ligulate การใช้
- The corolla of either a ray flower or of a ligulate flower.
- Silver saxifrage resembles rosette of ligulate, white-toothed basal leaves.
- Leaf shape is ovate (-oblong ), sometimes lanceolate or ligulate.
- The leaves are long, linear and ligulate.
- The head is ligulate, bearing many yellow ray florets but no disc florets.
- The head is ligulate, containing many yellow ray florets but no disc florets.
- "Aechmea mulfordii " has leathery green leaves ligulate or sword-shaped.
- The flower heads contain five ligulate florets in shades of lavender or pink to white.
- Corymbose-paniculate inflorescences with heads that have clusters of 10 to 15 bisexual ligulate flowers.
- These pseudobulbs carry on their top 6 to 7, narrowly ligulate-lanceolate, acute, plicate, leathery leaves.
- The flowers are ligulate, bearing long ray florets with toothed ends, which may be white, cream, or pale yellow.
- These are articulated, basally conduplicate, ligulate sometimes with acute apex, thin and narrow, very malleable, light green colored.
- Flowers in capitula, with yellow, ligulate florets, flowering May-June ( hysteranthous, flowers appearing after leaf development ).
- The flowers are hermaphrodite The outer flowers are ligulate, bright yellow and feminine, while the inner ones are tubular, dark yellow and bisexual.
- In members of Asteraceae, a "'ligule "'is the elongated tongue of the corolla of a ray flower or ligulate flower.
- Flowers in capitula, arranged in corymbs, florets 4, ligulate, yellow, reddish at the lower surface, flowers July October, fruit a pappose achene.
- All species are spiny, thistle-like in appearance, with flowerheads that consist of yellow ( rarely orange or white ) ligulate florets, and canals that contain latex.
- The two leaves ( occasionally one ) last from May to October, are narrowly ligulate to near elliptic, are almost erect and appear after the flowers which bloom between March and April.
- "' Leclercqia "'is a genus of early ligulate lycophyte ( clubmoss ), known as fossils from the Middle Devonian of Australia, North America, Germany, and Belgium.
- During late spring or early summer, yellow orange or brown, hairlike or ligulate structures called telia grow on the leaves or emerge from bark of woody hosts such as " Juniperus " species.
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