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Some Features in the Anatomy of the Sapindales
Botanical Gazette, 1912In studying the phylogeny of plants, there are certain general principles upon which all conclusions are based. One of these deals with the retention of ancestral-characteristics. A striking example of this is afforded by the anatomy of the cycads. The vegetative stem of these forms always has exclusively centrifugal metaxylem, but in the leaf petiole,
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Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 2021
Khaya grandifoliola is a well-known tree species in Africa with a conservation status of 'vulnerable' due to its overexploitation by the wood industry. Several studies have recorded numerous ethnobotanical uses of this plant, as well as the scientific validation of the efficacy of extracts from different plant parts used for the treatment of various ...
Yusuf Ola Mukaila +2 more
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Khaya grandifoliola is a well-known tree species in Africa with a conservation status of 'vulnerable' due to its overexploitation by the wood industry. Several studies have recorded numerous ethnobotanical uses of this plant, as well as the scientific validation of the efficacy of extracts from different plant parts used for the treatment of various ...
Yusuf Ola Mukaila +2 more
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Brazilian Journal of Botany, 2021
Cuticular waxes play an important role in plant survival in terrestrial environments. They are part of the cuticle and form a hydrophobic barrier associated with a decline in water loss through cuticular transpiration. Data on the chemical and morphological composition of cuticular waxes in Sapindales have been collected for more than 5th years.
Lucas Paradizo Roma +1 more
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Cuticular waxes play an important role in plant survival in terrestrial environments. They are part of the cuticle and form a hydrophobic barrier associated with a decline in water loss through cuticular transpiration. Data on the chemical and morphological composition of cuticular waxes in Sapindales have been collected for more than 5th years.
Lucas Paradizo Roma +1 more
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Floral organogenesis of Delavaya toxocarpa (Sapindaceae; Sapindales)
Journal of Systematics and Evolution, 2009Abstract The floral organogenesis and development of Delavaya toxocarpa Franch. (Sapindaceae) were studied under scanning electron microscope and light microscope to determine its systematic position within Sapindaceae. Flowers arise in terminal thyrses. The sepal primordia initiate in a spiral (2/5) sequence, which are not synchronous. The five petal
Li‐Min CAO, Nian‐He XIA
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2010
Nineteenth century botanists, such as Bentham (in Bentham and Hooker 1862) and Engler (e.g., 1931), tended to treat Sapindales and Rutales (the latter sometimes as Geraniales) as distinct orders, a concept followed by Takhtajan (2009) to the present day; however, a wider ordinal concept with Rutales included in Sapindales, as Terebinthales (Wettstein ...
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Nineteenth century botanists, such as Bentham (in Bentham and Hooker 1862) and Engler (e.g., 1931), tended to treat Sapindales and Rutales (the latter sometimes as Geraniales) as distinct orders, a concept followed by Takhtajan (2009) to the present day; however, a wider ordinal concept with Rutales included in Sapindales, as Terebinthales (Wettstein ...
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Physical dormancy in seeds of Dodonaea viscosa (Sapindales, Sapindaceae) from Hawaii
Seed Science Research, 2004Dormancy in seeds ofDodonaea viscosais due to a water-impermeable seed coat (physical dormancy, PY). Thus, mechanically scarified seeds imbibed water (c.95% increase in mass) and germinated to high percentages over a wide range of temperature regimes in both white light and darkness, whereas non-scarified seeds did not take up water. Dry heat at 80–160°
Jerry M. Baskin +4 more
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Editorial: Diversity and evolution of Neotropical Sapindales
Brazilian Journal of Botany, 2022Diego Demarco +2 more
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The wood anatomy of Sapindales: diversity and evolution of wood characters
Brazilian Journal of Botany, 2022Marcelo R. Pace +6 more
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2009
Amphipterygium was originally placed in its own family, Julianiaceae, mainly because of its unique infructescences, which form samaroid dispersal units containing a single fertile, one-seeded fruit and three or more sterile fruits enclosed in a cupulelike structure.
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Amphipterygium was originally placed in its own family, Julianiaceae, mainly because of its unique infructescences, which form samaroid dispersal units containing a single fertile, one-seeded fruit and three or more sterile fruits enclosed in a cupulelike structure.
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