tomentum การใช้
- The young expanding leaves are whitish or pinkish with very soft tomentum.
- New growth is margined with a short but dense white woolly tomentum.
- The branches are covered with a creamy white tomentum very long lasting.
- The new leaf spear and edges of the petioles are covered with a white tomentum.
- Capsule, ?inch long, S ! broad, rather turgid, densely covered with rusty tomentum.
- The acorn cups are light grey to almost white, with pointed, overlapping scales, covered with tomentum.
- The stems grow to 2 5 m tall, with numerous petioles are covered in brown tomentum and armed with sharp spines.
- The Latin word meaning'cushion stuffing,'tomentum, is used to describe a woolly coating formed by the tomentose hairs.
- The individual tomentum ); and the edges of the caps have a layer of very fine hairs and are lobed and wavy.
- The underside is covered by light brown tomentum and rhizines except on raised areas that correspond to the depressions on the upper surface.
- There are no clamp connections in the epicuticular hyphae, but there are on the hyphae of the tomentum at the base of the pileus.
- The tomentum of " Pallidum " species is thick, like felt, and typically aggregates into clumps of shaggy or woolly hair.
- The larvae were found feeding in the abundant fulvous cottony tomentum of the host plant, with which the spathe and other parts of inflorescence is clothed.
- When society members tour the Huies'garden they notice refinements of the leaves, such as the presence of velvety reddish or white tomentum on the undersides.
- The tomentum is thickest on the underside of the leaves, and can become worn off on the upper side, leaving the top surface glabrous with age.
- With the exception of " A . laevigatum ", all species have a thin separating layer, the cortex, between the hymenium and the tomentum.
- Its primary distinguishing characteristic from other North American " Tilia " species is the presence of dense felt ( tomentum ) of white hairs on the underside of the leaves.
- The species name comes from the Latin word " tomentum ", meaning " covered with dense short hairs, " referring to the underside of the leaves which help identify the species.
- He described the species as " fol . ovatis subtus tomentosis ", leaving no doubt that the plant was named from the tomentum, or wooly hairs, on the underside of the leaves.
- The exoperidium of " Ollum " species, in comparison, has a thin tomentum of fine hairs; fruit bodies are funnel-shaped and have either a constricted base or a distinct stipe.
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