Results 171 to 180 of about 5,219 (200)
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FLORAL DEVELOPMENT IN MANGROVE RHIZOPHORACEAE
American Journal of Botany, 1987The flowers of mangrove Rhizophoraceae (tribe Rhizophoreae) are adapted to three different pollination mechanisms. Floral development of representative species of all four genera suggests that the ancestral flower of the tribe was unspecialized, with successively initiated whorls of separate sepals, petals, antisepalous stamens, and antipetalous ...
Adrian M. Juncosa, P. B. Tomlinson
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Rhizophoraceae madagascarienses novae
1954(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Wood Anatomy of the Rhizophoraceae
1976The wood anatomy of 127 samples of 65 species of all 18 genera of the Rhizophoraceae is described in detail; features not observed here, but recorded in the literature are added. Wood anatomically several groups can be recognized. Three distinct groups are very homogeneous, coinciding with the Rhizophoreae ( Bruguiera, Ceriops, Kandelia, and Rhizophora)
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Floral morphology and phylogenetic analysis inCrossostylis (Rhizophoraceae)
Journal of Plant Research, 1996Floral morphology in all ten species ofCrossostylis, one of the inland genera of Rhizophoraceae and is distributed in the South Pacific Islands, was studied to increase our knowledge on floral features of individual species as well as on relationships among the species.
Hiroaki Setoguchi +2 more
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Morphological studies on some inland Rhizophoraceae
1974(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Geh, Siew Yin., Keng, Hsuan
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THE GENUS CARALLIA (RHIZOPHORACEAE) IN CEYLON
Acta Botanica Neerlandica, 1982SUMMARY Apart from the common Carallia brachiata (Lour.) Merr. and the rare C. calycina Benth. (reduced by Ding Hou, but re-instated correctly by Macnae & Fosberg), two further Ceylonese species are described: C. orophila sp. nov. (based on C. calycina var. b. Thw.) and C. paucinervia sp. nov.
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RHIZOPHORACEAE FROM THE YUCATAN PENINSULA MEXICO
1990(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Architecture and Phyllotaxis of Anisophyllea disticha (Rhizophoraceae)
1983(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Vincent, J. R. +1 more
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1979
Evergreen trees or shrubs. Leaves opposite or rarely alternate. Stipules interpetiolar, soon deciduous. Flowers solitary or in axillary, forked or cymose inflorescences, hermaphrodite, actinomorphic. Receptacle campanulate. Sepals persistent, free.
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Evergreen trees or shrubs. Leaves opposite or rarely alternate. Stipules interpetiolar, soon deciduous. Flowers solitary or in axillary, forked or cymose inflorescences, hermaphrodite, actinomorphic. Receptacle campanulate. Sepals persistent, free.
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1955
Evergreen trees or shrubs, mangrove species with various remarkable root formations. Branching (in the mangrove genera) mostly sympodial; branchlets swollen at the nodes, solid and pithy, hollow in Crossostylis, Gynotroches, and Pellacalyx. Innovation continuous, but flushwise in Anisophyllea.
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Evergreen trees or shrubs, mangrove species with various remarkable root formations. Branching (in the mangrove genera) mostly sympodial; branchlets swollen at the nodes, solid and pithy, hollow in Crossostylis, Gynotroches, and Pellacalyx. Innovation continuous, but flushwise in Anisophyllea.
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