Results 201 to 210 of about 13,759 (241)

Local people's interaction with Wejig-Mahgo-Waren Massif Forest in Southern Tigray, Ethiopia. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Ethnobiol Ethnomed
Hishe M   +4 more
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VITACEAE

Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 2003
Arobba et al. (1984), Bamzai and Randhawa (1965), Erdtman (1952), Erdtman et al. (1961, 1963), Faegri and Iversen (1989), Kuprianova and Alyoshina (1978), Lombardo et al. (1978), Maas (1977), Moore et al. (1991), Nema and Sharma (1981), Reille (1967, 1995, 1998), Straka (1954), Valdes et al. (1987), Visset (1971), Wodehouse (1935).
A. Marks, W. Punt, P.P. Hoen
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Seed Morphology of Vitaceae

International Journal of Plant Sciences, 2011
Seeds of Vitaceae can be easily recognized by their unique features, a pair of ventral infolds and a dorsal chalaza knot, but the inter- and intrageneric morphological variation in seed morphology has not been explored in detail. To facilitate identification of genera based on seed morphology, a study of 252 extant seeds representing all 15 genera of ...
Steven R. Manchester, Iju Chen
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Clematicissus pruinata, a New Combination in Vitaceae

Novon, A Journal for Botanical Nomenclature, 2023
As part of the taxonomic revision of the family Vitaceae for the Argentinean Flora, a new combination, Clematicissus pruinata (Weinm.) C. A. Zanotti & A. M. Panizza, is established as the correct name for the taxon known up to now as C. simsiana (Roem. & Schult.) Lombardi.
Adela María Panizza   +1 more
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Vegetative Features of the Vitaceae

2015
This chapter focuses on the nonreproductive features of the grape family, especially the unique and unusual ones. The most unusual is the initiation of the uncommitted primordia directly from the shoot apical meristem (SAM) opposite the leaf primordium.
Usher Posluszny   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Reproductive Features of the Vitaceae

2015
This chapter discusses aspects of the reproductive features within the Vitaceae from the point of view of development, within a comparative systematics framework. The typical stages of inflorescence initiation and development are illustrated, as well as the variability in mature inflorescence patterns present across the clades.
Usher Posluszny   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Morpho-Histogenic Studies on Tendrils of Vitaceae

American Journal of Botany, 1970
The origin and development of the tendrils were studied in 16 species of the Vitaceae: Ampelopsis (7 sp.), Parthenocissus (4 sp.), Vitis (3 sp.), and Tetrastigma (1 sp.). Two types of arrangement of leaf and tendril occur: (a) two successive nodes have leaf‐opposed tendrils alternating with each other, followed by a third node, with a leaf unopposed by
J. J. Shah, Y. S. Dave
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Notes on Ethiopian Vitaceae and Burseraceae

Nordic Journal of Botany, 1984
In Vitaceae three new species of Cyphostemma (Planch.) Alston are described: C. boranense Vollesen, C. burgeri Vollesen, C. pannosum Vollesen. The new combinations Cyphostemma betiforme (Chiov.) Vollesen, C. dembianense (Chiov.) Vollesen and C. oxyphyllum (A. Rich.) Vollesen are proposed. Cayratia ruspolii (Gilg) Suesseng.
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Woods of the Vitaceae—fossil and modern

Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 1994
Vitaceoxylon tiffneyi gen. et sp. nov. and Vitaceoxylon carlquistii sp. nov. from the Middle Eocene Clarno formation are the oldest known woods with characteristics of the Vitaceae. They are characterized by a tendency to two diameter classes of vessels, wide and tall rays, and a high proportion of their area is vessel.
Elisabeth A. Wheeler, C. A. LaPasha
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