pedicel 1. A tiny stalk; the support of a single flower. 2. The stalk of the sporangia. See also: seta. GardenWeb Glossary of Botanical Terms New Search: ...
Pedicel A flower stem, as opposed to a leaf stem, or the peduncle, from which the individual pedicels arise.
pedicel The stalk of an individual flower in an inflorescence. pendulous Hanging down, drooping. petal One division of the corolla. petaloid like or consisting of petals.
Pedicel The stalk of a flower or fruit when in a cluster or when solitary. Peduncle The stalk of a flower cluster or a single flower when the flower is solitary, or the remaining member of a reduced inflorescence.
pedicel The stem of an individual flower. peduncle The main stem supporting a cluster of flowers (as opposed to a pedicel, which is the stem of an individual flower). pendulous More or less hanging or declined.
pedicel A flower stalk that holds either a flower or fruit singly or in an inflorescence. peduncle ...
o Corymb - pedicels of older flowers longer than those of younger flowers, which brings all of them to nearly the same level.
pedicel search for term- n. (L. pedicellus, foot) the stalk of a flower in an inflorescence.peduncle search for term- n. (LL. pedunculus, small foot) the stalk of a flower borne singly or the stalk of an inflorescence.
starting at the base of the leaf biennial: a plant that completes its life cycle in 2 years bracteoles: the structures that subtend (occur below) a single flower in an inflorescence bracts: structures found at the base of a pedicel or ...
The elegant clusters resemble pink parasols, the bell-shaped flowers suspended as little jewels from arched pedicels. After the flowers are pollinated the pedicels straighten up.
The infection spreads down the pedicel and the tissue becomes water-soaked and dark green. The leaves on blighted terminals turn brown to black and usually remain firmly attached to the infected twig throughout the growing season.
Symptoms: Apple scab can be observed on leaves, petioles, blossoms, sepals, fruit, pedicels, and less frequently, on young shoots and bud scales.
See also: Plant, Flower, Genera, Leaf, Stalk
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