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Page "Brassicaceae" ¶ 10
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pistil and is
The stamens are usually found around the style, either aggregated densely or fused into a tube, probably an adaptation in association with the plunger ( brush ; or secondary ) pollination that is common among the families of the order, wherein pollen is collected and stored on the length of the pistil.
Kalmia is classified according to Linnaeus ' sexual system in class Decandria, order Monogyna, because it has 10 stamen s and one pistil
The flowers are small, and disposed in clusters on short stalks ; the corolla is composed of five yellowish-white petals, the anthers are heart-shaped, and the pistil consists of three carpels united to form a three-chambered ovary.
A somewhat narrower, ' petal ' is the pistil which is connected down to a three-chambered ovary.
The pistil has a one-celled inferior ovary, the style thick, short, light green, and the stigma broad ; there is one ovule in each cell.
It is derived from the fusion of both male and female parts ( stamens and pistil ) into a single organ.
This young flower is about to open its anthers, but has not yet fully developed its pistil.
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.
The superior gynoecium has 2 to 5 carpels ( members of a compound pistil ) and is syncarpous, i. e. with these carpels united in a compound ovary.
There are usually 3-4 stigmas attached to a single pistil per flower, which is 1 or 3-4 carpellate.
The pollen is delivered by the opening of anthers for subsequent pollination, that is, for the transfer of pollen grains to the pistil, the female reproductive organ.
It is believed that pollen tubes react to a combination of chemical, electrical, and mechanical cues during its journey through the pistil.
The gynoecium is a compound pistil of three united carpels with one locule.
Heterostyly – the presence of two ( distylous ) or three ( tristylous ) distinct flower morphs within a species differing in the lengths of the pistil and stamens – is common within the Lythraceae.
Self-pollination is a form of pollination that can occur when a flower has both stamen and a carpel ( pistil ) in which the cultivar or species is self fertile and the stamens and the sticky stigma of the carpel contact each other in order to accomplish pollination.
: and its pistil is that golden palace,

pistil and made
The pistil is made up of five free carpels ( i. e. they are not fused ), each containing a single ovule.

pistil and two
The gynoecium consists of two carpels fused into a single, bicarpellate pistil with an inferior ovary.
The gynoecium consists of a compound pistil with two carpels.
The androecium consists in two whorls of five stamens each, some of which can be unfertile ; the pistil consists of five ( less commonly three ) merged carpels.
The pistil on female flowers has a superior ovary, four-celled, rudimentary in staminate flowers ; style wanting, stigma sessile, four-lobed ; ovules one or two in each cell.
Numerous pistils, attached directly to the base, are partially united to various degrees with distinct stigma, with one or two ovules per pistil ; the style and stigma are club-shaped or narrowly conic.
The S-locus contains two basic protein coding regions-one expressed in the pistil, and the other in the anther and / or pollen ( referred to as the female and male determinants, respectively ).
Since SSI is determined by a diploid genotype, the pollen and pistil each express the translation products of two different alleles, i. e. two male and two female determinants.
SI loci always contain only two alleles in the population, one of which is dominant over the other, in both pollen and pistil.

pistil and fused
A pistil can consist of either a single carpel ( in a monocarpous or apocarpous gynoecium ), in which case it is called a simple pistil, or of several fused carpels ( in a syncarpous gynoecium ), in which case it is called a compound pistil.

pistil and carpels
It consists of one compound pistil with 2 carpels, a single style, and a superior ovary with typically 2 locules ( more rarely 1 or 4 ), each bearing numerous axile ovules.
There are many stamens in several whorls around a compound pistil, which results from the fusion of carpels.
The gynoecium consists of a compound pistil with 2 to 100 carpels.
The four to five carpels of the compound pistil have each an erect style.
The flowers are small, and disposed in little clusters on short stalks ; the corolla is composed of five yellowish-white petals, the anthers are heart-shaped, and the pistil consists of three carpels united to form a three-chambered ovary.
The pistil is the female reproductive organ of a flower that is composed of an ovary and several free carpels the style and the stigma.
Centre of a Tulipa aucheriana ( Tulip ) showing multiple connate carpels ( a compound pistil ) surrounded by stamens.

pistil and style
This means that the style and stigma of the pistil, with the filaments and one or more anthers, are all united.
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 glabrous, smooth style -- the usually slender part of a pistil, situated between the ovary and the stigma -- is 22. 7 mm ( 0. 89 inch ) long where it widens at the apex.
The disk in a pistil is the slightly thickened, or otherwise distinguished region, around the style in certain flowers that secret nectar.
The pistil head, the separate part attached to the style, is 0. 71 to 1. 0 mm high.
The style of a pistil is the tube-like portion between the stigma and the ovary.

pistil and very
Byblis species look very similar to Drosera and Drosophyllum, but are distinguished by their zygomorphic flowers, with five curved stamens off to one side of the pistil.

pistil and short
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.
In one morph ( termed pin or longuistylous flower ) the stamens are short and the pistils are long ; in the second morph ( termed thrum or brevistylous flower ) the stamens are long and the pistils are short ; the length of the pistil in one morph equals the length of the stamens in the second morph, and vice versa.
In one morph, the pistil is short, and the stamens are long and intermediate ; in the second morph, the pistil is intermediate, and the stamens are short and long ; in the third morph, the pistil is long, and the stamens are short and intermediate.
The pistil is short and thick.

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