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Page "Nepeta" ¶ 4
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calyx and is
The calyx is tubular.
The fruit is composed of the receptacle or upper end of the flower-stalk ( the so-called calyx tube ) greatly dilated.
A drink called solo is made from a decoction of the plant calyx.
The perianth is composed of two whorls, a fused tubular calyx, and a tubular corolla with one lobe larger than the other two.
The generic name is derived from the Greek words ευ ( eu ) " well " and καλυπτος ( kalyptos ) " covered ," referring to the operculum on the calyx that initially conceals the flower.
The calyx is made separately.
* Sea grape ( Coccoloba uvifera ; Polygonaceae )-the fruit is a dry capsule surrounded by fleshy calyx
* Wintergreen ( Gaultheria procumbens )-the fruit is a dry capsule surrounded by fleshy calyx
The calyx is long and tubular, swollen at the bottom, and sharply angled, surmounted by five sharp teeth.
* When the bract is attached to the stem holding the flower ( the pedicel or peduncle ), it is said to be recaulescent ; sometimes these bracts or bracteoles are highly modified and appear to be appendages of the flower calyx.
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.
The calyx is usually 4-5 lobed ; the corolla tubular, 2-lipped or 5-lobed ; stamens either 2 or 4 arranged in pairs and inserted on the corolla ; and the ovary superior, 2-carpellate, with axile placentation.
The staminate ( male ) flowers are without either calyx or corolla ; they consist simply of stamens, varying in number from two to ten, accompanied by a nectariferous gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is itself borne on the rachis of a drooping raceme called a catkin, or ament.
The pistillate ( female ) flowers are also without calyx or corolla, and consist of a single ovary accompanied by a small, flat nectar gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is likewise borne on the rachis of a catkin.
The calyx is bell-shaped.
The calyx generally remains attached to the fruit after harvesting, but becomes easy to remove once the fruit is ripe.
This is a sound, ripe kaki, soft enough for one to lift the calyx out cleanly and split the fruit for eating
At that stage the skin might be splitting and the calyx can easily be plucked out of the fruit before serving, which often is a good sign that the soft fruit is ready to eat.
The calyx is tubular, equally five-toothed, persistent ; the corolla is equally five-lobed, imbricate in the bud, cream-white, one-quarter of an inch across ; lobes acute, and slightly erose.
The calyx ( plural, calices, the sepals ) and the corolla ( the petals ) are the outer sterile whorls of the flower, which together form what is known as the perianth.
They have four curled-back petals and two high stamens with yellow or red anthers, between which is the low pistil ; the petals and stamens fall off after the flower is fertilized, leaving the pistil in the calyx tube.

calyx and tubular
They present a cupular calyx campanulate to tubular, truncate, bilabiate or 5-lobed.
The blossoms themselves each consist of about twenty stamens and a single pistil, bound together at the base by a short, green, tubular corolla and an even shorter calyx, just 5 mm long altogether.
The calyx is hairy, 5-lobed, tubular or funnel-shaped, enlarging as the fruit ripens.
The calyx is tubular or campanulate with five or ten veins visible.
The calyx ( eventually ruptured by the growing berry ) consists of bell-shaped or tubular sepals forming short, triangular lobes.
The tubular calyx is formed by 2-5 united sepals.
The long tubular calyx has five pointed red teeth.

calyx and they
The flowers are produced in clusters directly on the trunk and older branches ; they are small, diameter, with pink calyx.
The highly aromatic flowers, produced in clusters of 1-3, are 1 cm long with a four-lobed creamy yellow calyx ; they appear in early summer and are followed by clusters of fruit, a small cherry-like drupe 1-1. 7 cm long, orange-red covered in silvery scales.
The flowers are small, with a four-lobed calyx and no petals ; they are often fragrant.
Despite their appearance, the flowers are not formed from petals – rather they are a pigmented modification of the calyx.
The two of the petals called " wings " are so small that they are practically hidden within the calyx.
When they are plucked from the plant, the calyx will usually adhere and they will detach with a noticeable cracking sound.

calyx and are
Flowers across the Apiaceae are fairly uniform and are usually perfect ( hermaphroditic ) and actinomorphic, but some are andromonoecious, polygamomonoecious, or even dioecious ( as in Acronema ), with a distinct calyx and corolla, but the calyx if often highly reduced, to the point of being undetectable in many species, while the corolla can be white, yellow, pink or purple.
Some of the synapomorphies of the order are: leaves in spiral, secondary veins palmated, calyx or perianth valvate, elevated stomatal calyx / perianth with separate styles.
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.
The leaves are trifoliate ( rarely 5-or 7-foliate ), with stipules adnate to the leaf-stalk, and heads or dense spikes of small red, purple, white, or yellow flowers ; the small, few-seeded pods are enclosed in the calyx.
Fruits are typically cut from the vine just above the calyx owing to the somewhat woody stems.
They are placed under the hood of the calyx and are supported on long stalks.
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.
Flowers have the ovary free, but the petals and stamen are borne on the calyx.
Cloves are harvested when 1. 5 – 2 cm long, and consist of a long calyx, terminating in four spreading sepals, and four unopened petals which form a small ball in the center.
Examples of accessory tissue are the receptacle of strawberries, figs, or mulberries, and the calyx of Gaultheria procumbens or Syzygium jambos.

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