When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sympodial branching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sympodial_branching

    Sympodial growth is a bifurcating branching pattern where one branch develops more strongly than the other, resulting in the stronger branches forming the primary shoot and the weaker branches appearing laterally. [1]

  3. Maianthemum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maianthemum

    Maianthemum paludicola has an unusual woody, upright sympodial rhizome set above ground. [5] Roots may be spread along the rhizome, clumped at the nodes, or clumped near the base of leafy shoots. The rhizome is the perennial part of the plant and growth is by branching of the rhizome.

  4. Monocotyledon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocotyledon

    The Atactostele stem, the long and linear leaves, the absence of secondary growth (see the biomechanics of living in the water), roots in groups instead of a single root branching (related to the nature of the substrate), including sympodial use, are consistent with a water source.

  5. BBCH-scale (solaneous fruit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBCH-scale_(solaneous_fruit)

    1 For tomatoes with determinate stem growth, paprika and aubergines. In tomatoes with indeterminate stem growth and only one sympodial branch at the corresponding axis, the apical side shoot formation occurs concurrently with the emergence of the inflorescence (Principal growth stage 5), so that the coding within principal growth stage 2 is not necessary

  6. BBCH-scale (potato) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBCH-scale_(potato)

    First leaf of third order branch above second inflorescence unfolded (> 4 cm) 132: Second leaf of third order branch above second inflorescence unfolded (> 4 cm) 13 . Stages continuous till ... 1NX: Xth leaf of nth order branch above (n-1)th inflorescence unfolded (> 4 cm) 2: Formation of basal side shoots below and above soil surface (main ...

  7. Rhizome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhizome

    Examples of plants that are propagated this way include hops, asparagus, ginger, irises, lily of the valley, cannas, and sympodial orchids. Stored rhizomes are subject to bacterial and fungal infections, making them unsuitable for replanting and greatly diminishing stocks. However, rhizomes can also be produced artificially from tissue cultures.

  8. Glossary of mycology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_mycology

    sympodial A mode of conidiogenous cell growth which results in the development of conidia on a geniculate or zig-zag rachis, due to repeated termination and branching. Examples include Cercospora and Helminthosporium. [374] synanamorph Fungi which have multiple anamorph, or imperfect, phases. [375] synctium

  9. Polylepis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polylepis

    Branching pattern and leaf arrangement: Polylepis trees tend to have twisted, crooked stems and branches with repeated sympodial branching. Contorted growth is often associated with windy, cold, or arid habitats. The leaves are generally congested along the branch tips often at the end of long, naked branch segments. [2]