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axillary bud

Listing 1 - 10 from 41 for axillary bud

Handbook 4
... to examine it, you see that the continuation of the horizontal axis proceeds from an axillary bud at every fourth node. At that point you pull off your mask, ignore the herons ...
peopleandplants.org

Propagating House Plants
... to place the cutting in right side up. Leaf-bud Cuttings Leaf-bud cuttings (Figure 2) provide an excellent means of propagating ... axillary bud per cutting. Double-eye cuttings are taken from plants with opposite leaves, and have two leaves and buds per cutting. A leaf-bud ... , gloxinia and snake plant. Since leaf cuttings do not include an axillary bud (which gives rise to the new plant), they can only ...
pubs.caes.uga.edu

Vegetative Terminology (Part 2)
... normally develop. The spine is technically a modified, sharp-pointed leaf. Since it has a bud in its axil, the spine occurs in the relative position of a leaf. Some spines ... from the leaf axil. The spines are homologous (similar in structure & origin) to bud scales of an axillary bud. Although they arise in a leaf axil, they are not homologous to a stem ...
waynesword.palomar.edu

OSU PCMB - Dr. Morris Cline's Profile
... foraging animals damage the terminal bud of a vegetative shoot, the next lower axillary bud often will grow out in its place. What is the signal that releases this bud? What are the biochemical ... 90: 230-237. (A mini-review) Cline, M.G. 1996. Exogenous auxin effects on lateral bud outgrowth in decapitated shoots. Annals of Botany 78: 255-266. Cline, M.G. 1996. Gravity ...
www.biosci.ohio-state.edu

Atriplex confertifolia, shadscale saltbush
... green. Axillary bud leaves 1-12 mm (0.04-0.5 in) long and 1-7 mm (0.04-0.3 in) wide, persistent. Staminate flowers numerous, small, sessile in dense axillary glomerules or short leafy terminal spikes. Pistillate flowers fewer, larger, in axillary glomerules or subpaniculate spikes, flowering and fruiting in Summer. ...
www.biosurvey.ou.edu

untitled
untitled Index AX AXIL: The angle formed between a leaf's petiole and a stem where an axillary bud develops. The angle formed on an inflorescence, pedicel and rachis (of an Orchid). AXILLARY: Pertaining to or growing from the axil of plants; produced in the axil. AXIS: The stem; the central part or upright support of a plant to which organs or parts are attached. Return to the HOME PAGE.
www.botany.com

Bamboo lower stems
Bamboo lower stems Culms of an arborescent bamboo arise from the horizontal rhizome system. In the center, a young shoot still possesses the large leaves of the primary shoot. Each leaf is attached at a node by an encircling leaf base. When the leaf abscises, a circular leaf scare is formed. An axillary bud occurs just above each node and here is visible at a few nodes. [Return to Text]
www.botgard.ucla.edu

Bamboo Rhizomes
Bamboo Rhizomes Creeping rhizomes of this bamboo produce robust vertical green shoots. At the left, a new shoot with large leaves is rapidly emerging. the leaves of older shoots have abscised, leaving the circular leaf scars. Above the node, an axillary bud can be observed. [Return to Text]
www.botgard.ucla.edu
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Wisconsin Vascular Plants: Details Page
... more or less epetiolate leave then float away with what appears to be an attached axillary bud (?), from which a root (and shoot?) develops. Broken portions of the cord-lIke stems Text ...
www.botany.wisc.edu

Wisconsin Vascular Plants: Details Page
... more or less epetiolate leave then float away with what appears to be an attached axillary bud (?), from which a root (and shoot?) develops. Broken portions of the cord-lIke stems Text ...
www.botany.wisc.edu
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