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cypsela การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Seeds are ordinarily dispersed intact with the fruiting body, the cypsela.
  • The small achene-like fruits are called cypsela.
  • The fruit, a cypsela, is roughly 2 or 3 millimeters long.
  • The fruit is a ribbed, hairless cypsela.
  • Botanically speaking, it is a cypsela.
  • The fruit is a cypsela with a seeds are dispersed by animals, perhaps waterfowl.
  • No longer a residential bishopric, Cypsela is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.
  • For example, the white-gray husks of a sunflower " seed " are the walls of the cypsela fruit.
  • The smooth brown fruit, known as a cypsela, is 2 to 3 mm long with the pappus radiating from one end.
  • While this was happening, Philip attacked and occupied the cities in Thrace which still belonged to Ptolemy, Maroneia, Cypsela, Doriscos, Serrheum and Aemus.
  • The genus is distinguished morphologically by the pales, which are modified to completely and tightly enclose the mature cypsela ( achene ) and often have a tuberculate surface.
  • From the 7th century onward, the bishopric of Cypsela, initially a suffragan of Traianopolis, appears in the " Notitiae Episcopatuum " as an autocephalous archdiocese.
  • During the journey back to Italy after the victory at Magnesia and the end of the Syrian war, the consul Manlius Vulso ran into trouble near Cypsela in Thrace.
  • Each of the species was originally named as a member of " Brickellia ", and later transferred when King and Robinson named the genus . " Asanthus " and " Brickellia " both have cypsela ( achenes ) with 10 ribs, but in " Asanthus " the style is glabrous and narrow at the base whereas in " Brickellia " the style has a pubescent, enlarged base.
  • Wind dispersal is common ( " epizoochory ", in which the dispersal unit, a single cypsela ( e . g . " Bidens " ) or entire capitulum ( e . g . " Arctium " ) provided with hooks, spines or some equivalent structure, sticks to the fur or plumage of an animal ( or even to clothes, as in the photo ) just to fall off later far from its mother plant.