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Staminate flowers are borne in hairy aments two to three inches long ; calyx pale yellow, hairy, deeply seven to nine-lobed ; stamens seven to nine ; anthers bright yellow.
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Staminate and flowers
Staminate flowers in racemes, borne on long, slender, drooping peduncles developed from the axils of crowded leaves on the spur-like branchlets of the previous year.
Staminate flowers are borne in hairy aments two and a half to three inches long ; the calyx is bright yellow, hairy, six to eight-lobed, with lobes shorter than the stamens ; anthers are yellow.
Staminate flowers are borne on aments that develop from buds formed in the leaf axils of the previous year, and pistillate flowers are borne on short stalks from the axils of current-year leaves.
Staminate flowers in a short racemen-like corymb three to four inches ( 75 – 100 mm ) long, pistillate flowers in a raceme ten to twelve inches ( 250 – 300 mm ) long.
Staminate flowers borne in two to three-flowered cymes ; the pedicels downy and bearing two minute bracts.
Staminate flowers are borne on long-stalked catkins at the tip of old wood or in the axils of the previous season's leaves.
Staminate and are
Staminate aments are pendulous, clustered or solitary in the axils of the last leaves of the branch of the year or near the ends of the short lateral branchlets of the year.
Staminate and ;
Staminate heads dark red, on axillary peduncles ; pistillate heads light green tinged with red, on longer terminal peduncles.
Staminate and .
flowers and are
Pansies are supposed to like it cool, but those great velvety flowers were healthy and perky in the glaring sun.
There will be masses of flowers, reproductions of the handsome old buildings with their grillwork and other things that are typical of New Orleans.
The flowers are in the main not particularly distinctive, being of a general ' lily type ', with six tepals, either free or fused from the base.
Species are used as food and flavourings ( e. g. onion, garlic, leek, asparagus, vanilla ), as cut flowers ( e. g. freesia, gladiolus, iris, orchids ), and as garden ornamentals ( e. g. day lilies, lily of the valley, Agapanthus ).
The flowers are often at the tip of the stem and are mainly of a rather generalized ' lily type ', with six tepals and up to six stamens.
They are commonly called " Christmas Bells ", because of the shape of their flowers and their flowering time, which coincides with Christmas in Australia.
The sub-umbellate inflorescences are borne at the end of long stems, having numerous bright red flowers, which are radially symmetric with inferior ovaries.
Members of the family are usually perennial herbs with sword-shaped unifacial leaves ; the inflorescence is a spike or panicle of solitary flowers, or forms a monochasial cyme or rhipidium ( meaning that the successive stems of the flowers follow a zig-zag path in the same plane ); and the flower has only three stamens, each opposite to an outer tepal.
The flowers are quite large, blue or white, forming an umbel at the end of a stem ( scape ) which is longer than the leaves.
They are herbaceous perennials with bulbs, and can be identified by their rather fleshy leaves, usually large and attractive flowers, with six stamens and an inferior ovary.
The flowers are solitary or, more frequently, arranged in umbellate inflorescences at the end of a stem ( scape ).
Proposed subgroups are difficult to recognise, having similar ' lily-like ' flowers, with the result that some members of the group have been included in different subgroups at different times.
Most aquatic species have a totally submerged juvenile phase, and flowers are either floating or emergent.
Several genera are popular with the horticultural community, including marigold, pot marigold ( also known as calendula ), cone flowers, various daisies, fleabane, chrysanthemums, dahlias, zinnias, and heleniums.
The flowers are nearly always aggregated in terminal umbels, simple or compound, often umbelliform cymes, rarely in heads.
flowers and borne
The leaves are dark glossy green, and the flowers white, similar to other citrus flowers, borne singly or clustered in the leaf-axils.
The small white, feathery flowers, with ten-cleft calyx and corolla, two stamens and bifid stigma, are borne generally on the previous year's wood, in racemes springing from the axils of the leaves.
They are characterised by alternate, usually pinnate leaves without stipules, and by syncarpous, apparently bisexual ( but actually mostly cryptically unisexual ) flowers borne in panicles, cymes, spikes, or clusters.
The inflorescences are borne on stalks typically 5 – 40 cm ( 2. 25-15. 75 in ) tall, and can be a short cone or a long spike, with numerous tiny wind-pollinated flowers.
Araceae are a family of monocotyledonous flowering plants in which flowers are borne on a type of inflorescence called a spadix.
The flowers are small, 2. 5 – 5 mm, apetalous, discoidal, and borne in erect terminal panicles 15 – 30 cm wide.
Pistillate flowers borne in a dense globose many-flowered head which appears on a short stout peduncle, axillary on shoots of the year.
The inconspicuous, self-fertile flowers are borne in the axil of the leaf and are white, pink or purple.
* A flower head or capitulum is a very contracted raceme in which the single sessile flowers share are borne on an enlarged stem.
The flowers are monoecious, opening with or before the leaves and borne once fully grown these leaves are usually 3-6 mm long on three-flowered clusters in the axils of the scales of drooping or erect catkins or aments.
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