp. alipes. In 2005, Dean Nicolle and Ian Brooker raised the subspecies to species status as Eucalyptus alipes. The specific epithet (alipes) is a Latin word meaning "wing-footed" referring to the pedicels.
Salvadora persica is a large, well-branched evergreen shrub or small tree having soft whitish yellow wood. The bark is of old stems rugose, branches are numerous, drooping, glabrous, terete, finely striate, shining, and almost white. Leaves are somewhat fleshy, glaucous, 3.8–6.3 by 2–3.2 cm in size, elliptic lanceolate or ovate, obtuse, and often mucronate at the apex, the base is usually acute, less commonly rounded, the main nerves are in 5–6 pairs, and the petioles 1.3–2.2 cm long and glabrous. The flowers are greenish yellow in color, in axillary and terminal compound lax panicles 5–12.5 cm long, numerous in the upper axils, pedicels 1.5–3 mm long, bracts beneath the pedicels, ovate and very caduceus.
Typical floral diagram of a Brassicaceae (Erysimum "Bowles' Mauve")Flowers may be arranged in racemes, panicles, or corymbs, with pedicels sometimes in the axil of a bract, and few species have flowers that sit individually on flower stems that spring from the axils of rosette leaves. The orientation of the pedicels when fruits are ripe varies dependent on the species. The flowers are bisexual, star symmetrical (zygomorphic in Iberis and Teesdalia) and the ovary positioned above the other floral parts. Each flower has four free or seldomly merged sepals, the lateral two sometimes with a shallow spur, which are mostly shed after flowering, rarely persistent, may be reflexed, spreading, ascending, or erect, together forming a tube-, bell- or urn-shaped calyx.
In fruits, both species are characterized by paniculate infructescence and 2-lobed fruits with distinct pedicels, but the fruits are obovoid or cordate, 1-1.75 (up to 2) cm long and acute to attenuate at the base in B. paniculata, and oblong, 2.5–3 cm long and obtuse at the base in B. indica.
The leaf edge may be curved backwards or rolled under. The leaf upper surface has either small wart-like protuberances or smooth with occasional long hairs. The single yellow pea flower has a red-orange band around a yellow centre and bright yellow wings and keel. The flower bracts are about long, the pedicels long.
Gray's original description for the plant was the following: > Berbericidae, Berberis. B. Nevinii, Gray, n. sp. Leaflets 3 to 7, oblong- > lanceolate, rather evenly and numerously spinulose-serrulate, half to full > inch long, obscurely reticulated; lowest pair toward base of petiole: raceme > loosely 5-7-flowered, equalling [sic] or surpassing the leaves • pedicels > slender.
The gonophores in the family Tricyclusidae are fixed sporosacs, with only male specimens observed. The gonophores in the family Pennariidae develop above the aboral tentacles. They may or may not liberate eumedusoids. The gonophores in the family Cladocorynidae are carried singly or on short, branched pedicels on the lower or middle part of the hydranth.
It is a perennial wildflower growing from a corm. There are two or three basal leaves measuring up to long and wide. The inflorescence arises on a smooth, erect stem up to tall. It is an umbel-like cluster of several flowers which are borne on very long, straight pedicels measuring up to long.
Its sparse leaves are divided into two to four pairs of dull green lobes each one to six centimeters long. The tiny bunched flowers at the tip of each stem are bright yellow. The fruit is a tiny podlike silique on a straight pedicel. Pedicels holding fruits stick out from the stem at intervals.
The buds are sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are pale creamy yellow. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The pedicels are long, slight to densely covered with long white hairs. The smooth perianth is long and the pistil long. The needle-shaped leaves are grooved on the undersurface and up to long and wide and ending in a sharp point long. The leaves are moderately covered with flattened silky hairs, quickly becoming smooth.
The new growth is covered in sparse hairs. P. laxa is described as auxotelic, which means each stalk bears an individual flower that is subtended by a leaf at its junction with the stem. Known as pedicels, these smooth and measure 6–8 mm in length. The flowers occur in groups of one to three.
The obovate shaped, standards are long,. They widen gradually to from haft to a rounded apex. It has a 2.5 cm long perianth tube, which is green with a purple tinge. It has short pedicels (flower stalks), and oblong shaped styles, which are 2.5 cm long, and similar in colour to the flower petals.
Androsace filiformis is a small annual herb forming hairy to hairless patches up to 12 centimeters tall. The basal rosette contains finely toothed leaves up to 2 centimeters long, often much smaller, and oval to nearly triangular in shape. There are generally several open umbels of tiny five-lobed white flowers on long pedicels.
Self-compatible plants have smaller, barely scented flowers with introrse, or inward-facing anthers. This annual herb forms a rosette of leaves but usually has no stem. Flowers are borne on long pedicels that emerge from bracts hidden in the leaf rosette. In favorable conditions the plant may later grow a stem with an inflorescence.
The spikelets themselves are made out of 2–3 fertile florets are oblong and are long. Fertile spikelets are pediceled, the pedicels of which are ciliate, flexuous, hairy and are long. Florets are diminished at the apex. Its lemma have scabrous surface and emarginated apex with fertile lemma being coriaceous, keelless, oblong, and long.
Nepenthes izumiae has a racemose inflorescence up to 18 cm long, of which the peduncle constitutes up to 10 cm and the rachis up to 8 cm. Flowers are borne solitarily on pedicels (≤5 mm long) that lack bracts. Tepals are ovate and up to 6 mm long. Fruits reach 15 mm in length.
Partial peduncles are one-flowered. Pedicels are up to 6 mm long and may or may not be shortly bracteate. The species has an indumentum of simple or branched white hairs between 0.3 and 0.4 mm long. The diploid chromosome number of N. thorelii is 78 according to a 1969 paper by Katsuhiko Kondo.
The main panicle branches are indistinct and almost racemose. Spikelets are oblong, solitary, and have fertile spikelets that have filiformed pedicels. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous, with obtuse apexes. Their other features are different though; Lower glume is obovate and is long while their upper one is lanceolate and is long.
The individual flowers have green, yellow-green or white tepals and are borne on short stalks (pedicels) long. The filaments of the stamens are joined at the base to form a slightly cup-shaped structure. The inflorescence is topped by a head (coma) of green bracts, up to long. The plant has no purple coloration.
The eciliated margin have a ligule which is long. The panicle is linear, open, secund, and is long by wide. The main branches of the panicle carry 30–90 fertile spikelets which are oblong, solitary, long and are pediceled. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 2-4 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex.
The top of the stem branches into an inflorescence bearing tiny flowers on thin pedicels. The flower has a pouchlike calyx of sepals made up of ribs with membranous tissue between. The corolla emerges from the calyx, its narrow tubular throat yellow and white spotted and its face white and blue spotted or streaked.
The leaves are linear in shape, up to 2.5 centimeters long and one millimeter wide. Flowers are borne on pedicels one or two centimeters long. Each flower has a hairy tubular calyx of sepals with triangular lobes. The flower corolla is up to 1.3 centimeters long with a tubular throat and rounded, notched lobes.
Pedicels are one-flowered, up to 20 mm long, and typically possess bracts. Sepals are lanceolate to oblong in shape and up to 4 mm long. A study of 120 pollen samples taken from the type specimen (S 44163 (Lai & Jugah)) found the mean pollen diameter to be 32.3 μm (SE = 0.4; CV = 7.6%).
Hakea cinerea is a rounded, rigid, non-lignotuberous shrub typically growing to a height of with ascending branches. The inflorescence consists of 40-56 large showy creamy-white and yellow flowers turning orange with age in clusters in the leaf axils from August to November. The smooth pedicels are long. The style is long.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of the branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long. The individual buds are on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in January and February, and from June to August.
The plant is overall green to red in color. The leaves are oblong and thick, their edges slightly rolled under. They are oppositely arranged and some pairs clasp the stem where they meet. The inflorescence is an interrupted series of nodes bearing flowers; one to three flowers emerge on erect pedicels from the leaf axils.
Its petioles are 8 millimeters long, hairless and wrinkled on their undersides, with a channel on their upper surface. Its inflorescences have 3-4 flowers. Its peduncles are scaly and covered in fine hairs. Its pedicels are equal in length to its flowers, have bracts at their bases and are covered in brown hairs.
Brodiaea jolonensis is a perennial producing an inflorescence up to about 15 centimeters tall bearing blue-purple flowers on pedicels a few centimeters long. Each flower has six curving tepals between 1 and 2 centimeters in length. The center of the flower contains three fertile stamens ringed with three prominent sterile stamens called staminodes.
It has very short pedicels. It has 2.5 cm long stamens and 1.2 cm ovary. It has short style branches, 4 cm long and 8 mm wide, in similar shades as the standards. After the iris has flowered, it produces a reddish-brown ovoid to cylindric seed capsule, long and 2 cm wide between June and September.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical, ribbed operculum that is about the same length as the floral cup. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are mostly arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle in groups of seven. The peduncles are long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear- shaped, long and wide with a conical, rounded or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between April and October and the flowers are white.
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.
Leaves are round, widest near the middle, tip shape to obtuse, with toothed margins about halfway to the midvein, glandless. Leaf axis is finely short-hairy and sparsely glandular. Leaflets are hairy and are arranged in 5-7. Flowers: Inflorescences are generally one-flowered, pedicels are hairy and glandless, and measure to about 2-10mm in length.
Leaves are in length and are arranged alternately. In fall, the leaves turn red, orange, or yellow. It grows single pink flowers on 1-in pedicels, which result in purple-black fruit in summer. The fruit is a favorite of birds, but because of their size (small, pea sized) and color, are considered inconspicuous to humans.
The white flowers clustered in axillary peduncles are hermaphrodite, peduncles and pedicels are hairy, 4-5 hairy sepals and more or less imbricate, 4 –5 petals alternate to the sepals. 8-10 stamens, 2 styles. The fruit is an acuminate capsule, hairy and crowned by persistent styles, inside them there are dark brown seeds about 1 mm long.
Its fruit occur in clusters of up to 6 on woody pedicels that are 13 by 4 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The smooth, sparsely hairy, oval fruit are 3.8 by 2.5 centimeters. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by stipes that are 14-18 by 3.5-4 millimeters and covered in sparse, brown, fine hairs.
The inflorescence consists of 2-11 cream- white to golden yellow flowers in profusion, clustered along the branches. The inflorescence is on a simple stem densely covered with upright hairs, they may be white, brown or a combination of both. The pedicels are long with white, soft, silky hairs. The pistil long, the perianth is smooth and long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond- shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in spring and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The fruit are born on woody pedicels that are 7.5-12 by 1.7-3.2 millimeters. The oblong, smooth, dull grey-blue, fruit occur in groups of 2-4 and are 3.3-4.2 by 1.4-1.7 centimeters and covered in dense, fine hairs. The fruit have up to 8 oval, brown seeds that are 11 by 8 millimeters.
The individual buds are on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, long, wide with a conical operculum about twice as long as the floral cup. Flowering occurs between July and September and the flowers are white or creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortly barrel-shaped capsule long, wide with the valves near rim level.
They are up to long, including the stalk (petiole). The flowering period is from April or May to July or September, with fruits appearing until October. The flowers are borne singly on stalks (pedicels) long. The sepals are joined at the base to form a lobed cup-shaped structure, often nearly as long as the petals.
It has an oval (in cross-section), thick stem or peduncle,Kelly Norris that can grow up to between tall. Occasionally, it can reach up to tall. It has 1–2 short, 1 cm long, branches (or pedicels). The branching habit distinguishes it from Iris albicans (another white flowering tall bearded iris), which does not have branches.
Inflorescences are typically shorter than the leaves and decumbent. Flowers are in whorls or pairs at nodes and have a diameter of two to three centimeters.. They have three petals, each of which is white with a striking wine-colored stain, and three green sepals. The thick pedicels are as long as . Flowering occurs from June to September.
Nitraria retusa is a bush growing to a maximum height of about . The twigs are furry when young, with the bluish-grey fleshy leaves being alternate, wedge or sickle-shaped, with entire margins and measuring by . The small, sweetly-scented, whitish or greenish flowers have short pedicels and parts in fives. The fruit is a triangular drupe, in diameter.
The flowers of Berberidopsis have a spiral phyllotaxis. They don't have a clear way to distinguish the bracts, sepals and petals. The flowers appear separate from anything else and pendent on long pedicels in the axil of an ovate leaf. The contain a progressive loss of red pigmentation from the outside towards the inner perianth parts.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on branching peduncles in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets. The peduncles are long and the pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical or narrow egg- shaped, with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide. Flowering occurs between November and January and the flowers are white.
It is mostly hairless in texture. The purple-green or reddish leaves are oppositely arranged in pairs about the stem, the blades lance- shaped and smooth-edged. The inflorescence is an open array of several flowers on thin, straight pedicels. The flower is up to a centimeter wide with four lobes, the upper lobe being largest.
Branches are long and are erect with villous pedicels which are curved as well. Spikelets are in length but could exceed up to . When young, they are bright violet in colour, and carry 1-2 bisexual florets by maturity. The glumes are acute, glabrous, hyaline, membranous, and lanceolated at the same time and have 3-5 veines.
The long thin stems of C. europaea are yellowish or reddish. They have an inflorescence that is produced laterally along the stems, the flowers are arranged in compact glomerules with few to many flowers. The pedicels are up to long. The 1.5 mm calyx is cup-shaped with 4 or 5 sepals that are triangular-ovate in shape.
The main panicle branches are indistinct and almost racemose. Spikelets are solitary with fertile spikelets being pedicelled, pedicels of which are filiform and puberulous. They also have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex and which are also cuneated and are long. Glumes are reaching the apex of florets and are thinner than lemma.
The leaflets are rounded to acuminate at their apex and rounded to acute at their base, as well as pubescent on both sides with densely ciliate margins. The petiole is long, and there are two petiolules, approximately long. It has two to five inflorescences that are sometimes 10-flowered. The peduncle is long and the pedicels are long.
Towards the front, they are pointed or blunt short, they are narrowed down to a pointed base. The veining is slightly reticulated and after drying translucently dotted. The inflorescences are in axillary, corymb-like racemes, shorter than the leaves, and are up to 3 (rarely up to 6.5) cm long. The pedicels are 1 to 3 cm long.
Spikelets are solitary with fertile spikelets being pedicelled, pedicels of which are ciliated, curved, filiform, scabrous and hairy on top. The spikelets are elliptic, are long, and have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex. Floret callus is pubescent. The upper glume is lanceolated and is long and 0.9 length of the top fertile lemma.
They are lance-shaped or linear and reach 9 centimeters in length. The inflorescence is an erect or bending series of many clusters of flowers, some of them widely spaced. Most specimens are dioecious, with male and female flowers occurring on separate plants. The flowers are usually red and hang from pedicels, with several flowers to a cluster.
It has a slender stem or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. It is normally taller than the foliage. The stem has several branches, (or pedicels), normally 2–4, the lower branches are long and the upper branches are sessile. The stem has obtuse or rounded, inflated, spathes that are very heavily stained purple.
Each flower has six triply veined tepals which are long and slightly hooded or boat-shaped at their tips. The stamens consist of a pollen- producing anther about long with a filament of similar length or slightly longer. The central style is long. Seeds are produced in a capsule, long, on stalks (pedicels) which lengthen to up to .
Fallopia scandens, the climbing false buckwheat, is a species of Fallopia native to North America. It is a herbaceous perennial plant which grows from to tall. Although they are semi-erect during bloom, when they are producing fruit, they hang from their pedicels in a downward position. Both the fruit and flower are greenish-white in appearance.
The upper side of the leaves has 1-3 obscure longitudinal veins, the underside veins barely visible. The inflorescence consists of 6-14 creamy-white flowers in racemes, appearing upright and singly in leaf axils. The cream-white pedicels are smooth, rarely with soft short flattened hairs. The perianth a cream-white and the style is long.
The inner petals are sparsely hairy on their upper surface and densely hairy on their lower surface. Each inner petal has a horizontal, rod-shaped gland at the base of its outer surface. Male flowers have up to 24 stamens that are 0.6-0.7 millimeters long. Fruit are on sparsely hairy pedicels 7-12 millimeters in length.
The dense, racemes are 250 mm long and 200 mm wide. They consist of approximately 50 to 60 individual flowers. The ovoid-pointed bracts have a length of 15 mm and are 7 mm wide. The club-shaped, green flowers are tinged with lemon yellow around the center and are held on 20 mm long pedicels.
The plants produce one peduncle with one solitary flower or 2-5 flowered cymes. Fruits in heads fusiform in shape, with 7–20 cm long pedicels. Fruits called achenes measure 2.5-3.5 mm long and 2–2.5 mm wide with a rounded outline and flat in shape, densely woolly, not winged also with straight 1.5 mm long beaks.
The pedicels are of variable length, averaging around and may be either glabrous or pubescent. The calyx is usually infundibuliform (funnel-shaped) and around in length. Most of the calyx lobes of A. tanguticus appear broadly dentate. Closer examination of these lobes generally reveals one or two lobes to be broader and longer than the others.
Flowers are produced on two-flowered partial peduncles bearing filiform basal bracteoles up to 2 mm long. The unbranched portion of the partial peduncles is up to 5 mm long. The pedicels themselves are up to 6 mm long. Tepals are ovate-oblong and measure up to 5 mm in length by 3 mm in width.
The peduncle itself may be up to 8 cm long by 1 mm wide in female plants, and up to 3 cm long in males. The rachis is up to 8 cm long. The inflorescence bears one-flowered pedicels (≤6 mm long), which may be bracteoleate. The oblong-lanceolate tepals measure up to 4 mm in length.
The peduncle itself reaches up to 9 cm in length, with a basal diameter of 1 mm. Flowers, which number up to 40 per inflorescence, are borne on one- flowered, ebracteate pedicels up to 4 mm long. Tepals are ovate and up to 2.5 mm long by 1.2 mm wide. The androphore is around 1.5 mm long.
The peristome ranges in colour from yellow to red, whereas the lid is most commonly yellow throughout. Nepenthes lamii has a racemose inflorescence up to 14 cm long. The peduncle constitutes up to 7 cm of this length and has a basal width of around 2 mm. Flowers are borne solitarily on pedicels (≤10 mm long) that lack bracts.
Phytophthora pluvialis is homothallic; it forms oogonia in culture. Its oogonia are terminal, smooth and globose, being approximately 30 µm in diameter, and possess amphigynous antheridia. Its oospores are globose and aplerotic, being about 28 µm in diameter. Sporangia formed in water are ovoid and slightly irregular, semi-papillate, terminal or subterminal, and partially caducous with medium-sized pedicels.
Its smooth, wrinkled petioles are 1 centimeter long and have a channel on their upper side. Its solitary flowers are axillary and born on 0.5 centimeter-long pedicels. It has 3 sepals that are 5 millimeters long and come to a point at their tip. The sepals are sparsely hairy on the outside and smooth on the inside.
Leaves have biserrate margins, with caudate to acuminate apices and rounded bases, mounted on a 1cm pubescent petiole. P. himalaica inflorescences are umbellate with one or two flowers attached by 3.5 to 4.5cm pubescent pedicels. The glabrous hypanthia are about 1cm long, and the ovate and glandular-serrate 0.4cm sepals are often reflexed. Petals are a pale pink.
The pedicels are 8–20 mm long, and strongly winged towards the apex. The spreading, membranous bracts are 2–3 mm long, and rounded at the apex. The corolla of the mature bud is usually 18–28 mm long, and white, yellow or pink. The fruit is globose, 7–12 mm long, and pink or red.
Spikelets are ovate, solitary, long and have some fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are filiform, pubescent and hairy above. The spikelets have 2-3 fertile flores which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are not present. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, scarious, purple coloured, and have acute apexes.
Desmodium paniculatum grows to 3 feet tall in an erect and spreading habit with alternate, pinnately-trifoliolate leaves. The leaves are lanceolate to oblong and are usually 2 to 10 times as long as wide. The pedicels are around 1 cm. The flowers of the paniculate inflorescence are light pinkish to lavender and appear June through September.
It bears a hook-shaped basal crest and a filiform apical appendage up to 5 mm long. A number of large, scattered nectar glands are present on the underside of the lid, particularly along the margins and near the base. Nepenthes hurrelliana has a racemose inflorescence. Pedicels bear a basal bract measuring 3 to 4 mm in length.
The terminal, pyramidal to corymbiform inflorescences bear up to 25 scattered racemose flowers on their ascending branches. The inflorescence is monochasial after the fourth grade, with lateral dichasial or monochasial branches six nodes below, the lateral branches bearing up to fifteen flowers. The pedicels are long and bracts are long. The star-shaped flowers are wide.
The inflorescence is one to twelve flowered, branching dichasially or pseudo-dichotomously, with peduncles and pedicels long. The star-shaped flowers are wide. The elliptic to oblanceolate sepals are long and wide, with three to five veins and a midrib not prominent. The glands of the sepals are linear below, becoming punctiform in the upper third to upper half.
Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu. The inflorescence of may be up to 50 cm long and has two-flowered pedicels. Despite the size of the pitchers, this hybrid is not large in stature. is restricted to the summit ridge of Mount Trusmadi and has been recorded from elevations of 2500 to 2600 m above sea level.
Inflorescence are erect and sometimes from old wood, they contain 10–16 flowers with simple rachis that are long. The inflorescence is glabrous or appressed-pubescent with pedicels approximately long. The fruit are formed in an obliquely obovate shape, long and wide. The fruit are black-pusticulate with a toothed crest found on either side of suture.
Umbels compound, devoid of involucral bracts, rays 5-9, bracteoles 4-5, pedicels 4-9, flowers white or yellow, petals circa 1.5mm. Mericarps broadly ovate to oblong, flat, up to 5 x 3mm, tuberculate when young but becoming smooth at maturity, lateral ribs winged. Flowering August–September and fruiting September–October.Schultes, Richard Evans; Albert Hofmann (1979).
The flower buds are borne in groups of between seven and fifteen on a slightly flattened peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature buds are cream-coloured, wide with a conical operculum up to 2.2 times as long as the floral cup. The flowers are creamy white and the fruit are conical to hemispherical, long and wide.
In age, the upper surface of the puffball cracks and tears open. The resilient texture of the inner peridium enables the puffball to maintain its ball-like shape after it has detached from the ground. As the old puffballs get blown around, spores get shaken out of the tears. Short pedicels are a characteristic of B. pila spores.
The inflorescences consists of 2, 4 or 6 small white, pink or deep red flowers in leaf axils. The over-lapping bracts are long, pedicels long and densely covered in silky flattened, white-creamish hairs. The perianth is long with cream-yellow or white hairs near the base but those further along a rusty colour. The pistil is long.
Cotoneaster tenuipes goes into bloom from May to June. Its flowers are about 7 mm in diameter, and borne on corymbs of two to four flowers each. The slender pedicels (1–3 mm), rachis and hypanthium are villous and closely appressed, but hypanthium only abaxially. The bracts (2–4 mm long) are puberulous, linear or linear-lanceolate.
C. Michael Hogan. 2009 It is a perennial herb producing an erect stem 30 to 90 centimeters tall from a taproot. The leaves are mostly located around the base of the plant, each with an oval blade up to 15 centimeters long held on a petiole. The inflorescence is a panicle of flowers on individual pedicels.
They have fertile spikelets that are pediceled, the pedicels of which are long. Lemma is chartaceous, lanceolated, and is long and wide. Its lemma have an obtuse apex while the fertile lemma itself is chartaceous, keelless, oblong and is long. The species also carry 2–3 sterile florets which are barren, cuneate, clumped and are long.
Allium tenuiflorum is a Mediterranean species of wild onion found in Algeria, Morocco, Libya, Italy including Sardinia, and the Balkans.Altervista Flora Italiana, Schede di botanica, Allium tenuiflorumKew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Allium tenuiflorum produces a bulb up to 20 mm long. Scape is up to 40 cm tall. Umbel is lax with uneven pedicels.
The hermaphrodite, mostly large flowers are zygomorphic and threefold. On pedicels, they are 0.2–1 cm long, red or yellow-orange, except in some cultivars, 4.5–7.5 cm long, with the sepals being closely triangular, 1–1.7 cm long and the petals erect, 4–6.5 cm long. The tube is 1.5–2 cm long. The bracts are designed differently.
Rosa gallica is a deciduous shrub forming large patches. The slender, straight prickles are various in size and frequency in this species The leaves are pinnately- compound, with three to seven bluish-green leaflets. The flowers are clustered one to four together, on glandular pedicels. Each flower has five or more petals, sometimes producing double corollas.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a beaked operculum about the same length as the floral cup. Flowering occurs in most months and the flowers are creamy white.
The upper surfaces of the leaves are shiny and variably hairless or hairy. The undersides of the leaves have white hairs, particularly along the veins. Its leaves have 14-18 secondary veins emanating from either side of the midrib. Its axillary inflorescences have 2-4 flowers. The flowers are on 6-15 by 0.5-5 millimeter pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves ner rim level.
The leaves are paler on their undersides and have margins that are deflected down toward their undersides. The leaves have 12–14 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its green flowers are on 20–25 millimeters long, smooth pedicels. Its 3 oval sepals are 8 by 4.5 millimeters and come to a point at their tips.
The upper surface of leaves are bright colored while the undersides are paler. The leaves have 9-12 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its flowers are on 15 millimeter long pedicels. Its 3 sepals are 10 millimeters wide and 15 millimeters long and are conjoined at their margins for 5 millimeters at their base.
Centaurium davyi is an annual herb not exceeding about 25 centimeters in height, with oval leaves under 2 centimeters long. The inflorescence is a small, open array of flowers, some on very short pedicels. Each flower has generally five overlapping corolla lobes, each only a few millimeters in length, usually pink or partially pink in color.
Brodiaea minor is a small perennial producing an erect inflorescence up to 10 centimeters tall which bears light purple flowers on short pedicels. Each flower is urn-shaped with narrow, spreading tepals 1 to 2 centimeters long. In the center of the flower are three fertile stamens and three prominent, protruding sterile stamens known as staminodes.
Flowers of M. capillaris are perfect with each having about two or three stamens and anthers that are about 1-1.8 mm long. Spikelets are found on the long, hair-like pedicels that are clavate-thickened at the apex and are slightly scabrous.Britton, Nathaniel L. "Gramineae Grass Family." An Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States and Canada.
Its terminal panicles are long, with rigid and divergent branches. The rose-purple spikelets of the grass are long with two to five flowers and have rather short pedicels. The flowering scales are oblong and twice lobed at their apex, with glabrous lower scales. The joints of the rachilla are as half as long as the flowering scales.
Leaves with canaliculate petioles, blades lanceolate, narrowly to broadly ovate, sharp on the tip, decumbent or rarely abrupt on the base, 18 – 24 cm long x 2 – 9 cm wide, with terrestrial forms usually only 10 x 2 cm having 5 - 7 veins and distinct pellucid lines. Stem below cylindrical, between whorls triangular in cross-section, often alate, 35 – 120 cm long. Inflorescence racemose or paniculate having 4 - 15 whorls. Bracts on base connate, longer than the pedicels (up to 3.5 cm). Pedicels 0.5 – 2 cm long. Sepals 4 – 6 mm long, petals about twice as long, the diameter of the corolla 1.2 - 1.5 cm. Usually 12 stamens, achenes 2 x 1.5 mm with one, rarely 2 glands separated by a rib. Stylar beak bent back - reaching usually 1/4 of the body.CONABIO. 2009.
Nepenthes hamata has a racemose inflorescence. The male inflorescence is 8–15 cm long, of which the peduncle constitutes 2.4–10 cm and the rachis up to 8 cm. The peduncle has a basal diameter of around 3 mm. Flowers are borne solitarily on ebracteate pedicels measuring 10–15 mm in length by 0.1–0.3 mm in width. The pedicels number around 22 per inflorescence. Tepals are elliptic, reflexed, and 1.5–3 mm long by 1–1.5 mm wide. Androphores are 1–2.5 mm long and bear anther heads measuring 0.6–0.8 mm by 0.8–1.4 mm. One infructescence was measured at 8.5 cm long by roughly 5 cm wide (fruits included), with a peduncle measuring 6.5 cm in length and having a basal diameter of 2.25 mm.
Sepiola atlantica has short fins which do not overlap the mantle margin either anteriorly or posteriorly. The four arms have two series of suckers close to the body and 4 to 8 rows of minute suckers toward their tips. The remaining arms have two rows of suckers. A hectocotylus is present, the left dorsal arm is modified, the near end has a fleshy pad which is formed from enlarged and fused sucker pedicels with the copulatory apparatus being a large swollen horn, which has secondary lobes at its base; the dorsal row of suckers which are placed tword the tip from the copulatory apparatus has 3 or 4 slightly enlarged suckers with swollen pedicels, 3 or 4 vestigial suckers, then 3 to 5 greatly enlarged suckers roughly halfway along arm.
Stem erect, longer than the leaves, glabrous or rarely scabrous, 30 – 80 cm long. Inflorescence racemose having 3 - 9 whorls containing 6 - 12 flowers each, proliferous. Bracts as long as the pedicels, or hardly longer, to 1.5 cm long, having 9 - 11 ribs and membraneous margins. Pedicels usually 1 - (2.5) cm long, sepals 5 – 6 mm long having 16 - 20 undistinct ribs, petals white, 1.7 – 2 cm long, corolla 2.5 – 4 cm in diameter. Stamens 20 - 25, anthers as long as the filaments, pistils numerous. Aggregate fruit globular or ovate, 5 – 7 mm in diameter. Achenes 2 - 2.3 mm long x 0.9 – 1 mm wide having usually 4 lateral ribs and (1) - 3 glands placed in a row in the upper half of the body. Beak erect or bent, 0.5 mm long.
The flower buds are usually arranged in leaf axils on a thick, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oblong to oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between February and August and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical or cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves strongly protruding.
The floral bracts are 10-12 mm long and have sessile pedicels. The radially symmetric flowers are 35-65 mm long, with hairy perianths, are white to cream, with six roughly equal tepals. There are six stamens, all at one level, having filaments which are 7-8 mm long. The anthers have no appendages and are 5.5-5.7 mm long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from November to December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide, with the valves protruding above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from December to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule about long and wide with the valves protruding.
The peduncle, as well, is glabrescent. The pedicels are pale reddish-green, 8 mm (0.315-inch) to long, and sparsely pubescent and hairy. The bracts` of P. baronii are oblong and 2 to 3.5 times as long as wide, thus 5 mm (0.197-inch) to 11 mm (0.433-inch) in length by 2 mm (.078-inch) to 2.5 mm (0.098-inch).
The pedicels are almost one fourth of an inch long and produce 1.25 inch long two-lipped tubular flowers over dark green foliage. The flowers have tiny white hairs on the outside of the tube. The plant has elliptic basal leaves and lance-shaped to oblong stem leaves. The Latin word digitalis means "finger-like": the flowers resemble fingers of a glove.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, rarely nine or eleven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are more or less spherical, long and wide with a rounded operculum with a small point on the top. Flowering is spasmodic, depending on rainfall and the flowers are cream-coloured.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from April to October and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide.
In botany, an umbel is an inflorescence that consists of a number of short flower stalks (called pedicels) which spread from a common point, somewhat like umbrella ribs. The word was coined in botanical usage in the 1590s, from Latin umbella "parasol, sunshade".umbel etymology The arrangement can vary from being flat-topped to almost spherical. Umbels can be simple or compound.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels about long. Flowering occurs between January and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped, urn-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The individual flowers are subtended by bracteoles that fall off early in development. The pedicels supporting single flowers, and later the fruits, are erect initially but curve when in fruit. They measure about . The 3 concave, membranous sepals are inconspicuous, but persist after the fruit develops; the lateral pair are fused basally, measure only long by wide, and are elliptic and glabrous.
It is a bush reaching 1.5 meters in height. Its oblong, hairless leaves are 17.8 by 7 centimeters with wedge shaped bases, cusped tips and wavy margins. The leaves have 11 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its petioles are 1 centimeters long and covered in fine hairs. Its flowers are born on pedicels that are 2.5 centimeters long.
The stiff pedicels can reach between long. The flowering stem (and branches) grow higher than the leaves. The stems have 3–5 spathes (leaves of the flower bud), which are lanceolate, and long. The stems (and the many branches) hold between 2 and 4 flowers, in spring and early summer, between March to April (in Japan) or April and May.
Stems vary between five and fifty centimeters in length, with thread-like to linear leaves generally alternate: the leaves are typically not planar and not clasping. Cymes are characteristically open and pedicels are somewhat thread-like and ascending. The flower has five sepals, whose margins may be minutely gland-toothed. Five petals are widely spreading between one and twelve millimeters in dimension.
The brow-antlered deer is a medium-sized deer, with uniquely distinctive antlers, measuring 100–110 cm. in length with extremely long brow tine, which form the main beam. The two tines form a continuous curve at right angles to the closely set pedicels. This signifies its name, brow-antlered deer, the forward protruding beam appears to come out from the eyebrow.
Adult leaves, when formed, are arranged alternately, dull green, lance-shaped, up to long and wide. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to flattened operculum. Flowering occurs from November to January and the flowers are white.
In male plants, the peduncle is about 6 cm long and 2 mm wide, while in female plants it is 12 cm long and 2.5 mm thick. The rachis is up to 15 cm long. Pedicels are up to 15 mm long and do not have a bracteole. They are almost always one-flowered, although lower ones may be two-flowered.
The colors of flowers are pink maroon or pale yellow, often with red-tinged margins, or striped red, 5~8 mm long, 1~5 flowered assemble to an umbellate; pedicels sparsely ciliolate, pubescent bracts. Sepals 1.5~3.0 ?0.5~1.0 mm, lanceolate-subulate,acute, ciliate, ovate- subulate; petals 4.0~6.5 ?0.7~1.5 mm, linear-oblong,obtuse to subacute lanceolate; night-fragrant, gynodioecious.
There are up to three, sometimes up to nine flowers on a peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. The four sepals are narrow triangular, long, wide, about the same length as, but narrower than the petals. The petals are pink to white, long, wide but enlarge as the fruit develops. The eight stamens alternate in length, size and shape.
They have fertile spikelets that are pediceled, the pedicels of which are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy. Lemma is chartaceous, lanceolated, and is long and wide. Its lemma have either erose or obtuse apex while the fertile lemma itself is chartaceous, keelless, oblong and is long. The species also carry 2–3 sterile florets which are barren, cuneate, clumped and are long.
Cheiranthera alternifolia is a small understory, scrambling, perennial shrub to with smooth stems. The leaves are linear long, wide, arranged alternately, usually evenly spaced along stems and margins rolled under. The flowers may be single or in clusters of 2-11, peduncles long, pedicels long, stems and 5 yellow stamens. The petals may be pale to deep bluish-purple, lanceolate, long and wide.
Its peduncle is long while the main branches are appressed and are . It have solitary spikelets which carry one fertile floret and have a pubescent callus. The spikelets themselves are elliptic, are long and carry filiformed pedicels which are long and scabrous as well. The species carry an ovate fertile lemma which is long and is keelless with dentate apex.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spherical, long and wide. Flowering occurs from August to December and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding but fragile.
It bracteole is linear, long, and have long pedicels which are slender as well. It receptacle is broadly funneled and is long. Petals are green in colour, are either obovate or oblong, and are long while its claw is . The species have three fertile stamens which are long and glabrous while the staminodes are two in number with silky hairs.
The tentacles at the epipodium (the lateral grooves between foot and mantle) are well developed. The species in Medusafissurella have numerous subequal tentacles at the propodium, while the species in Dendrofissurella have an outgrowth with main trunk and side branches at the propodium. The eyes are situated on rudimentary pedicels at their outer bases. The sides are ornamented with short cirri.
This species produces two erect, strap-shaped leaves annually, 350–400 x 40–45 mm, smooth and soft-textured. The flowerstalk is 250–350 mm long, with a brush- like flowerhead 45 mm in diameter; the acutely tipped spathe segments or valves are about as long as the flowers. Flowers 15–20, pure white; pedicels 7–10 mm long (Snijman, 1984).
The lance-shaped leaves are just a few millimeters long, green to red in color, and densely hairy. The inflorescence bears flowers on short, threadlike pedicels about a centimeter long. The tiny flower has five pointed lobes each 1 or 2 millimeters long, the two lowest fused to form a spur. The flower is white with dark red stripes in the throat.
It has a slender grey-green, stem or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. The stem has elliptic or ovate, (scarious) membranous, spathes (leaves of the flower bud). They are green with a purple, but can be stramineous (straw-like) when dry. It has slender branches (or pedicels), that appear from the midpoint upwards to the terminal end.
Nepenthes glabrata has a racemose inflorescence measuring up to 20 cm in length, of which the peduncle makes up 7 cm. It bears around 55 one-flowered partial peduncles lacking bracts. The reddish-green flowers have oblong tepals up to 3 mm long and are borne on pedicels measuring up to 8 mm. Most parts of the plant are glabrous.
Eucalyptus infracorticata is a mallee. It has rough fibrous or flaky, pale grey bark on the base of the trunk. Adult leaves are dull green, broadly lance-shaped to elliptic, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
Flowers are borne singly or in pairs, the two-flowered partial peduncles being located towards the base of the inflorescence. The partial peduncles are ebracteate and number 30–40. They are approximately 4 mm long, being formed from a pair of basally-united pedicels around 10 mm long. Tepals are elliptic and around 4 mm long by 2 mm wide.
The former produces two-flowered pedicels, whereas those of N. sibuyanensis are one- flowered. The pitcher mouth of N. insignis is oblique, compared to almost horizontal in the latter. In addition, the peristome of N. sibuyanensis forms a short neck, while N. insignis lacks a neck completely. Furthermore, N. insignis has shorter peristome teeth than N. sibuyanensis (1 mm versus 5 mm).
It blooms between August and October producing pink-white flowers. The flowers have a diameter of around and are on pedicels about the same length as the leaves. The plant superficially resembles Scholtzia uberiflora but is much more widespread. The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1864 as part of the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
The main umbel is further divided into several secondary umbels known as umbellets or umbellules. Each umbellet has 15 to 20 rays (pedicels) that are each topped with a single, small, five-petaled white flower. The fruits are small and have long curved styles. The flowers are visited by many types of insects, thus being characterised by a generalised pollination system.
The pedicels have up to 4 bracts that are 2-4 millimeters long at their base. Its triangular to oval sepals are 7 by 4 millimeters with pointed tips. The sepals are fused over a short portion of their base. The oval to lance-shaped outer petals are 10–14 by 4–6 millimeters with pointed to tapering tips and rounded bases.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a beaked operculum long. Flowering occurs from July to October and the flowers are creamy white to yellow. The fruit is a woody shortened spherical to cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
The pedicels emerge from warty tubercles on the main trunk. Its leathery to membranous, triangular to oval sepals are 1.9-3.1 by 1.5-2.6 centimeters with fused bases and short blunt- pointed tips. The sepals are hairless except their tips which have minute red hairs. The outside of the sepals are shiny while the insides are dull and covered in minute dots.
While the stalks of each single flower in the flower clusters called pedicels, are thin and often sessile. The whorl of bracts beneath the inflorescences is called involucre. It consists of phyllaries, modified bracts, which are linear-lanceolate or linear and 1–2 cm long. It also consists of smaller young phyllaries, which are glabrous and 5–15 mm long.
The flowering stem (scape) is shaded dark maroon or magenta on the lower half, with similarly coloured marks on the upper half. Individual flowers are slightly sweetly scented, with greenish white tepals up to long. The upper flowers have up to long pedicels, the lower ones are sessile. The inflorescence is topped by a head or "coma" of 9–16 bracts long.
There is no anal fin. The caudal fin is broad, with a well-developed lower lobe and a deep ventral notch near the tip of the upper lobe. The small dermal denticles have sharp wedge-shaped crowns bearing median ridges, and are placed on stalks (pedicels). This species is dark brown, with prominent blackish, then light bands at the fin margins.
The glossy, grey hairless upper surfaces of the leaves have a slightly blistered or puckered appearance while the lower surfaces are hairless or covered in sparse brown hairs. The leaves have 12-17 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs at angles of 55°-85°. Its solitary (sometimes 2), fragrant flowers are born pedicels that are 1-1.2 centimeters long.
The inflorescence of the herb is forty-flowered and arises from one to three nodes, with the ascending or horizontal flowering branches arising from up to six nodes. The lax inflorescence is predominantly cylindrical to subcorymbiform. The pedicels are long and the lanceolate, entire bracts and bracteoles are long. The star- shaped flowers are wide and are ellipsoid and obtuse while in bud.
Pedicels are around 3–4 mm long and bear a single flower. Sepals are ovate and around 2 mm long in male inflorescences and 5 mm long in female inflorescences. A very dense indumentum of long woolly grey-brown hairs is present on immature tendrils and the outer surface of pitchers. The hairs on the margins of the leaves are caducous.
Flowers are borne solitarily on pedicels that reach 6 mm in males and 11 mm in females. A basal bract is often present (≤4 mm long). The nectariferous tepals are ovate and measure up to 3 mm in length by 1 mm in width. The androphore is around 3 mm long and terminates in an anther head measuring 1–1.5 mm in diameter.
Kelly Norris It has 2–3 (rarely 4,) slender (slightly weak,) branches (or pedicels), near top of the plant. The stem and branches have 2 (scarious) membranous spathes, (leaves of the flower bud). They are normally up to long, navicular (boat shaped), broad and rounded. The outer bracts are brown and paper-like,Stuart Max Walters (Editor) or completely scarious.
The plant reaches an overall height of around . The individual flowers have greenish tepals and stamens with purple filaments, and are borne on short stalks (pedicels) long. The inflorescence is topped by a head (coma) of green bracts, up to long. The homoisoflavanone 5,6-dimethoxy-7-hydroxy-3-(4′-hydroxybenzyl)-4-chromanone can be found in the bulbs of E. montana.
Philotheca nodiflora is a weak shrub that grows to a height of . The leaves are more or less cylindrical, long, concave on the upper surface and rounded below. The flowers are borne compact heads in diameter on hairy pedicels long. The flowers have five linear to triangular sepals about long and five blue to pink, elliptic to egg-shaped petals long.
The flowers appear from August to September. They are borne in racemes, on pedicels of , borne in the leaf axils of the upper leaves. They are surrounded by a calyx of five sepals, fused into a tube at the base and separated into distinct lobes above. The pointed, triangular lobes of the calyx are almost as long as its tube.
The plant stems are long and are erect. Leaves grow in 2-4 pairs and are long and membranous with by long obovate and spatulate leaflets. The plant flowers in spring when the Inflorescence carries 4-12 flowers that have a long peduncle which have ascending bracteoles and are often deciduous. Pedicels are long with long calyx that is glabrous.
Pedicels long, perianth is long and smooth, the style without hairs. The sweetly scented creamy white or yellow flowers, occasionally with a pink tinge, appear in the leaf axils from August to October. The smooth rounded fruit are up to long by wide and taper to a prominent beak. Hakea ambigua may be used for erosion control, hedging and wildlife habitat.
The inflorescence consists of 6-10 small sweetly scented cream-brown flowers on an obscure stem. The pedicels are long thickly covered in matted silky rusty coloured hairs extending onto the lower part of the flower. The perianth is long and the style long. Flowers appear in clusters in the leaf axils or on old wood from August to November.
Aegiceras corniculatum grows as a shrub or small tree up to high, though often considerably less. Its leaves are alternate, obovate, long and wide, entire, leathery and minutely dotted. Its fragrant, small, white flowers are produced as umbellate clusters of 10–30, with a peduncle up to 10 mm long and with pedicels long. The calyx is long and corolla long.
The inflorescences may be terminal or axillary, and are in the form of spikes or clusters, with at most very short peduncules (flowering stems). Individual flowers have pedicels (stalks). The flowers may be bisexual or unisexual, with sometimes a mixture of staminate, pistillate and bisexual flowers on the same plant. There are five white to greenish white tepals, joined at the base.
The spores of Bovista pila are spherical, smooth (when viewed with a light microscope), and measure 3.5–4.5 μm. They have thick walls and very short pedicels. Basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, measuring 8–10.5 by 14–18 μm. They are usually four- spored (rarely, some are three-spored), with unequal length sterigmata between 4 and 7.4 μm.
Different interpretations are also sometimes made regarding placement of various eastern Asian populations of this group, by some considered to represent additional varieties or subspecies, if not different species altogether. The most distinctive physical difference among these plants is usual presence of gland-tipped hairs on first-year canes, petioles, pedicels, and calyces of R. strigosus, lacking in R. idaeus.
The pedicels are subtended by a small bract. Its oblong sepals are 10 by 3.5-4 millimeters, covered in fine hairs on both sides, and come to a shallow point at their tips. Its flowers have 6 white petals arranged in two rows of three. The outer, oblong petals are 15 by 3-4 millimeters, and covered in woolly hairs on both sides.
Calandrinia ciliata is an annual herb which varies greatly in size from a small patch a few centimeters wide to an erect form approaching tall. The linear or lance-shaped leaves are long and slightly succulent in texture. The inflorescence is a raceme bearing flowers on short pedicels. The flower has usually five deep pink to red petals, each up to in length.
Hakea ochroptera is a tall shrub or tree to high with descending branches and does not form a lignotuber. Young stems, leaves and pedicels are hairy and rusty coloured. The leaves are needle-shaped, long and about wide ending with a point long. Creamy-white flowers appear in umbels of up to six flowers in the leaf axils from September to October.
Pseudogaltonia grows from a large bulb with a fibrous tunic. The flowers are borne on a long stem (scape) in a pyramid-shaped raceme. Individual flowers are borne on long stalks (pedicels) and droop downwards. The tepals are fused at the base, forming a tube about two-thirds or three- quarters of the length of the flower, swollen slightly at its base.
Each leaf is entire. Leaves are medium green and smooth, with a distinct odor that many characterize as unpleasant. Flowers: The flowers have 5 regular parts with upright stamens and are up to wide. They have white petal-like sepals without true petals, on white pedicels and peduncles in an upright or drooping raceme, which darken as the plant fruits.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a horn-shaped to conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves strongly protruding.
The species is endemic to Australia. M. eucalyptoides is pendulous in habit, unlike other Muellerina species, but has the long epicortical runners of all Muellerina species. The leaves are opposite with indistinct venation. Mainly flowering in summer, the inflorescence is terminal, racemose with usually 3–4 opposite pairs of triads of flowers, with the central flower sessile, and the lateral flowers having pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide, with five prominent, thin ribs along the sides and a beaked operculum long. The buds are pinkish near flowering time. Flowering occurs between April and July and the flowers are creamy yellow.
They are 2–3.5 cm wide. They have short, 6mm long pedicels (flower stalk). The stems hold between 1 and 2 flowers,Elizabeth Lawrence, Nancy Sanders Goodwin and Allen Lacy in spring, between April and May. The flowers have a very short flowering period, that only last one day, it opens in the morning and then closes in the afternoon.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are cylindrical, long and wide with a hemispherical operculum. Flowering occurs in July and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical, barrel-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from December to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup- shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide.
The plant has a dense, spreading to pendulous crown. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are creamy white.
Western dock is considered a perennial plant as a result of its annual flowering and lifetime. Adult plants can reach upwards of 180 cm (6ft). Its leaves are partially persistent at maturity and hold a triangular, blade-like appearance with a truncate base. The stems are typically erect with pedicels no more than 3 times as long as the inner tepals.
They grow on pedicels 1 to 3 cm long, and can range from 5 to 10 cm in length. Each pod has two compartments separated by an inner central wall within which a row of seeds develop. The seeds are round and have a diameter of 1.5 to 3mm. They have a reticulate surface texture, and are black and hard at maturity.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on very short pedicels. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long, wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in autumn and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical or cup-shaped capsule long, wide with the valves near rim level or slightly beyond.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven on a thin, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are a blunt, elongated oval shape, long and wide and finely ribbed with a rounded operculum about the same length as the floral cup. Flowering occurs between June and November and the flowers are creamy white.
Eucalyptus exilipes was first formally described in 1987 by Ian Brooker and Anthony Bean from a specimen they collected in the White Mountains in 1985. The description was published in the journal Brunonia. The specific epithet (exilipes) is derived from Latin words exilis meaning "slender", "thin" or "small" and 'pes' meaning "stem", and refers to the slender pedicels of this species.
Cassiope tetragona (common names include Arctic bell-heather, white Arctic mountain heather and Arctic white heather) is a plant native to the high Arctic and northern Norway, where it is found widely. Growing to 10–20 cm in height, it is a strongly branched dwarf shrub. The leaves are grooved, evergreen, and scale-like in four rows. Pedicels are long and arched.
They begin to grow in late November and fade after summer, when the plant becomes dormant. It has a slender stem or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall. The stem has 3 acute, carinate (ridged or keeled), lanceolate, (scarious) membranous, spathes (leaves of the flower bud). It also has long pedicels and a perianth tube which is longer than the ovary.
Scorzonera libanotica grows to a height of and is covered with fluffy detersile coating. Its erect flower stems are leafy and branched in the upper part into 3-5 floral heads measuring . The flower heads are supported by a scaly receptacles atop long pedicels. It has glabrous cylindrical involucral bracts that are truncated at the base and slightly constricted at the top.
The upper surface of the leaves are somewhat shiny and hairless or sparsely hairy, while the underside is hairless and pale. Its leaves have 10-18 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs. Its slightly hairy to hairy petioles are 5-14 by 1.5-3.3 millimeters. Its flowering pedicels are 8-21 by 1-1.7 millimeters with dense yellow hairs.
Its flowers have 11-36 carpels. Its carpels have ovaries that are 1-3 by 0.3-0.8 millimeter and densely covered in gold to red-brown hairs arranged in rows, except at their apex. Its stigma are funnel-shaped and sparsely to densely hairy. Its fruit are on 7-19 by 1.7-2.7 millimeter pedicels that are hairless or sparsely hairy.
Its leaves are triangular-lanceolate, truncate to cordate at the base, with an acute to acuminate tip. Its petioles are around 3-15 mm. It produces small yellow flowers from late spring through summer. Tragia urticifolia can be distinguished from the similar looking Tragia betonicifolia by its longer pedicels on staminate flowers (1.5-2 mm), which are more evenly distributed in the raceme.
They are also dull, glaucous to grey-green and weather to glossy with age. The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on a flattened peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature flower buds are oval, long, wide and glaucous with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between January and March and the flowers are white.
The plant grows tall from an oval bulb. Leaves are glabrous, measuring around wide; they are lanceolate and acute, and grow shorter or equal in length to the erect flower stem. The white flowers are born in April and May on simple racemes in an inflorescence of 10 to 20 flowers. Highly acuminate bracts attach to short pedicels measuring long.
Brodiaea pallida is a perennial producing an inflorescence up to about 20 centimeters tall bearing pale purple flowers on short pedicels. Each flower has six strongly curving tepals about a centimeter long. In the center of the flower are three erect white, notch- tipped sterile stamens called staminodes, each about as long as the tepals. Within these are the fertile stamens.
Abactinal spines are very numerous, small, more or less cylindrical. Color of abactinal surface may be purplish or grayish-black, with deep yellow or whitish spines. The actinal surface is whitish, yellowish, or brownish, with pedicels much darker than spines.Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College These sea stars can regenerate lost or damaged parts of their body.
The inflorescence is a series of zigzagging branches bearing occasional flowers on thin, erect pedicels. There is a single small bract at the base of each pedicel. The flower at the curved tip of the pedicel is just a few millimeters wide. There are five pointed sepals and five white corolla lobes, generally three in the upper lip and two in the lower.
Most of the leaves are located low on the stem, each measuring up to 1.5 centimeters long, with smaller, narrower leaves occurring above. The leaves are hairless except for some rough hairs along the margins, and the blades have shiny surfaces. The inflorescence bears a few flowers on short pedicels. The flower has five pointed sepals each a few millimeters long.
The stem is lined with pairs of oval leaves each up to about 2 centimeters long. The inflorescence is an umbel-shaped array of several flowers each on an arching or erect pedicels. The flower has five pointed green sepals each no more than 3 millimeters long. There are occasionally tiny white petals within the calyx of sepals, but these are generally absent.
Boronia defoliata is a straggly shrub with thin stems and that grows to a height of about . Its branches and leaves are glabrous. The leaves are simple, often fall off early and thread-like or more or less thin cylindrical, about long. The flowers are borne in branching groups on the ends of the branches and in leaf axils on thin pedicels long.
The leaves have two lateral veins that curve upwards from the lower midrib, and dense tertiary reticulation that is rather obscure. The dense, cylindrical to subcorymbose inflorescences have one to seven flowers, rarely up to twenty-one. The pedicels are long. The linear-lanceolate to linear-elliptic bracts and bracteoles have black glandular cilia, with the basal cilia more lengthy.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from September to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a flattened to rounded operculum with a small point in the centre. The operculum is much wider than the floral cup. Flowering has been observed in June and the flowers are creamy white.
After the plant has flowered and set seed, the leaves die in the late summer. It has a strong, erect, round stem, that can reach up to between long. The stem has 1 or 2 lateral, upright branches,Christopher Brickell (editor) or pedicels, which are about 2 cm long. The stem also has keeled, lanceolate, green, spathes (leaves of the flower bud) (or bracts).
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, ribbed, and wide with a hemispherical operculum about the same length as the floral cup. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical or hemispherical, ribbed or wrinkled capsule and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
The leaf blade is long and wide with a narrowly flattened or channelled petiole long. It blooms between December and May, producing white to pink flowers. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle that is circular or angled in cross-section. Each branch of the peduncle has buds in groups of three or seven on pedicels long.
The pedicels, small stalk or stalk-like parts bearing a single flower in an inflorescence, are pale reddish-green at long. They are slightly elongated in fruit at . The bracts are pale green, persistent-- lasting until the maturity of the flower--and narrowly oblong, having a somewhat elongated spherical form with approximately parallel sides. They measure by and pubescent, hairy outside and sparsely pubescent inside.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in October and November and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a thin-walled capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flowers are arranged on the ends of branches on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spherical, long and wide with a rounded operculum. The fruit is a shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit. The seeds are brown, long with a wing on the end.
The tree is usually leafless by the middle of the dry season. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are smooth and glossy, pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to flattened operculum. Flowering occurs from June to November and the flowers are creamy white.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are more or less spherical to oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between January and April or June and September and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide.
These flowers bear capsular fruits, with pedicels that are reflexed below the fruit but erect in the flower. The fruits are 6–7 mm across. Mature fruits are more spherical in shape and have a light brown colour and can contain up to 4 seeds. Seeds are more a wedge-shaped, about 3–4 mm long; this can range from dark brown to black.
The carpels have 6-12 ovules. Its fruit occur in clusters of 4-6 on pedicels that are 10 by 2 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The smooth, sparsely hairy, oblong fruit are 14-30 by 7.5 millimeters. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by stipes that are 3-3.5 by 2 millimeters and covered in sparse, grey-brown, fine hairs.
Flowers horizontal and nodding. Corolla truly campanulate, delicate in texture, tinged of a sulphur hue and always spotless, nearly two inches long. broader across the lobes, which are finely veined. The pedicels of the capsules radiate horizontally from the apices of the ramuli, and the capsules themselves curve upwards with a semicircular arc; they are about an inch long, always loosely covered with stipitate glands.
The inflorescence is a head of several elongated flowers borne on long, glandular pedicels all attached at the small central receptacle. Each trumpet-shaped purple or magenta flower may be up to 2.5 centimeters in length and over a centimeter wide at the face of the corolla, with 4 or 5 lobes. The fruit has wide, thin, net-veined or ribbed wings and hairy surfaces.
Delphinium gypsophilum is a species of larkspur known by the common name Pinoche Creek larkspur. It is endemic to California, where it grows throughout the central part of the state in woodland and grassland. This wildflower generally reaches between one half and one meter in height. Its pale whitish- green stem is topped with cylindrical inflorescences of up to 30 flowers on short pedicels.
Toward the top of the stem are flowers on long pedicels, with usually not more than 20 flowers per plant. The flowers generally have deep dark blue sepals which are flat and extended to the sides, and petals which are mainly the same color except for the top two, which may be lighter blue to white. The spur is between one and two centimeters long.
Salvia urticifolia (nettleleaf sage, nettle-leaved sage, wild sage) is a herbaceous perennial native to the southeastern United States. S. urticifolia is an erect plant that reaches tall. Flowers, with a corolla that is approximately long, are blue or purple (occasionally white), growing in panicles on short pedicels. The lower lip has three lobes, with a pair of white marks coming from the throat.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature flower buds are flattened globe- shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum long that has a long, pointed and beaked tip. Flowering mainly occurs between August and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody top-shaped capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from July to August or from October to January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule with an unusually small opening.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between November and March and the flowers are cream-coloured or white. The fruit is a woody shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven, sometimes on an unbranched peduncle in leaf axils, or on a branching peduncle on the ends of the branchlets. The Peduncle is long with the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between May and September and the flowers are creamy white.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from September to January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cylindrical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of between seven and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between November and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical to cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, long and wide with a horn- shaped operculum about three times as long as the floral cup. Flowering occurs from February to April and the flowers are lemon-coloured. The fruit is a woody cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to narrow pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. The flowering time and flower colour have not been recorded. The fruit is a woody elongated barrel-shaped capsule with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Homoranthus cernuus is an upright, smooth, slender shrub to high. The leaves are arranged in crowded, opposite pairs, either terete or laterally compressed and tapering at the apex and narrowing toward the short leaf stalk. The pendant flowers are cream coloured with a pink base on an arching pedicel long and mostly in pairs. Flowers have a single bract about long between the two pedicels.
The fruits of Paleopanax oregonensis are bilaterally symmetrical with a wide elliptical shape in face view and bicarpellate structure. The fruits have an overall length ranging between and a width between . Each carpel is D-shaped in face view, with two to three arched longitudinal grooves which run across the carpel face and join at the ventral axis. The preserved pedicels are no more than long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from December to February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped or urn-shaped capsule long and wide.
The inflorescence is a terminal raceme of flowers borne on hairy, glandular pedicels. Each flower has dark, hairy sepals and a flat corolla about a centimeter wide or slightly wider. The flower corolla has four deep blue-purple lobes with whitish bases, the top lobe being largest since it is actually a fusion of two lobes. At the center are two long, protruding stamens.
Botanical illustration of Phacelia covillei (1913) Phacelia covillei has slender weak stems which are 15 through 30 centimeters (6–12 inches) long, pubescent, and branched from their bases. Its leaves have 3 through 7 deeply divided lobes. It produces small, light blue- violet flowers in early spring. The flowers are on pedicels 13–17 millimeters (0.52–0.68 inches) long, in racemes of 1–6 flowers.
The axis and short curved pedicels are both pubescent. The bracts are oblong and caducous. ;Flowers & fruits:The flowers are perfect, 4–5 mm long, urn shaped, with a corolla that is white to pink to deep red in colour (often lighter at the base and darkening towards the lobes). The sepals are oblong and ciliolate, frequently light green but turning to red towards the tips.
When in bloom, pedicels are about 4cm long, and they grow to about 9.5 cmby the time of fruiting. Each flower has five (rarely six or seven) prominent yellow sepals which turn more or less green when dried. The sepals are broadly obovate or obovate, and rarely broadly elliptic, 1.7 to 2.5 (rarely 3)cm by 1.2 to 2.5 (rarely 2.8)cm, with rounded or truncate apices.
Pairs of leaves spiral and become smaller and more crowded lower on the stem. The terminal, cylindric inflorescence is five to sixty flowered, with regular monochasial or dichasial branching, flowering branches rising from ten nodes below. The pedicels are long, the upper leaves are foliar, and the bracts are subulate to foliar. The star-shaped flowers are wide and the central flower has a shorter pedicel.
The pedicels are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy above. The spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, lanceolate and clumped. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless and membranous, but every other feature is different; Lower glume is flabellate and is long with erosed apex. Upper glume is lanceolate and is long with an obtuse apex.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on paired peduncles long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from October to December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding strongly.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical or beaked operculum. The flowers are white or creamy white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The pinnules are long, elliptic, oblong or ovate with acute tips and entire margins. The inflorescence is an axillary raceme, often branched, covered with short hairs and up to long. The jointed pedicels are up to long. The sepals are shorter than the petals which are around long; the petals are yellow, sometimes with a spot of orange near the base of the keel.
It is a bush. Its rigid, oblong, yellow-green leaves are 12-20 by 3-5 centimeters, hairless and have pointed tips. Its solitary flowers are on thick, rigid pedicels that are 0.5-1 centimeter long with a 3-5 millimeter oval bract near their base. Its oval to triangular sepals are 4-5 millimeters long, recurved and come to a point at their tip.
The androphore is up to 3 mm long. Tepals are elliptic and up to 5 mm long by 3 mm wide. They are predominantly green with red margins. The female inflorescence is similar in structure to the male one, but differs in having a shorter rachis (10–15 cm long) and longer pedicels of 4–10 mm, which either have greatly reduced bracts or lack them altogether.
Cuscuta australis, commonly known as Australian dodder, is a herb in the family Convolvulaceae. The annual parasitic twining herb or climber that is associated with many hosts. It blooms between November and March producing 5-merous white-cream-yellow flowers in compact clusters on pedicels which are less than long. The lobes are rounded-triangular and shorter than or equal in length to the corolla tube.
Whereas the latter has a shorter inflorescence with flowers borne singly on pedicels, N. tobaica has two- flowered partial peduncles. In addition, N. tobaica lacks the fasciculate spur of N. mikei and generally has wider laminae. Salmon and Maulder also compared N. mikei to N. adnata and N. tentaculata. Stewart McPherson noted that the species may also superficially resemble N. eustachya in the shape of its pitchers.
Campanula rotundifolia is a perennial, slender, prostrate to erect herb, spreading by seed and rhizomes. The basal leaves are long-stalked, rounded to heart-shaped, usually slightly toothed, with prominent hydathodes, and often wither early. Leaves on the flowering stems are long and narrow and the upper ones are unstemmed. The inflorescence is a panicle or raceme, with 1 to many flowers borne on very slender pedicels.
The pedicels are long and are hairy. The spikelets have 2 fertile flores which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, clumped and orbicular. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, lanceolate, membranous, and purple in colour. They are also have acute apexes but are different in size; Lower glume is long while the upper one is long and is 5-veined.
Species of Oziroe grow from bulbs, which have contractile roots as well as normal ones. Each bulb produces only a few leaves, which are thick and grooved. The flowering stem (scape) appears at the same time as the leaves. It has bract along its length, with generally one or two flowers on straight stalks (pedicels) appearing from the angle between each bract and the scape.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of thirteen to nineteen or more on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs in summer and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, spherical glaucous capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed below the rim.
The petiolule is between . Inflorescences are between in size, simple, with 5–20 flowers, ebracteate or nearly all the nodes bracteate; peduncle between , glabrous and minutely glandular to densely velvety pubescent with intermixed longer patent trichomes like those of the stems. The pedicels are between , articulated at the middle or in the distal half. Buds are conical, straight, approximately half way exerted from the calyx.
The flowers buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. The mature buds are smooth, long and wide. The flowering period is not known but the flowers are white. The fruit is a smooth, cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves level with the rim or enclosed.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a hemispherical to conical operculum that is shorter than the floral cup. Flowering occurs between September and December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup- shaped to shortly cylindrical capsule long and wide.
Its leaves are triangular- lanceolate, truncate to cordate at the base, with an acute tip. Its petioles are around 10-40 mm. It produces small yellow flowers from late spring through summer. Tragia betonicifolia can be distinguished from the similar looking Tragia urticifolia by its shorter pedicels on staminate flowers (with the persistent base only reaching 0.6 mm), and its more distally clustered flowers in the raceme.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum long. Flowering occurs in autumn and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Oval bracts at the base of pedicels are 1-1.5 by 1 millimeters while those at top are 1-1.5 by 1-1.5 millimeters. Its oval to triangular sepals are 1.5-2.5 by 2.5-3 millimeters. The outer surfaces of the sepals have sparse, fine, brown hairs; the inner surfaces are hairless or nearly so. Its flowers have 6 petals in two rows of three.
It is a succulent, prostrate herb, with pink-white flowers. It flowers from August to November and grows on sandy soils in swampy depressions, flats, and sand dunes. The stems of the flowers (pedicels) are 0.5–2 mm long and spreading to reflexed in fruit. The bracts are leafy and alternate, the sepals are persistent and the 4 or 5 petals are white to pale-pink.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and about wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from September to November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or slightly below it.
The leaves must be handled carefully as they can cause blisters if they contact the skin. It blooms between August and December producing white flowers. The flowers are supported on pedicels in cymes at the terminus of branches and in the leaf axils. The flowers have a Calyx - hemispherical calyx that is long that has five triangle shaped lobed and is a silver colour.
Emmenanthe is monotypic genus of annual plants with fleshy foliage which exudes a sticky juice with a light medicinal odor. The plant comes up from a weedy-looking basal rosette of sharply lobed leaves. Inflorescence is a terminal cluster of flowers, borne on slender pedicels less than 1 inch long. Blooms have five sepals and five yellow or pinkish petals in a bell-shaped.
The leaves are alternate, tripinnate, only coarsely toothed, unlike the ferny, lacy leaves found in many other members of the family Apiaceae. The flowers are small, white and clustered in umbrella shaped inflorescences typical of the family. The many flowered umbellets have unequal pedicels that range from 5 to 11 cm long during fruiting. An oily, yellow liquid oozes from cuts to the stems and roots.
Flowers of this plant usually blossom around March to April. The inflorescence type is considered a raceme, where there are flower spikes from stalks that pawn out from the stem. The flowers themselves stretch in entirety to 12-16 millimeters. They occur in clusters of 2 to 8 on leaf axils. The pedicels on which the flowers are attached measure to 15-16 millimeters.
The leaves then lengthen, and by the time the iris has seed capsules, they are between long and 0.3–0.4 cm wide. It is a dwarf plant, having either subterranean, or very small stems or pedicels. They can reach up to between long. The pedicel (or dwarf stem) has 2 narrow, lanceolate (or oblong-lanceolate,) and (scarious) membranous spathes or bracts (leaves of the flower bud).
The pink pedicels are smooth, sometimes with thinly sparsed silky hairs. The perianth is cream-white and the style long. The fruit have a short stem, narrowly oblong to egg-shaped long and wide with a long narrow straight or slightly curved beak toward the apex. The blackish-brown seeds are narrowly oblong to egg-shaped long and wide with a wing on each side.
The peduncle is up to 23 cm long and 5 mm wide, while the rachis is up to 55 cm long. Pedicels are one- flowered, bracteate, and measure up to 16 mm in length. Sepals are elliptic in shape and up to 6 mm long. Most parts of the plants bear an indumentum of very short hairs, although much of this covering is caducous.
They are slow growing, multi-stemmed, and their longer stems tend to sprawl in their rocky natural habitat. Within the genus, various subgroupings can be recognised, based on shared characteristics. The Foliolosa Complex (including the entities robusta, foliolosa and congesta) can be distinguished by the glossy sheen to their leaves, and by their flowers with long bracts, short pedicels, smooth perianth tubes and broad cream-white lobes.
There are 15 to 40 flowers with pedicels being seven to twelve millimeters in length. The flower itself is six to ten millimeters, its perianth parts are more or less erect, narrowly lanceolate, acuminate, and entire with a rose to white color. The stamens are longer than the tepals, and there is no ovary crest.Cronquist, A.J., A. H. Holmgren, N. H. Holmgren & Reveal. 1977.
Hakea stenocarpa is a small, rounded multi-stemmed shrub typically grows to high and forms a lignotuber. The branchlets are more or less smooth at flowering time. The inflorescence is a single raceme of 14-20 sweetly scented white, creamy- white or yellow flowers in leaf axils in the upper branchlets. The smooth pedicels are cream-white, the perianth cream-white and the pistil long.
An erect non-sprouting shrub typically grows to a height of . Racemes of fragrant blooms appear from July to August in profusion in white or pale pink-red along the branchlets in the leaf axils. Inflorescences are solitary with 12 to 18 scented flowers with glabrous pedicels. Blue-grey leaves are obovate to elliptic and sometimes undulate long and wide and narrowly cuneate at the base.
Hakea preissii is a shrub or tree which typically grows to a height of . It has branchlets that are moderately to densely appressed-pubescent on new growth, quickly glabrescent, and glaucous in their second year. The rigid, simple leaves are rarely divided apically into 2 or 3 segments, in length and in width. Inflorescence are axillary with 4–28 yellow-green flowers with persistent pedicels long.
D. esquirolii subsp. pedunculata differs in having the young shoots and the peduncles and pedicels of the inflorescence densely covered with short yellowish hairs (tomentose) and lanceolate or oblanceolate leaves. It is recognized as a separate species, Daphne pedunculata, by the Flora of China. It is found in south-east Yunnan, China, where it grows in dry valleys and sandy shrubby slopes at around 400 m.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on a flat, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between April and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, bell-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide.
The stipules are peltate, sometimes spurred, and are ovate, long. The inflorescence is a few-flowered raceme, with the peduncle being long, the pedicels long, and the calyx long and glabrous, with minute teeth. The corolla is yellow and 5–7 mm long. The pods are cylindrical, long and wide, from glabrous to sparingly pubescent with short adpressed hairs, and are black when ripe.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on an unbranched, cylindrical peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, with an oval floral cup about long and wide and a saucer-shaped operculum that has a central point and is about long and wide. The flowers are creamy white and the fruit is an urn-shaped capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are long and wide with an elongated, conical operculum. Flowering occurs in June and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule with the valves extending well beyond the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from May to November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, broadly cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, about long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from March to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, hemispherical to bell-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flowers are borne in leaf axils in groups of between seven and thirteen on a cylindrical, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and about wide with a conical operculum long. Flowering occurs mainly between November and March and the fruit is a woody cup-shaped, barrel-shaped or hemispherical capsule long wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are glaucous, diamond-shaped, about long and wide with a conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near the level of the rim or protruding above it.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of three, on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, yellow or cream-coloured, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
Trunk of M. baccata Trees grow up to 10–14 meters (33–47 feet) high. They have arching or overhanging red-brown branches and red-brown buds. Petioles are 2–5 cm (0.8-2.0 inches) long, with few glands. Leaves are elliptic or egg-shaped, (3–8)×(2–3.5) cm ((1.2-3.2) × (0.8-1.4) inches). Pedicels are slender and 1.5–4 cm (0.5-1.6 inches) long.
Anopodium ampullaceum is most commonly characterized by its spores pedicels that face upwards toward the apex of its ascus. Its spores are polar with both an apical and basal side. The A. ampullaceum perithecia where spores are discharged is a non-stromatic, membrane enclosed structure, that is light in colour with a dark neck, and is covered in hair. The A. ampullaceum has a filiform paraphyses.
In the Royal Natal National Park Eucomis bicolor is a perennial growing from a large bulb. It reaches in height, with a basal rosette of wavy leaves long. In late summer (August in the UK), it produces a stout stem (peduncule), often with purple markings. The inflorescence is a raceme of pale green, purple margined flowers with tepals up to long, borne on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a thick, downturned, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on thick pedicels up to long. Mature buds are long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs mainly from August to November and the flowers are yellowish green. The fuit is a woody, cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves at or below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are long and wide, the hypanthium cup-shaped and the operculum hemispherical with prominent longitudinal ribs. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, conical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near to rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on a flattened peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to oval, long and wide with a conical to flattened hemispherical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, conical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
They are usually the same shade of green on both sides, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are mostly arranged on the end of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle in groups of three or seven. The peduncle is long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a usually conical operculum.
Its cylindrical carpels are 1-1.5 millimeters long and hairless. Its fruit are on 1.5-4 centimeter long, hairy pedicels. Its fruit are dark yellow, oval to round, 1.7-3 centimeters in diameter, hairless and have an outer surface that has a network pattern. Its numerous seeds are brown, oval, flat and 7-9 by 3-4 millimeters with a caruncle at one end.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody conical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Allium cyrilli is a plant species native to Greece, Turkey, and to the Apulia region of southeastern Italy.Altervista, Flora Italiana, Sched di Botanica, Allium cyrilli Allium cyrilli has one egg-shaped bulb wide, fleshy leaves that are U-shaped in cross section. Umbel consists of a large number of flowers crowded together, all with long fleshy pedicels. Scape is robust, up to 100 cm tall.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of between nine and thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are narrow cylindrical, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. It blooms between November and April producing white flowers. The fruit is a woody, narrow cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed below the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of between eleven and fifteen in leaf axils on a thick peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, wide and wide with an asymmetrical, conical operculum. Flowering occurs in autumn and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or conical capsule long and wide on a short pedicel.
Collinsia childii is an annual herb producing an erect, branching stem up to about 35 centimeters tall coated in glandular hairs. The leaves are oblong, flat and sometimes slightly toothed. The hairy gland- covered inflorescence bears flowers on erect pedicels, with several emerging from the leaf axils at interrupted nodes. Each flower has two upper lobes and three lower lobes and is pale lavender in color.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are shaped like an egg in an egg cup, about long and wide with a rounded operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, conical to shortened hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Arctostaphylos morroensis is a spreading shrub, reaching up to 4 meters in height but generally staying wider than tall. It has shreddy red-gray bark and whiskery bristles on the smaller branches and twigs. The leaves are oval-shaped and slightly convex, dark green on the upper surface and duller gray-green beneath. Plentiful flowers hang in dense clusters on short pedicels during the winter months.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Sometimes there are four ribs on the sides of the operculum. Flowering occurs between June and September and the flowers are whitish or cream-coloured.
Nepenthes surigaoensis has a racemose inflorescence. It measures up to 40 cm in length and has a maximum basal diameter of 6 cm, flowers included. The peduncle itself is up to 18 cm long, whereas the rachis reaches up to 25 cm. Most flowers are borne in pairs on partial peduncles measuring up to 8 mm in length, with pedicels up to 16 mm long.
The flower buds are arrange in leaf axils in groups of three on a flattened peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to flattened operculum. Flowering occurs between January and April and the flowers are whitish. The fruit is a woody, cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near to rim level.
Eucalyptus exilipes, commonly known as the fine-leaved ironbark, is a species of medium to tall tree and is endemic to Queensland. It has dark grey or black "ironbark", linear to narrow lance-shaped adult leaves, flower buds in groups of seven, white flowers and cup-shaped to shortened spherical fruit. It is similar to E. crebra, differing only in the length of the pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven to fifteen on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are sausage-shaped, long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum that is about three times as long as the floral cup. Flowering occurs from September to February and the flowers are creamy white to pale yellow.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a thick, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a ribbed, conical or beaked operculum about equal in length to the operculum. The fruit is a sessile, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves at rim level.
Hypertelis spergulacea grows to about high, woody at the base with softer ascending stems. The lower leaves are crowded together and fleshy; further up the stem the leaves are arranged in well spaced whorls of five to ten. The individual leaves are narrowly linear, hairless (glabrous) and greyish green in colour. The inflorescence is somewhat umbellate, with individual flowers borne on long thin stems (pedicels).
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a prominently beaked operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from October to January and the flowers are white to pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, sometimes nine, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in March and the fruit is a woody cup-shaped, barrel-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Flowers occur individually and are 2.5 cm long. Only a few flowers on the same plant are in bloom during the June to September season. The two-lipped corolla is borne from 5 mm pedicels from the upper leaf axils. At the center, or throat, of the corolla is a yellow region surrounded by a band of white; the yellow beard guides pollinators towards the flower.
The flower buds are arranged on a branched peduncle, each branch with a group of seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, about long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs in January or June and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody spherical urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Baeckea linifolia is an erect shrub with branches having drooping tips. The leaves are linear and widely spaced, linear (more or less terete) and growing close to the stem. They are 5 to 15 mm long, acute at the end and having a tapering base. The solitary, axillary, flowers are white and up to 5 mm across on pedicels (stems) which are 1.5–2 mm long.
The leaves have sparse fine hairs on their upper surface and are smooth on their lower surface. The leaves have 10-12 pairs of secondary veins emanating from the midrib. Its solitary flowers are in axillary positions on 3-4 millimeter long pedicels. Its 3 oval sepals have blunt tips and their outer surfaces are covered in short red hairs while their inner surfaces are hairless.
Correa calycina is a dense shrub that typically grows to high and wide with its branchlets covered with rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are narrow oblong to elliptic, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are borne singly on short side shoots on pedicels long. The calyx is green, top-shaped, square in cross-section and up to long with four lance-shaped lobes.
Meconopsis horridula flower with spiny capsules Meconopsis horridula is a species with many variations in leaf structure and inflorescence. In the wild, the flowers are solitary or arranged in a raceme. The plant is monocarpic (it produces seeds and dies) with a plump taproot. The stem and pedicels have straw-colored spines on their surface. The plant has basal leaves (about 25 cm) arranged in a rosette.
This perennial produces an inflorescence up to 25 centimeters tall which bears purple to pinkish flowers on long pedicels. Each flower has a narrow cylindrical tube which opens into a flat face of six tepals, each 1 to 1.5 centimeters long. In the center of the flower are three fertile stamens and three staminodes, which are flat, white sterile stamens, each with a two- pointed tip.
Hakea laurina is an upright shrub or small tree with smooth grey bark, high, wide and does not form a lignotuber. The inflorescence consists of 120-190 conspicuous white, deep pink or red pin cushion shaped flowers in the leaf axils. The pedicels are long and smooth. The perianth is dark pink to red, the pistil long, cream-white or occasionally red or dark pink.
The flowers are borne singly or in groups of 3 in leaf axils on a branched peduncle long, with branches (pedicels) long. There are 4 deep red, pointed sepal lobes, each long and 4 deep pink petals long and wide. There are 8 curved stamens tipped with yellow anthers. Flowering occurs mainly from September to November but flowers are often present in other months.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from September to November and the flowers are yellow. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or bell-shaped capsule long and wide with lobes between the valves.
They are a pale yellow- green above and greyish on their undersurface. New growth is covered in reddish hairs. Flowering takes place from November to January. The showy creamy-white flower heads are terminal and umbellate, each composed of three to seven flowers on 0.8–3.2 cm (0.3–1.3 in) long pedicels, which in turn branch off from a 1.5–7 cm (0.6–2.8 in) long peduncle.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped, curved or elliptical, long and wide, on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between August and April and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in January, May, June, July and October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves usually below the rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical or beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in November and December. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long, wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in June and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule, long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The androphore is up to 1.5 mm long. Tepals are round or elliptic and up to 4 mm long by 3 mm wide. Those of male flowers may be green or red, whereas those of females are always green. The female inflorescence is similar in structure to the male one, but differs in having a rachis up to 25 cm long with longer pedicels of 10–23 mm.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to cylindrical, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flower occurs from February to April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule, long and wide, with a short neck.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle in groups of seven, the peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, about long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from April to May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of the branchlets and in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from July to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valved near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of nine or eleven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between September and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup- shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on a branched peduncle, usually in groups of seven, the peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical to rounded or beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in January and February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on an branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped or conical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle up to long, the individual buds on short pedicels. Mature buds are oval or spindle-shaped, up to long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from March to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, oval to more or less spherical capsule up to long and wide with the valves slightly protruding.
Persoonia brevirhachis is an erect to spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of with smooth, mottled grey bark and hairy branchlets. The leaves are narrow spatula-shaped to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide. The flowers are arranged singly or in pairs in leaf axils on pedicels long. The tepals are yellow to greenish yellow, long and wide and hairy on the outside.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of between seven and eleven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum that is longer than the floral cup. The flowers are pale creamy white and the fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped or spherical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, about long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. The flowers are creamy white and the fruit is a woody urn-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels about long. Mature buds are oval, long, about wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from August to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves at rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical, long, wide with a conical operculum long. Flowering occurs from September to March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped to cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed below the rim.
The leaves are densely covered with short, multicellular, hair-like glands. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets, sometimes upper leaf axils on a peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, about long and wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in November and the flowers are white.
There are many small oil dots visible to the naked eye. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with three or seven buds that are sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded, conical or slightly beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from August to November and the flowers are white.
The adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same dull blue-green on both sides, more or less round to kite-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branching peduncle each branch with seven buds. The peduncle is long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum.
The leaves have a strong sweet mint scent when crushed.Southwest Colorado Wildflowers The herb tastes like peppermint and is used as a minty flavoring in parts of Mexico.USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center The inflorescence arises from the axils of these leaf pairs, bearing three to seven flowers each between one and two centimeters in length on short pedicels. The flowers are generally light to deep lavender with some white markings.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils usually in groups of between seven and eleven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum that is longer than the floral cup. The flowers are pale creamy yellow and the fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped or spherical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils usually in groups of between seven and eleven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are smooth, long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum that is longer than the floral cup. The flowers are pale creamy yellow and the fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped or spherical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of stems on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in most months between March and December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Tripterocalyx micranthus is erect and branched but generally compact, its hairy, glandular stem reaching a maximum length near 60 centimeters. The stem is red in color and sticky in texture. Each leaf has a fleshy, hairy green blade up to 6 centimeters long which is borne on a long petiole. The inflorescence is a head of several elongated flowers borne on long, glandular pedicels all attached at the small central receptacle.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club- shaped, long and wide with a rounded to flattened operculum. Flowering occurs between December and February and the flowers are white or whitish. The fruit is a woody, cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule that is more or less square in cross-section, long and wide.
The leaves are a similar height to the flowering stems, but broader than those of Iris schachtii. It has a slender stem or peduncle, that can grow up to between tall, with 1–3 branches, (or pedicels). The stem (and branches) have inflated, green, spathes (or leaves of the flower bud). The stems (and the branches) hold 2 and rarely 5 flowers, in spring, between April, or between May and June.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven or thirteen on an unbranched, down-turned peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with an elongated, conical operculum. Flowering occurs between August and May and the flowers are creamy white or yellowish green. The fruit is a woody, flattened spherical capsule long and wide on a pedicel up to long.
The adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same glossy green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oblong to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. It blooms between August and April producing cream-white-yellow blossoms.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and twenty or more on a pendulous peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs in August and the flowers are white or creamy white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven or nine on an branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Eucalyptus incerata is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, light greyish brown bark. Adult plants have lance-shaped leaves that are the same shade of green on both sides, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of between seven and thirteen in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a pointed operculum long. Flowering occurs between December and February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding well above the rim of the fruit.
Eucalyptus livida is a malle or a small tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, greyish and orange bark. The adult leaves are lance-shaped or narrow lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven or more on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are egg-shaped, about long and about wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, flattened spherical to conical capsule, long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched, flattened peduncle wide, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped or diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from October to December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, cylindrical or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flowers are yellowish and 1.5 mm across, with absent sepals, and the styles form a stylopodium. The fruits are 4–5 mm in size, oblong-ovoid, and are rarely compressed. The commissure is broad, the mericarps are prominent with slender ridges and lateral forming narrow wings; a carpophore is present. There are numerous vittae, with stout pedicels of 2–3 mm in size, and the stigmas are capitate.
Nepenthes micramphora has a racemose inflorescence measuring up to 35 cm in length by 6 mm in width. The peduncle itself may be up to 8 cm long and 1 mm wide. Flowers are borne on one- flowered, non-bracteate pedicels (3–4 mm long), of which there are between 20 and 40 on the inflorescence. The ovate tepals measure up to 2.5 mm in length by 1.2 mm in width.
Fennel, Foeniculum vulgare, is a perennial herb. It is erect, glaucous green, and grows to heights of up to , with hollow stems. The leaves grow up to long; they are finely dissected, with the ultimate segments filiform (threadlike), about wide. (Its leaves are similar to those of dill, but thinner.) The flowers are produced in terminal compound umbels wide, each umbel section having 20–50 tiny yellow flowers on short pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum. Flowering occurs between February and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
Phebalium appressum is a rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with silvery scales. The leaves are sessile, crowded, egg-shaped to heart-shaped, about long and wide and pressed against the branch. The flowers are white and borne singly or in pairs on the ends of branchlets. The pedicels are about long, thick and densely covered with rust-coloured scales.
Lonicera alba was described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus. It was moved to Chiococca in 1893 by A. S. Hitchcock, and is considered the type species of that genus. Stewardson Brown described the Bermuda population of the plant as a new species, C. bermudiana, in 1909 due to its lighter green and larger leaves, larger berries, and wider and longer pedicels. Many authorities consider C. bermudiana a synonym of C. alba.
The leaf stalks are to long and without hairs. Flower stalks (peduncles) are to long and woody. They appear opposite from the leaves or as an extra from near the leaf stalk, each with one or two flowers, occasionally a third. Stalks for the individual flowers (pedicels) are stout and woody, minutely hairy to hairless and to with small bractlets nearer to the base which are densely hairy.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped to curved, the same dull greyish green on both sides, long and wide, on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in groups of three in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pendulous, oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from March to June and the flowers are white.
N. papuana has a racemose inflorescence, while that of N. neoguineensis is a panicle or panicle-like raceme. Furthermore, the inflorescence of N. papuana usually bears only one-flowered pedicels, both in male and female plants. Those of N. neoguineensis can be up to four-flowered. The lamina of N. papuana has very distinct longitudinal veins and indistinct pinnate veins, whereas in N. neoguineensis the opposite is true.
It produces sprawling or climbing stems up to 25 centimeters long which may be hairless to hairy. Small pointed leaves grow in whorls of four divided into two pairs at intervals along the stem, which may branch at these points. The plant is dioecious, with male plants producing clusters of staminate flowers on pedicels and female plants producing solitary pistillate flowers. Both types of flower are usually maroon.
Its inflorescence is 90–120 cm long, usually with 3-7 branches (each 30–60 cm long). The inflorescence, pedicels, and erect flower buds are all salmon coloured. The flowers become paler yellow after opening. They have green tips and in habitat they are often frayed and torn from the tiny endemic gecko species which push their heads into the perianth tube to lick the nectar and thereby pollinate the plants.
The two species look very similar - in their orange-red flowers, and in their slender recurved leaves. However the Réunion Aloe is thinner, more decumbent, and usually does not grow tall stems. Its leaves do not have the pink-red colour on their margins. It can also be distinguished from Aloe purpurea by its shorter flowers and pedicels which are a much brighter red colour, and by its smaller fruits.
The flowers sit atop stalks (known as pedicels) up to 3.5 cm (1.6 in) in length, which arise in pairs off main horizontal stalks within the inflorescence. Each flower consists of a tubular perianth up to 4 cm (1.8 in) long, which partly splits along one side at anthesis to release the thick style. The stigma is contained within a slanting disc-like structure at the tip of the style.
The flowers appear in spring. These are yellow with a red centre and are supported by short pedicels that are concealed by a series of overlapping bracts. The pods which follow are 14 to 25 mm in length and 10 to 14 mm in width. The species was first formally described by botanist William Jackson Hooker in 1833 in Botanical Magazine This species is found in South Australia, Tasmania, and Victoria.
The pedicels are curved, filiform, and scaberulous. The spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, lanceolate, clumped and are long. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless and membranous, but every other feature is different; Lower glume is flabellate, truncate and is long with an erose apex. Upper glume is ovate and is long with an obtuse apex.
Flowers initially occur in clusters of 1–6 at intervals along the stem (scape) of the inflorescence. Each cluster is at the base of a bract, which ranges from in length, becoming smaller towards the end of the inflorescence. Most of the flowers which are produced initially die off, so that the inflorescences are relatively sparsely flowered. Individual flowers are greenish-white, borne on stalks (pedicels) some long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, spindle-shaped or diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in February and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
Schefflera is a genus of flowering plants in the family Araliaceae. With an estimated 600–900 species, the genus represents about half of its family. The plants are trees, shrubs or lianas, growing tall, with woody stems, the absence of articulated pedicels and armaments, and palmately compound leaves. Several species are grown in pots as houseplants, most commonly Schefflera actinophylla (umbrella tree) and Schefflera arboricola (dwarf umbrella tree).
The flower buds are usually arranged in groups of three, sometimes seven, in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide, with the valves protruding above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a beaked to horn-shaped operculum long. Flowering occurs between May and September and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical to barrel-shaped capsule, long and wide with the valves protruding well beyond the rim.
Flowers have no petals, but instead have 5-9 petal- like sepals that are white, blue-tinted white or yellow in color. The flowers usually have 40 to 80 stamens but can have up to 100. After flowering, fruits are produced in rounded heads with long pedicels. When the fruits, called achenes, are ripe they are ellipsoid to ovate in outline, flat in shape and long and wide.
The pitcher lid may be glabrous or pubescent. The peduncle is typically slightly pubescent, and the partial peduncles, pedicels, bracts, tepals, and androphores densely pubescent. The laminae are green, whereas the stem, midribs and tendrils range from green, through yellow, to orange or even red. Terrestrial pitchers have a distinctive colouration: their outer surface is black, brown, or purple, with numerous large flecks of greenish-white, brown, or orange.
Tepals are elliptic and up to 3 mm long by 1.5 mm wide. The tepals are green when newly opened, but later darken to orange or red. The female inflorescence differs markedly in structure from the male one, bearing flowers solitarily on ebracteate pedicels measuring 3–12 mm in length. It also differs in having a rachis that is 8–22 cm long and tepals that are always green.
The peristome is white throughout, while the lid may be green, yellow, or white. Nepenthes andamana has a racemose inflorescence. In male plants, it reaches 110 cm in length, of which the peduncle constitutes 45–65 cm and the rachis 20–45 cm. Around 40–190 flowers are produced. Most are borne solitarily on pedicels measuring 3–6 mm in length, although some may have two-flowered partial peduncles.
Disregarding these supposed differences leaves only a few stable distinguishing features between the species. Firstly, the teeth lining the inner margin of the peristome are shorter in N. mikei, although both have minute teeth and this difference is minor. Secondly, the pedicels of N. mikei bear simple bracteoles, while those of N. angasanensis do not. Finally, N. angasanensis exhibits a greater density of digestive glands on the inner pitcher surface.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and nineteen or more on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from August to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel- shaped capsule with the valves below the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs from November to January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, hemispherical or conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
N. papuana has a racemose inflorescence, while that of N. neoguineensis is a panicle or panicle-like raceme. Furthermore, the inflorescence of N. papuana usually bears only one-flowered pedicels, both in male and female plants. Those of N. neoguineensis can be up to four-flowered. The lamina of N. papuana has very distinct longitudinal veins and indistinct pinnate veins, whereas in N. neoguineensis the opposite is true.
They are also paler in colour. It has 2–4 cm long pedicels, 1.5–2 cm long ovary, that has a beak-like point and a small, 0.7–1 cm long perianth tube. It has 4–4.5 cm long and 0.7–1.2 cm wide style branches, that are sharply recurved, and have broadly triangular lobes that are 4–5 mm long. They are also paler in colour, similar to the standards.
The leaves are covered with minutes dots; their upper surface is shiny and pale brown to olive-colored while the undersides are dull and pale brown. Its leaves have 14-22 secondary veins that arch and connect with one another about 6 millimeters from leaf edge. The leaves have prominent tertiary veins. Its solitary (sometimes in pairs) flowers are born on hairless, wrinkled pedicels that are 2-3.7 centimeters long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a conspicuously ribbed, rounded to conical operculum. Flowering from May to September and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The leaves have 9-19 pairs of secondary veins emanating from their midribs at angles of 42°-75°. Its fragrant, bisexual flowers occur in groups of 1-3 on peduncles that are 2-13 by 1-2 millimeters. The flowers are attached to the peduncles by pedicels that are 4-17 by 1.2-3 millimeters. The peduncle has 5-6 bracts that are 8-12 by 4-9 millimeters.
Flowers with thin pedicels up to 6 cm long, petals pinkish, lavender or bluish-white, blue-veined; lower petal obovate, the upper ones oblong-ovate or oblong- elliptic; up to 9 mm long and 4.5 mm wide; all petals with rounded apex; spur ca 1 mm long; anthers and ovary about almost 2 cm long. Fruit, an ellipsoid capsule 6–7 mm long containing seeds ca 1 mm long.
Its fruit occur in clusters of 10-15 on pedicels that are 7-23 by 1.5-4.5 millimeters and covered in sparse hairs. The smooth, oval fruit are 1.8-3.4 by 1.1-2.1 centimeters with flat tips. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by stipes that are 1.5-4 by 1-2.4 millimeters. Each fruit has 6-8 seeds that are 6.5-23.5 by 7-20 millimeters.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between January and May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, hemispherical or conical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The species is tall with its branches being in length. It has a pilose and strigose apex with acute sepals which are either acuminate or obtuse the border of which is broad and can be villous and strigose at the same time. Its fertile shoots not to mention 4 leaves are in length with pedicels being of long. Corolla is long and sometimes can have from 3 to 4 petals.
Flowers may be directly attached to the plant at their base (sessile—the supporting stalk or stem is highly reduced or absent). The stem or stalk subtending a flower is called a peduncle. If a peduncle supports more than one flower, the stems connecting each flower to the main axis are called pedicels. The apex of a flowering stem forms a terminal swelling which is called the torus or receptacle.
The pedicels have several bracts and are covered in dense rust-colored hairs. Its 3 oval, leathery sepals are 1.6-2 by 1.1-1.4 centimeters and densely covered in silky cream-colored to brown hairs. Its flowers have 6 petals that are fused at the base to form a 6-lobed corolla that is yellow with a purple base. The lance- shaped lobes are 3-5 millimeters long with rounded tips.
Rumex maritimus is composed of golden yellow or green/yellow inflorescences on its leaves and stem. The plant ranges to be 15 cm to 75 cm high from the base of the plant. The stems of the plant grows upward or laying close to the ground with pedicels as long as 3 to 8 cm. The leaves are wedged shaped, commonly narrow on both ends, but are rarely broadly wedded shaped.
Philotheca kalbarriensis is a shrub that grows to a height of about and has reddish-brown branchlets. The leaves are crowded, narrow spindle-shaped, about long and grooved on the upper surface. The flowers are arranged singly in leaf axils on pedicels long. There are five fleshy, triangular sepals about long, five egg-shaped, white petals about long and wide and ten hairy stamens that are free from each other.
The inflorescence consists of 18-26 large, white, strongly scented flowers in leaf axils along a stem long. The overlapping bracts are covered with long, soft, white hairs. The pedicels are long, the pistil long and the white perianth long. The small ovoid fruit are wide and and have prominent coarse tubercles on the surface or are smooth, ending with two distinct horns at the apex about long.
Linum alpinum has stems erect or recumbent, densely leafed, reaching an average of in height. This plant is glabrous and woody at the base. It has alternate leaves that are linear-lanceolate, up to long, and sessile. The hermaphrodite, rather large flowers with radial symmetry are blue, yellow at the bottom, with a diameter of and with erect or slightly inclined pedicels, in loose clusters each containing one to eight flowers.
They can grow up to long, and 0.2–0.7 cm wide, They have incurving tips, and they disappear in summer, after flowering. It has a simple dwarf (or short stem), that can grow up to between tall. The stems have 2–3 spathes (leaves of the flower bud), which are lanceolate and are (scarious) membranous at the top of the leaf. They have short, 7.5mm long pedicels (flower stalks).
It has 2 pairs of petals, 3 large sepals (outer petals), known as the 'falls' and 3 inner, smaller petals (or tepals), known as the 'standards'. The elliptic to oblanceolate falls are long, and 1.3 cm wide, with a long blue beard, in the centre of the fall. The elliptic to oblanceolate standards are long, they also have a thin beard. It has short pedicels and a long perianth tube.
Botanical illustration of Agalinis tenuifolia (1913)Agalinis tenuifolia is 20 to 60 centimeters tall, with a slender, paniculately branched stem. Its simple opposite leaves are 20 to 50 millimeters long, and only 1 to 3.5 millimeters wide. The flowers are borne on 10 to 20 millimeter long pedicels. Each flower is bilaterally symmetrical, with five 10 to 15 millimeter long petals fused into a corolla tube, and four stamens.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between November and March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or protruding.
Leionema elatius is a shrub that grows to high with either smooth stems or with star-shaped hairs. The leaves are flat, lance- shaped, oblong or narrowly oval to spoon-shaped, long, wide, upper surface shiny and smooth with a distinctive midrib below. The inflorescences are at the end of branches crowded by the leaves, pedicels and peduncles both slim. The calyx lobes are wide-triangular shaped and fleshy.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between July and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flowers are borne singly or in groups of up to three in leaf axils on pedicels about long. The sepals are long and glabrous apart from soft hairs on the edges. The petals are white, egg-shaped to round, long and the stamens are long. Flowering has been observed in November and the fruit is a thin-walled, glabrous, bell-shaped to hemispherical capsule about long and wide.
Allotropa virgata has an underground stem (rhizome) with brittle roots. The scale-like leaves are along the striped peduncle with a raceme-like inflorescence. The peduncle is persistent after the seeds have been dispersed and tends to turn brown. The bracts of the inflorescence are less than 3 cm and the pedicels are not recurved. The individual flowers generally don’t have sepals but if they do, have 2 to 4.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of usually seven, on a branched peduncle wide, the individual buds on pedicels long. The buds are spindle-shaped to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup- shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on the ends of branchlets on a compound peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle- shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between May and August and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical, conical, pear-shaped or oval capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long and square in cross-section, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, long and wide with a flattened to rounded operculum. It blooms between March and October producing creamy-white flowers. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, cylindrical or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide and green, with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from October to November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel- shaped or conical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed, below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, about long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from May to July and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to oblong, long and wide with a rounded or conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, cylindrical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from October to November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The racemes grow laterally in a cluster of 1-6 cup-shaped flowers in leaf axils on the upper part of stems, usually on a peduncle long. The flower petals are pale mauve or blue with purple veins. The flower bracts are long, pedicels long and calyx lobes long. The shiny seed capsule is egg-shaped long, wide with stiff fine backward arching hairs and notched at the apex.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, either in leaf axils or on the end of branchlets, sometimes on a branching peduncle. The peduncle is long and the individual buds are on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, sometimes glaucous, about long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in June and November and the flowers are white, pale yellow or lemon-coloured.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three or seven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding strongly.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels about long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from February to May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves strongly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oblong to oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from January to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Young leaves have long silky caducous hairs, and retain some pubescence on their undersides at maturity. Leaves and male flowers The trees are dioecious, with the usually salmon to brick red flowers appearing in early spring before the leaves fully unfurl. Staminate (male) flowers are held in 8 to 10 flowered nodding fascicle-like racemes. The slender pedicels are pilose or glabrate and from 2 to 4cm long.
Individual flowers are carried on short stems (pedicels), less than long, and have red to pink tepals, fused at the base for about with narrow free segments up to long. When the flowers fade and fruits are formed, the scape straightens, so that the ripe red berries, about long, are held upright. The sticky seeds are elongated, about long and wide. All other species of Scadoxus have ovoid or spherical seeds.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a horn-shaped or beaked operculum long. Flowering occurs from June to October and the flowers are red, pink or bright yellow. The fruit is a woody, short, broad and hemispherical capsule, long and wide with coarse, longitudinal ridges.
The stems of R. bucephalophorus are thin and branch off the base of the plant about 5 to 50 centimeters long. The leaves of the plant vary as they can be circular and ovate or lengthened and lancelate anywhere in between. The pedicels are known to be heteromorphic often distinguishing this plant from others. Flowers are often found in groups of 2 to 3 in clusters and are also often heteromorphic.
In June and July, cream-white flowers are borne in terminal panicles of secund racemes seven to eight inches long; rachis and short pedicels are downy. The calyx is five-parted and persistent; lobes are valvate in bud. The corolla is ovoid-cylindric, narrowed at the throat, cream-white, and five-toothed. The 10 stamens are inserted on the corolla; filaments are wider than the anthers; anthers are two-celled.
The flower buds are borne in leaf axils on a branched peduncle long, each branch with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded, conical or slightly beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped or barrel- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Its solitary flowers are on 1-2.7 centimeter long pedicels. Its oval sepals are 3-4 millimeters long and covered in rust-colored shaggy hairs. Its outer petals are 20 by 5-7 millimeters and covered in fine hairs. The mature, thick, fleshy, outer petals have an outer surface that is green at the base and yellow at the tip, while its inner surface has pink and red highlights.
Persoonia manotricha is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to Western Australia. It is an erect shrub with hairy young branchlets, more or less cylindrical leaves and greenish yellow flowers in groups of up two to eight on a rachis long. It is similar to P. bowgada and P. hexagona but has longer pedicels than P. bowgada and differently grooved leaves from P. hexagona.
The flower buds are usually arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on a thin, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are more or less cylindrical, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in November and December and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a turban-shaped, ribbed operculum long and wide. Flowering occurs from February to May or from September to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are cylindrical to oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between October and May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup- shaped to cylindrical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spherical to oval, long and wide with a hemispherical operculum long. Flowering usually occurs after rainfall and the flowers are pale creamy yellow. The fruit is a woody, conical to hemispherical capsule long and wide with a powdery covering at first, the valves protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle wide, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from August to Octoberand the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rime level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are broadly spindle-shaped to oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in summer and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cylindrical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped or oval, long and wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from July to November and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, glaucous, barrel-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to more or less cylindrical, long and about wide with a conical, striated operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded or conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in September and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shallow cup-shaped to flattened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from September to December and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, conical to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valve protruding strongly.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axil in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between December and March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortly barrel- shaped capsule, long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a blunt, conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to February and from August to September and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Adult leaves are egg-shaped to lance-shaped or elliptical, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, about long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in January and the flowers are white.
Inflorescences emerge between nodes and have 1-2 flowers. Its pedicels are 1.5 centimeters long and have two kidney-shaped bracts that enclose their base. Its rounded sepals come to a point at the tip, are covered in dense woolly hairs on their outer surface, and are hairless on their inner surface. Its outer petals are 1.7 by 2 centimeters and come to a taper point or have blunt tips.
The flower buds are usually arranged in groups of seven on a branched peduncle, long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering has mostly been recorded between July and September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near or below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody conical, cup-shaped or bell-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The plant grows upright with a rounded habit, oppositely arranged leaves, and terminally born flowers. The white flowers are small, with four petals long, and clustered together in rounded clusters wide called diachasial cymes, produced sometime between May and July. After flowering, green fruits (drupes) are produced, and they ripen and turn white from August to October. The flowers and fruit are attached to the plant by bright red pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between February and June and the flowers are cream-coloured or white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to shortly barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, to spindle-shaped, long and wide and yellowish green with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between January and August and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, cylindrical or conical capsule long and wide with the valves at or below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in cluster of between seven and fifteen, sometimes more, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from October to February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged on a slender, branched peduncle long, each branch with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to narrow pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in November and from February to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a flattened operculum that has a prominent central knob. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped, urn-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle up to long, each branch usually with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been recorded in December and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped, cup-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear- shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to cylindrical, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between March and July and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The mite usually attacks the flower clusters soon after they open. The individual gall is no more than 2 cm across but when grouped together can be impressive as they present a sizable irregular deformity formed from the fused and swollen flower stalks (pedicels). The gall has also been found on buds, leaf stalks, twigs or trunks. It is brown when fully formed, finally black, but green at first.
They have six tepals long that have rounded ends with a sharp point in the center. The flowers are borne on slender pedicels (stems) in an umbel enclosed in two bracts at the top of an unbranched flat stem. The leaves are grass-like, long and across, and the flower stem is about as long as or a little longer than the leaves. The root system is coarse and fibrous.
The flowers are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical to slightly beaked operculum. The flowers are creamy yellow and the fruit is a woody urn-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide, with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Eucalyptus virginea is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth pale grey bark, sometimes with insect scribbles. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, thin, glossy green, paler on the lower surface, narrow lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to bluntly conical operculum. Flowering occurs from April to June and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flowers are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds of pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum long. Flowering occurs from April to November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flowers buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oblong, square in cross-section, long and wide with four ribs along their sides. Flowering occurs between May and November and the flowers are creamy white or sometimes pink. There are two rows of stamens, the outer ring of stamens not producing pollen.
Adult leaves are the same dull greyish green on boh sides, narrow lance- shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from late summer to early autumn and the flowers are white.
The upright standards are oblanceolate, elliptic, or obovate shaped, are between long and 1 cm wide. The standards are paler than the falls. It has pedicels that are between 1 and 1.5 cm long, trumpet shaped perianth tube that long, which is longer than spathe. It has 2.5–3.2 cm long and 5–6 mm wide, style branches, it is dark in the centre and paler at the edges.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, cylindrical to oval, about long and wide with a beaked or conical operculum long. Flowering has been observed in March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, bell-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves slightly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a thin, flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to cylindrical, long and wide with a conical operculum about the same length and width as the floral cup. Flowering occurs in autumn and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven, on a peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are spherical, long and wide with a rounded to shortly beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from July to September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical to hemispherical capsule about long and wide with the valves near rim level or slightly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds in groups of seven on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, long and wide with a conical or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from November to February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, bell-shaped or cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to almost spherical, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs from June to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or slightly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are cylindrical to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven to twenty five on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and about wide with a hemispherical operculum. Flowering occurs from September to January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped capsule long and wide on a pedicel long with three or four valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, creamy yellow, long and wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum that is longer than the floral cup. Flowering occurs from September to October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves prominently protruding.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of the branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle wide, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and about wide with a conical to hemispherical operculum. Flowering occurs from October to February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody oval to cylindrical capsule about long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Adult leaves are narrow lance-shaped to curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature flower buds are oval long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum, sometimes with a small point on the tip. Flowering mainly occurs between August and December and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle long and wide, usually with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in March and April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is an urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the end of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between February and September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum about equal in length to the floral cup. Flowering occurs between December and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a conical to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Adult leaves are also arranged in opposite pairs, glossy green above and paler below, lance-shaped or curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branches on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle usually with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are globe-shaped, long and wide, the floral cup hairy with longitudinal ribs. The sepals are up to long.
The stalked follicles are green and then turn red through deep blue through black. Flowers are dioecious, with yellow-green petals. Flowers appear as umbrella-like clusters from 2–12 in small terminal to axillary umbellate clusters. They are imperfect with pedicels 2–4 m long; there are 4–5 petals, elliptic to ovate-oblong 1.6–1.9 mm long and have green with reddish hairs near the tips; stamens 5; ovary with 2–5 carpels.
The flower buds are usually arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded or conical operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from July to September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Eucalyptus rugulata is a mallet or tree that typically grows to a height of but does not form a lignotuber. It has smooth grey bark that is shed in strips. Adult leaves are the same dark, glossy green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
Clustered leaves are up to 25 mm long; the single alternate leaves are up to 55 mm long. The flowers grow in groups of one to three in the leaf axils, with pedicels 6–15 mm long. The calyx, eventually ruptured by the growing berry, is a whitish tube crowned by five or six radial triangular sepals, shorter than the tube, 10–12 mm long and 3–4 mm wide, sometimes 2–lipped, strongly curved.
The tree typically grows to a height of up to and has tessellated red-brown to grey-brown persistent bark throughout. The dull grey-green adult leaves have a disjunct arrangement and a narrow lanceolate to lanceolate shape that is basally tapered. The thin discolorous leaves have a length of and a width of with obscure lateral veins. The terminal compound inflorescences occur in groups of seven per umbel on pedicels with a length of .
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with three or seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering has been observed in June, September and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of nine to fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from November to February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, hemispherical or conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The stems hold short pedicels (flower stalks), and 2–5 flowers, in spring, between March and April. The flowers are in diameter, come in shades of lilac-violet, and purple. It has 2 pairs of petals, 3 large sepals (outer petals), known as the 'falls' and 3 inner, smaller petals (or tepals), known as the 'standards'. The falls are oblong or lanceolate-obovate shaped, and are long and 0.6-0.9 cm wide.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven, rarely nine, buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped, barrel-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide.
Corymbia polysciada, commonly known as the apple gum, paper-fruited bloodwood or bolomin, is a species of tree that is endemic to the Top End of the Northern Territory. It has rough, tessellated bark on some or all or the trunk, smooth bark above, egg-shaped to broadly lance-shaped adult leaves, flower buds in groups of seven, creamy white flowers and cup-shaped, cylindrical or barrel-shaped from on long pedicels.
The adult leaves are more or less the same dull green to blue-green on both sides and have a pointed apex. The flower buds are arranged at the ends of the branchlets in groups of seven, occasionally three, on a branching peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. It blooms between January and June producing white flowers.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a long, beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in February and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in February and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Adult leaves are arranged alternately, dark green on the upper surface, paler below, egg-shaped to lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are an elongated oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between January and March and the flowers are white.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped to curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, about long and wide with a conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, hemispherical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of nine to twenty or more on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from November to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs in most months, depending on habitat and in some places follows rain. The flowers are whitish and the fruit is a woody conical, cylindrical, bell-shaped or barrel-shaped capsule four- sided in cross-section, long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are more or less cylindrical to spindle-shaped, long and wide with conical operculum. Flowering occurs between April and July and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to cylindrical capsule, long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and about wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between December and April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves slightly above rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle up to long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a flattened operculum. Flowering has been observed in December and January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody shortened spherical to cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a prominently beaked operculum that is longer than the floral cup. It blooms between June and September producing white to pale yellow flowers. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature fruit are oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum long. Flowering has been recorded in January and May and the fruit is a woody, conical to bell-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves at rim level or slightly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine, eleven or thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from November to December or January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, short cylindrical to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on thin pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded, sometimes pointed operculum. The tree will bloom between January to April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody urn- shaped to more or less spherical capsule long and wide.
The tree loses its leaves in the dry season. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on the leafless branchlets, on a branched peduncle up to long, each branch of the peduncle with three or seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear- shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum that sometimes has a central point or knob. Flowering occurs from September to January and the flowers are creamy white.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, about long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum long. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cylindrical or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed below the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds that are sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, about long and wide with a variably shaped operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody barrel-shaped, urn-shaped or spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, about long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in February and the flowers are white. The fruit is an urn-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle long, each branch with three or seven buds, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded, sometimes pointed operculum. Flowering occurs from September to October and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody cylindrical to barrel- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Eucalyptus melanophitra is a mallet that typically grows to a height of but does not form a lignotuber. It has rough, flaky grey bark on part or all of the trunk, smooth greyish bark above. The adult leaves are narrow lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels about long.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between March and November and the flowers are white, often smelling like bananas. The fruit is a woody, more or less hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval long and about wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cylindrical to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or below it.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum long. Flowering occurs between January and March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves about level with the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to broadly spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between August and October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves at or below the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering has been observed in February and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves close to rim level.
Fallopia baldschuanica is a vining plant with woody, climbing stems known to reach at least ten meters (about 33 feet) in length. The pointed oval or nearly triangular leaves are up to ten centimeters (4 inches) long and borne on petioles. The inflorescence is an open array of narrow, branching, drooping or spreading clusters of white flowers, each cluster reaching a maximum of 15 centimeters (6 inches) long. Flowers hang on short pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded or limpet-shaped operculum. Flowering has been observed in March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves deeply enclosed in the fruit.
Female flowers have thick pedicels, and an inferior ovary with 3–5 stigmas that each have two lobes. The female flowers of C. argyrosperma and C. ficifolia have larger corollas than the male flowers. Female flowers of C. pepo have a small calyx, but the calyx of C. moschata male flowers is comparatively short. A variety of fruits displayed at the Real Jardín Botánico de Madrid in 2016 Cucurbita fruits are large and fleshy.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded or conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to March and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Its petioles are 3-6 by 1-1.7 millimeters long and covered in short, brown hairs. Its flowers are arranged in groups of 3 or fewer on a woody rachis positioned opposite leaves. Each flower is on a fleshy, densely hairy pedicel 12-13 by 0.6-1.1 millimeters long. The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 3.1 by 2.7 millimeters, and another middle bract that is 2 by 2.1 millimeters.
Its stigma are shaped like narrow, inverted cones. Its fruit occur in clusters of up to 5-7 on woody pedicels that are 6-16 by 2.2-2.4 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The smooth, hairy, dull grayish-green, round to oblong fruit are 13-19 by 6.5-13 millimeters. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by stipes that are 7-10 by 1.4-2.7 millimeters and covered in grey-brown hairs.
Adult leaves are the same shade of green on both sides, lance-shaped or curved, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a branched peduncle up to long, each branch of the peduncle usually with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in November and December and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum. Flowering has been recorded in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long and wide with the valves close to rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded, sometimes pointed operculum. Flowering occurs between August and October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed below the level of the rim.
The larvae feed on Gossypium species, Hibiscus tiliaceus and Thespesia populnea. Practically all parts of the host plants are liable to attack, including squares, flowers, bolls in all stages, terminal shoots, boll pedicels and even fairly woody parts. Larvae often seem to browse on the green tissues of the outside of the bolls before entering the bolls, and sometimes make several holes in a group without gaining entrance to the boll through any of them.
The two taxa can also be distinguished on the basis of their floral morphology; the pedicels of N. villosa have a filiform bract, while those of N. edwardsiana do not. Additionally, N. edwardsiana and N. villosa differ considerably in their altitudinal distributions. The latter species generally occurs at ultrahighland elevations (2300–3240 m), whereas N. edwardsiana is found between 1500 and 2700 m. Where their altitudinal distributions overlap, they are still identifiable as distinct species.
The peristome has prominent ribs and teeth, but is not as developed as that of N. macrophylla. The inflorescence of N. × trusmadiensis may be up to 50 cm long and has two-flowered pedicels. Despite the size of the pitchers, this hybrid is not large in stature. Nepenthes × trusmadiensis is restricted to the summit ridge of Mount Trusmadi and has been recorded from elevations of 2500 to 2600 m above sea level.
Eulobus californicus is an annual herb which produces a basal rosette of leaves and then bolts a slender, erect stem which can exceed 1.5 meters in height. The larger leaves are located in the ground-level rosette; those on the stem are small and thready. The upper stem is an inflorescence bearing widely spaced flowers on long pedicels. Each flower is a cup of four bright yellow petals, sometimes with red speckles near the bases.
The laminar glands are pale and not prominent, and the intramarginal glands are black, small, and few in number. The plant is usually 1–5 flowered, but can have up to nine flowers that grow from three nodes, and rarely from one lower node. Their pedicels are long and rather stout. The bracts are reduced-foliar, are broadly imbricate, and lack black glands, and the bracteoles are similar but smaller in size.
The pedicels are 1.5—3 cm long. The plant can grow very quickly, forming new growths from April or May. The stems have 3–5 spathes (leaves of the flower bud), which are thin, green and narrowly ovate. They are 1.5–2.5 cm long and 1 cm wide. The stems (and the many branches) hold between 2 and 10 flowers, 2–3 flowers per branch, in spring, or between spring-summer, between April and May.
The lid is similar to that found in terrestrial traps, although slightly smaller (up to 6 cm long by 5 cm wide) and often bearing a revolute margin. Other parts of upper pitchers are similar to their lower counterparts. Nepenthes bokorensis has a racemose inflorescence measuring up to 100 cm in length. It bears up to 80 flowers borne on one-flowered pedicels (≤9 mm long), or rarely two-flowered partial peduncles.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven to fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from September to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody spherical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a slightly flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are diamond-shaped to spindle-shaped, about long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from January to March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, urn-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three or seven on an umbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical, rounded or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from December to May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves prominently protruding.
Asystasia alba is an erect woody herb, growing to 0.5–0.75 m in height. Its 30–140 mm long leaves are ovate, acuminate or acute, pale green in colour and usually bristly when young. The inflorescence is 60–80 mm long, the flowers single or occasionally paired, the bracts and bracteoles about 2 mm long and the pedicels 1.5–3 mm long. The corolla is white or violet, and the tube 14–18 mm long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, hemispherical or bell- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding slightly above the rim.
Boronia rozefeldsii is an erect, woody shrub which grows to a height of and has pinnate leaves. The leaves are long and wide in outline on a petiole long with between three and seven leaflets. The end leaflet is narrow elliptic to narrow egg-shaped, long and wide and the side leaflets are a similar shape but longer. There are between three and seven flowers on a peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long.
Adult leaves are also arranged in opposite pairs, glossy green above and paler below, lance-shaped or curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branches on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle usually with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are globe-shaped, long and wide, the floral cup glabrous with longitudinal ribs. The sepals are up to long.
Eucalyptus redunca is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has grey and pale brown bark that is shed in short ribbons. The adult leaves are narrow-lance-shaped to lance-shaped, long and wide tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils or on the ends of branchlets in groups of five or seven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum that is about the same length as the floral cup. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody cup-shaped to oval capsule long and wide.
They have several longitudinal veins and are green with darker green or purplish mottling. The inflorescence is actually an umbel of flowers, but the peduncle is mostly underground with 3 to 12 flower-bearing pedicels rising above the surface, appearing separate. The flower has three flat, spreading, pointed oval or lance-shaped sepals and three narrower, linear or fingerlike petals. The sepals are pale or greenish and striped or streaked with dark purple.
Eucalyptus pellita is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, greyish or reddish, fibrous or flaky bark on the trunk and branches. Adult leaves are glossy green but paler on the lower surface, broadly lance-shaped to egg- shaped, long, wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped to oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between March and October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cylindrical or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are mostly arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped to oval, long and about wide with a conical to rounded or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves strongly protruding.
The funnel to awl shaped, stigma are hairy to slightly hairy. Its fruit are on 4-16 by 1.6–2.8 millimeters pedicels that are hairless to slightly hairy. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by a negligible to 6 by 1.2-2.3 millimeter stipe. The red, round to elliptical, smooth, hairless to slightly hairy fruit are 7–11 by 10-14 millimeters with rounded to pointed bases and rounded to pointed tips.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an erect, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to rhomboid, about long and wide with a conical to slightly beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from September to October and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to funnel-shaped capsule, glaucous at first and with the valves protruding strongly.
The pedicels have an oval, basal bract that is 1 by 1 millimeters, and another bract at their midpoint that is 1-1.5 by 1-2.5 millimeters. Its flowers have 3 triangular to oval sepals that are 1.5-3 by 2-3.5 millimeters. The sepals are covered in dense, brown hairs on their outer surface and sparse hairs on their inner surface. Its 6 petals are arranged in two rows of 3.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven to eleven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to slightly club-shaped, long and about wide with a conical operculum that is shorter than the floral cup. Flowering occurs in autumn and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Correa alba is a prostrate to spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of and has rust-coloured, woolly-hairy young stems. The leaves are leathery, elliptic to more or less round, long and wide on a petiole long. The lower side of the leaves is densely covered with woolly hairs. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to five on the ends of short side branches on pedicels long.
Philotheca eremicola is a shrub that grows to a height of about and has glabrous branchlets. The leaves are crowded near the ends of the branchlets, about long, glossy green and glandular-warty. The flowers are borne singly on the ends of the branchlets on slender pedicels about long. There are five egg- shaped to narrow triangular sepals about long with prominent brown glands and five elliptical, white petals with a pink midline and long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical, horn-shaped or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical, conical or cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding strongly.
Hakea scoparia is a rounded, many-stemmed shrub with smooth bark, ascending branches, high and does not form a lignotuber. The inflorescence consists of 50-70 pinkish-cream coloured flowers that appear in clusters in the leaf axils. The pedicels are smooth, the perianth cream coloured ageing to pink or orange-pink and the pistil long. The branchlets are densely covered in short, soft matted hairs or short, soft silky hairs at flowering time.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to rounded or slightly beaked operculum. Flowering mainly occurs between October and March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The leaves occasionally vary in shape, they may be linear, narrowly egg-shaped, flat or concave with prominent veins. The inflorescence consists of 8-14 white, sweetly scented flowers is a single raceme in clusters in the leaf axils or on old wood. The cream-white pedicels are smooth, the perianth cream-white and the pistils long. The egg-shaped fruit are the smallest in the genus less than long and wide.
Eucalyptus orthostemon is an upright, spreading mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth coppery and greyish to silvery bark. Adult leaves are the same shade of green on both sides, linear, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of five or seven a slightly flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The cylindrical or conical appearance of the pedicel (an uncoloured, cytoplasm-filled appendage attached to each ascospore) in P. appendiculata allows it to be distinguished easily from P. fimiseda, whose pedicels are club-like in shape. Podospora appendiculata was also discovered independently slightly after Auerswald in 1873 by the Finnish mycologist Petter Adolf Karsten, who classified it as Sordaria winteri, and in 1876 by Job Bicknell Ellis who classified it under the name Sphaeria amphicornis.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between five and eleven on a thin, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum long and wide. Flowering occurs from late spring to early summer the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule about long and wide with the valves level with the rim.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oblong to oval, long and wide with a flattened operculum. Flowering occurs from October or December to January or March and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in January and April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves at rim level or slightly protruding.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branching peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle having buds in groups of seven, the buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of three or seven on a branched peduncle long the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from November to December and the fowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical, hemispherical or cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are mostly arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are an elongated diamond shape, square in cross section, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs between June and August and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule that is square in cross-section, long and wide with the valves enclosed.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven, nine or eleven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and about wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in April and July and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, barrel- shaped or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle up to long, the individual buds sessile or on short pedicels. Mature buds oval to club-shaped, up to long and wide with a conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to more or less cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.
Eucalyptus longissima is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth greyish brown bark, usually with rough, fibrous or stringy bark on most of the trunk. The adult leaves are lance-shaped, long, wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in groups of between seven and fifteen in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on very short pedicels. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, glaucous, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs in July or November and the flowers are white or yellow. The fruit is a woody, conical capsule that is glaucous at first, long and wide with the valves protruding strongly.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven or nine on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped to pear-shaped or oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum with a small point on the tip, or conical. Flowering occurs between August and January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from January to February but the flower colour is not known. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical, conical or cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three or seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a hemispherical to conical operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from July or September to December and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Collinsia tinctoria is an annual herb producing a sturdy erect stem up to about 60 centimeters tall. The oppositely arranged leaves are triangular lance-shaped, sometimes toothed, and hairy on the undersides. The inflorescence is a series of widely spaced dense whorls of flowers, each whorl a crowded ring of flowers held on erect pedicels. The flower has five elongated sepals with rounded tips, the corolla angling sharply down from the mouth of the calyx.
The leaves are long and wide with their bases surrounding the branchlet. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of the branchlets in groups of seven on a thick, branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, oval or pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from March to October and the flowers are creamy white to pale yellow.
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.
Rorippa sessiliflora is glabrous (hairless) annual with erect stems and whose species epithet "sessiliflora" refers to the plant's short pedicels, between 0.5 – 2 mm in length. Stuckey notes other distinctive features for this species as compared to other members of the genus Rorippa, including thick siliques that are wedge-shaped at the base. Although some sources note the absence of petals, Radford et al. suggest the presence of diminutive petals less than 1.5 mm long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are glaucous, oval, long and wide with a beaked to horn-shaped operculum. Flowering occurs on November and February and the flowers are pale yellow to white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding strongly above the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of three, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical, bright red before flowering, long and wide with a conical or beaked operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from July to October and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped to cylindrical capsule with the valves at rim level or below it.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are ribbed, spindle-shaped to oval, long and wide with a prominently ribbed and beaked operculum. Flowering has been observed in October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, ribbed, conical or cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
Eucalyptus rameliana is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth greyish to brown bark. The adult leaves are the same shade of dull green on both sides, egg-shaped to broadly lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged singly in leaf axils, sometimes in groups of three, on a down-turned peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped, egg-shaped or elliptical, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded between December and February and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and eighteen on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum. Flowering occurs between September and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical capsule about long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, sometimes three, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from January to May and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical or barrel-shaped fruit that is long and wide with the valves enclosed below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on a dowturned, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are yellowish-brown, spindle-shaped and square in cross-section, long and wide, the operculum splitting into four as the bud develops. It blooms between January and March producing white flowers. The fruit is a woody, conical, four-winged capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils usually in groups of seven on an ubranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to oblong, long and wide with a beaked to horn-shaped operculum long. Flowering occurs between July and December and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, urn-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long, wide and glaucous, with the valves protruding prominently.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are spherical, long and wide with a rounded operculum that has a small point on the top. Flowering occurs from July to November and the flowers are pale cream-coloured to yellow. The fruit is a woody hemispherical, sometimes conical, capsule long and wide with the valves protruding prominently.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, about long and wide with a rounded, sometimes pointed operculum. Flowering occurs in January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Toothed Rock Cress Boechera dentata IllinoisWildflowers Boechera dentata is a short-lived herbaceous biennial.Boechera dentata Flora of North America It can be distinguished from other Boechera in its area by a combination of short fruits (reaching 4.2 cm) on short pedicels (reaching 3.5 mm), which are held spreading at maturity, and its wider stem leaves (reaching > 8 mm) that have a pubescent upper surface. It produces cream-colored flowers in the spring.
The flower buds are mostly arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to cylindrical, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between May and October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a sessile, woody, cup-shaped to funnel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
Drimia indica is a perennial herbaceous flowering plant which grows from bulbs. It has long leaves, typically 15–30 cm long by 1–2.5 cm wide, but sometimes considerably longer. The flowers, which appear in spring before the leaves, are borne in racemes on a leafless stem (scape) up to 60 cm long. The flowers are widely spaced on the raceme, which is 15–31 cm long, and are carried on stalks (pedicels) 2.5–4 cm long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and twenty one on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum that is shorter than the floral cup. Flowering occurs from November to December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum that is shorter and narrower than the floral cup. Flowering occurs from April to September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in the ends of branchlets in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped or cylindrical, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in October and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical to hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of seven, nine or eleven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to blunt conical operculum. Flowering occurs in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cylindrical, barrel-shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves usually below the level of the rim.
Eucalyptus kenneallyi is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth white to brownish bark that is shed in large plates or flakes. The adult leaves are the same shade of green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils, usually in groups of seven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear- shaped to oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in April and June and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule long and wide with a short neck and the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Eucalyptus × lamprocalyx is a crooked, spreading tree or shrub that grows to a height of up to . It has tessellated greyish bark on the trunk and branches. Adult leaves are arranged in opposite pairs, sessile, the same greyish green on both sides, broadly lance-shaped, long and wide. The flower buds are arranged in groups of between seven and eleven on a thick or slightly flattened peduncle long, the individual buds on thick pedicels up to long.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped to curved, mostly long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual flowers on pedicels long. Mature flower buds are oval or pear-shaped, covered with a whitish waxy bloom, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering mainly occurs between May and September and the flowers have pink stamens with yellow anthers on the tip.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of eleven, thirteen fifteen or more, the groups often paired, on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or club-shaped, long and wide with a conical or rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between December and February and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody conical or pear-shaped capsule, long and wide with the valves at abour rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with an operculum that is rounded with a central knob or conical. Flowering occurs from July to September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped, urn- shaped or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Adult leaves are arranged alternately, lance-shaped to egg-shaped, the same dull greyish to bluish green on both sides, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on a pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical, rounded or flattened operculum. It flowers in most months and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a thin, branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, about long and wide with a rounded operculum, sometimes with a small point in the centre. Flowering has been observed in February. The fruit is a woody urn-shaped capsule long and wide with a short neck and the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Adult leaves are the same shade of glossy green on both sides, lance-shaped to curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded or flattened operculum. Flowering occurs from September to January and the flowers are white.
P. juniperina exhibits characteristic pea flowers typical of the family Fabaceae, which are yellow to orange, often with darker reddish markings. Flowers are axillary, occurring on short lateral branches and ranging from terminal to apparently terminal, often clustered. Flowers are 7–13 mm long with 2–3 mm pedicels and glabrous to glabrescent sepals 4–7 mm in length, usually fused. Bracts are approximately 2 mm long, 2–3 lobed, ovate, subulate, keeled, persistent and glabrous.
It grows in rocky clay and often serpentine soils in grassland and woodland habitat, sometimes near vernal pools. This is a perennial herb growing from an oval-shaped corm up to 3 centimeters wide deep in the soil. The curving, widely branching stem is up to about half a meter in maximum height with linear leaves up to 30 centimeters long sheathing the lower portion. The inflorescence is a raceme or panicle of several flowers on pedicels.
Its fruit occur in clusters of 4-9 on pedicels that are 3-7.5 by 0.5-1.5 millimeters and covered in sparse, fine hairs. The smooth, densely hairy, oval fruit are 14-12 by 2.5-9 millimeters with flat tips. The fruit are attached to the pedicel by stipes that are 1-2 by 1-1.5 millimeters and covered in dense, brown, fine hairs. Each fruit has 2-4 seeds that are 8.5-10 by 7-9 millimeters.
The branchlets and flower buds have a waxy covering. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils usually in groups of between seven and eleven, on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are long and wide with a horn-shaped operculum that is longer than the floral cup. The flowers are pale creamy yellow and the fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped or spherical capsule long and wide.
The plant's buds and flowers are used for cooking in a variety of ways, including in pupusas. The name "loroco" is used throughout Mesoamerica to refer to Fernaldia pandurata.Azurdia, César; Loroco (Fernaldia pandurata, Apocynaceae), a Mesoamerican species in the process of domestication Fernaldia pandurata is an herbaceous vine with oblong-elliptical to broadly ovate leaves . long, 1.5–8 cm broad, inflorescences are generally somewhat shorter than the leaves, with 8–18 flowers, the pedicels 4–6 mm.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine on a thick, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical operculum that is often striated. Flowering occurs between January and March or April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, conical or hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between January and May and the flowers are white to cream-coloured. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are sometimes glaucous, oval, long and wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum, Flowering has been recorded in March, May and December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long, wide, sometimes glaucous at first, with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven or nine in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs from February to April or from November to December and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody globular, hemispherical or cup-shaped capsule long and wide, containing dark brown, pyramid-shaped seeds long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are shaped like long, thin spindles long and about wide with a horn-shaped operculum two or three times longer than the floral cup. Flowering occurs between December and January and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody cylindrical to barrel-shaped or conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, creamy yellow, long and wide with a rounded to bluntly beaked operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from November to January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical to shortened spherical capsule long and wide, strongly or weakly ribbed, with the valves protruding but fragile.
Adult leaves are lance-shaped, the same dull shade of green on both sides, long and wide on a petiole wide. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven or nine, on a sometimes branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from January to April and the flowers are white, cream-coloured or yellow.
The flower buds are usually arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering has been observed in March and August and the flowers are creamy-white. The fruit is usually a woody cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves more or less at the level of the rim.
Eucalyptus mimica is a mallet that typically grows to a height of and does not form a lignotuber. It has smooth, shiny green bark that is copper-coloured when fresh. Adult leaves are the same shade of glossy green on both sides, held erect, linear to narrow elliptical, long and wide on a petiole up to long. The flower buds are arranged in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a beaked operculum long. Flowering has been observed in October and November and the flowers are pale yellow to white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped, barrel-shaped or cylindrical capsule with the valves protruding above the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum with a small point in the centre. Flowering occurs between May and August and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is an urn-shaped capsule with thin walls and the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Claytonia exigua is a fleshy annual herb producing a patch of erect or leaning stems up to about 15 centimeters tall. The thick leaves are linear in shape and fingerlike near the base of the plant and crescent to disc-shaped farther up the stem. The plant is hairless and waxy and varies in color from green to pinkish, grayish, or brownish. The inflorescence holds several flowers on drooping pedicels which turn erect as the plant develops fruit.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets in groups of three or seven on a bristly, branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are globe-shaped, long and wide with white or creamy white petals that are long and wide with a green keel. Flowering has been observed in December and the fruit is a bristly, cup-shaped capsule long and wide with longitudinal ribs and the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same shade of green on both sides, narrow lance- shaped to lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are mostly arranged in leaf axils in clusters of between five and fifteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between September and February and the flowers are white.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of sevn or nine on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a prominently beaked to horn-shaped operculum long. Flowering occurs from August to December or from January to April and the flowers are white to cream- coloured or pale yellow. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped or urn-shaped capsule long and wide.
The leaf veins are prominent, well-spaced and at an angle greater than 45° to the leaf mid-rib. The flower buds are usually arranged at the ends of the branchlets, on a branched peduncle in groups of seven or nine, the peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club- shaped, yellow, long and about wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between August and January and the flowers are white to lemon-yellow.
On larger adult plants, there can be up to ten of these racemes, all branching from a 20–30 cm peduncle. It flowers in September, and the green-yellow buds of the flowers become orange or pink when open. It is especially closely related to Aloe macra, the highly variable species of Reunion island, and the two species look very similar. However Aloe purpurea can usually be distinguished by its longer, more dull-coloured, flowers with longer pedicels.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and about wide with a rounded, conical or beaked operculum. Flowering occurs between January and April or between July and September and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody hemispherical or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or slightly protruding.
Linum grandiflorum is a species of flax known by several common names, including flowering flax, red flax, scarlet flax, and crimson flax. It is native to Algeria, but it is known elsewhere in Northern Africa, Southern Europe and in several locations in North America as an introduced species. It is an annual herb producing an erect, branching stem lined with waxy, lance- shaped leaves 1 to 2 centimeters long. The inflorescence bears flowers on pedicels several centimeters long.
The pedicels are filiform, curved, pubescent, and hairy above. The spikelets have 1-2 fertile florets which is diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, and clumped with its floret callus being glabrous. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous and have acute apexes. Their other features are different; Lower glume is obovate, long and have an erosed apex while the upper one is lanceolate, long and have obtuse apex.
Grolleau is a high yielding grapevine that ripens reliably and relatively early for the cool climate Loire Valley-often right after Gamay. The vine produces medium-sized clusters clinging to the vine via its long, slender pedicels. The grapes are thin skinned with few phenolic compounds, but after veraison they produce color ranging from gray to bluish/black depending on the clone. There are currently five clones of the Grolleau vine authorized for viticulture in France.
This is an annual herb with a hairy, glandular stem up to 25 centimeters tall. The leaves are divided into smooth or toothed lobes, the largest leaves near the base of the plant measuring up to 2.5 centimeters long and the uppermost tiny and reduced. The inflorescence bears several flowers on threadlike, gland-studded pedicels. Each flower has a calyx of green sepals and white or pale blue or lavender tubular corolla just under a centimeter long.
The flowers are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with three or seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are globe-shaped, long and wide with a ribbed floral cup. The petals are white or creamy white with a green keel, long and wide. Flowering occurs between December and January and the fruit is a cup- shaped capsule long and wide with the valves enclosed in the fruit.
Kunzea salterae is a densely-branched shrub or small tree which grows to a height of with a pendulous or spreading crown wide. The leaves are linear to lance-shaped, long and wide. The flowers are white and arranged in groups of between two and eight and the individual flowers are in diameter on pedicels long. The five sepals are triangular, about long and wide and the five petals are more or less round, about long and wide.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on very short pedicels. Mature buds are broadly oval and wrinkled, long and wide with a rounded operculum that is shorter and narrower than the floral cup at the join. Flowering occurs in a short period in January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding.
The flower buds are mostly arranged in groups of seven on a branched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum, the floral cup more or less square in cross-section. Flowering occurs in most months and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical, hemispherical or cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves close to rim level.
Corymbia novoguinensis is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, fissured, flaky or fibrous and tessellated bark on the trunk and branches. The adult leaves are glossy green but paler on the lower surface, lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long.
The flowers buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, glaucous, long and wide with a beaked operculum that is longer than the floral cup. Flowering has been observed in July and the flowers are pale yellow. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim.
The stems hold 2 terminal (top of stem) flowers, blooming in late spring, between April and May, or June (in Russia). The flowers are held on pedicels (stalks) that are 0.5–2 cm long. The flowers are in diameter, come in shades of yellow, from bright yellow, to clear yellow, to dark yellow. It has 2 pairs of petals, 3 large sepals (outer petals), known as the 'falls' and 3 inner, smaller petals (or tepals), known as the 'standards'.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs in most months, peaking from January to April, and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped or cylindrical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
However the flower scent is conversely described by editors in Flora of Australia as "a strong smell, sometimes described as fetid". The flowers are surrounded by overlapping bracts long. The pedicels are long and covered with cream or rusty coloured hairs that are either short, soft and thickly matted or with flattened silky hairs, both forms extending onto the long perianth. The green fruit are smooth, obliquely egg-shaped and appear to resemble flat leaves, long and wide.
The tribe Indigofereae is a subdivision of the plant family Fabaceae. It is consistently recovered as a monophyletic clade in molecular phylogenies. The Indigofereae arose 30.0 ± 3.3 million years ago (in the Oligocene). This tribe does not currently have a node-based, phylogenetic definition, but it can be distinguished by the following morphological synapomorphies: the presence of biramous hairs, keel spurs, short free staminal filaments, and short fruiting pedicels; and the loss of stipels and seed arils.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of three on an unbanched peduncle, the individual buds sessile or an pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from December to April and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped, hemispherical or bell-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level or protruding slightly.
The midrib is pale yellow in contrast to the green lamina and the lateral veins are parallel to each other. The flowers are borne on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with seven buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded to blunt-conical operculum. Flowering occurs from February to May and the flowers are creamy yellow, pink or red.
The leaves may be uniformly coloured or vary on the upperside or underneath. The 6-20 compact, green-yellow or sometimes reddish, female or bi-sexual flowers are a floral tube long and flaring at the tips, usually hairy and appear in heads at the end of branches or in leaf axils. The flower bracts may be absent or not conspicuous, the style long, sometimes shorter in female flowers and the pedicels hairy. The dry, green fruit are long.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seven and fifteen on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are cylindrical to spindle- shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering occurs from August or October to December or January or April and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves below rim level.
Like the other species of the former genus Aconogonon (all now classified in Koenigia), the hybrid is a perennial, growing from short rhizomes. It grows to about , with leaves up at least long and about wide. The hybrid is intermediate in appearance between its parents. It differs from Koenigia weyrichii in having less persistent ochreas (sheaths surrounding the stems), less pointed leaves with fewer hairs on the underside, pedicels that are jointed in the upper part, and larger tepals.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between seventeen and twenty one on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on thin pedicels long. Mature buds are spindle-shaped, about long and wide with a conical operculum about long and wide. Flowering occurs in summer and the flowers are white. The fruit is a sessile, woody, shortened hemispherical capsule about long and wide with the valves below the rim of the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are club-shaped, long and wide and green, yellow or red with a rounded to conical operculum. Flowering occurs between November and December and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody cup- shaped, hemispherical or conical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in October and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, barrel-shaped or urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.
Eucalyptus orophila a tree that typically grows to a height of , or a shrub to on higher, exposed sites. The bark is rough, scaly and flaky near the base, smooth and grey above. The adult leaves are paler on the lower surface, egg-shaped to lance-shaped, long, wide on a petiole long. The flowers are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle up to long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long, wide with a conical operculum that is long, wide, but usually narrower than the floral cup. Flowering mainly occurs between September and November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped or conical capsule long and wide on a pedicel long with the valves below the rim.
The flower buds are glaucous at first, arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or oblong to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to horn-shaped operculum. Flowering has been recorded in November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, hemispherical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding well above the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long. Each branch of the peduncle has groups of seven buds, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are green, oval, about long and wide with a conical operculum. The flowers are white and the fruit is a woody pear-shaped, cup- shaped or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a flattened, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or a pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in November and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, conical to cup-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves protruding prominently above the rim of the fruit.
Eucalyptus ophitica is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull green, egg-shaped to lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long.
The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven on a branching peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are glaucous, oval to spindle-shaped, long and wide with a conical operculum. Flowering has been recorded in October and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, glaucous, cup-shaped to barrel-shaped capsule long and wide on a pedicel up to long with longitudinal ribs and the valves close to rim level.
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch of the peduncle with three buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a conical, beaked operculum. Flowering has been observed in January, April and November and the flowers are white or lemon-yellow. The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped to urn-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves inclosed in the fruit.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven on a slightly flattened, down- turned, unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds sessile or on thick pedicels long. Mature buds are oval long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from September to November and the flowers are red to pink, sometimes yellowish. The fruit is a woody, conical to slightly bell-shaped capsule, long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of between nine and fifteen on one or two unbranched peduncles long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs from March to May and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or conical capsule long and wide on a pedicel long and usually with three valves near the level of the rim.
Up to 100 (but usually fewer) orange-red flowers are arranged in an umbel at the top of the scape. The bracts underneath the umbel have withered by the time of full flowering. The individual pedicels (flower stalks) are long, and bend downwards when the fruit (a berry) is formed, whereas in most other species of Scadoxus they are upright at this stage. The flowers are somewhat differently shaped in different parts of the range of the species.
The flowers are grouped in axillary racemes. Pedicels are subtended by a linear bract and are straight or recurved outwards at fruitification. The corolla is pink, sometimes lightly so, and dark red or purple at the apex; it is 9-12 mm (0.35-0.47 in) in length. It is made up of four petals of which the outer upper and lower ones are free while the two inner ones are fused into a tube closed at the apex.
This in turn is made up of 2-7 compact clusters, with the basal cluster sometimes on a long erecto-patent peduncle. The colour of the subglabrous, linear-lanceolate lower bract ranges from straw-brown to scarious; this bract is much shorter than the inflorescence at a length of . No pedicels are present. The dark brown bracteoles are ovate, obtuse and sparsely ciliate above with either dentate or lacerate margins, reaching a length of up to .
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are club-shaped, long and wide with a rounded or conical operculum that is shorter and narrower than the floral cup at the join. Flowering occurs from October to January and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup- shaped, hemispherical or shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine, eleven or thirteen on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are pear-shaped to cylindrical, sometimes glaucous, long and wide with a ribbed, conical to beaked operculum. Flowering has been recorded in May and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a woody, elongated cup-shaped, cylindrical or conical capsule with the valves near rim level.
The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils in groups of seven, nine or eleven on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are club-shaped to diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to rounded operculum. Flowering mainly occurs from March to August and the flowers are white. The fruit is a woody, cup-shaped or barrel-shaped capsule long and wide with the valves near rim level.

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