Uninodal

Word UNINODAL
Character 8
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Uninodal"

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The word "uninodal" in example sentences

Spring-shoots uninodal in some, multinodal in other species. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

All the species, like the Soft Pines, are uninodal and the cones are dehiscent at maturity, but the trend toward the serotinous species is shown in the occasional appearance of the oblique cone as a varietal form of a few species, and in the persistent cone of the last two species of this group. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

The second group, the Australes, contains species with small ray-pits, cones dehiscent at maturity and spring-shoots gradually changing, among the species, from a uninodal to a multinodal form. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

The branchlet, as here understood, is the whole of a season's growth from a single bud, and may consist of a single internode (uninodal, fig. 12-a) or of two or more internodes (multinodal, fig. 13), each internode being defined by a leafless base and a terminal node of buds. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

The uninodal spring-shoot may remain so throughout the growing season and become a uninodal branchlet. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

On uninodal shoots they are necessarily subterminal (fig. 34), the lateral pistillate flower being possible only on multinodal shoots (fig. 35) where it is often associated with the subterminal flower (fig. 33). ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

Spring-shoots conspicuously pruinose, uninodal or not infrequently multinodal. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

In the Lariciones the cone is symmetrical, and dehiscent and deciduous at maturity, while the spring-shoot is uninodal. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

For Pines are not sharply divided into multinodal and uninodal species, and no exact segregation of them, based on this difference, is possible. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

Or a summer-shoot may appear on vigorous branches of any species with the result of converting a uninodal spring-shoot into an imperfect multinodal branchlet. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

The first group, the Lariciones, contains species with large ray-pits, cones dehiscent at maturity, and uninodal spring-shoots. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

The spring-shoot is uninodal in all Soft Pines and in many Hard Pines, but, in P. taeda and its allies and in species with serotinous cones, it is more or less prevalently multinodal. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

Spring-shoots uninodal, slightly or not at all pruinose. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

On uninodal branchlets they form an apical group consisting of a terminal bud with a whorl of subterminal buds about its base. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

From a most searching investigation of all the phenomena presented by the _Seiches_ in the Swiss Lakes, Forel deduces the conclusion that they are really movements of steady uninodal oscillations (balanced undulations), in which the whole mass of water in the lake rhythmically swings from shore to shore. ❋ George Wharton James (1890)

a uninodal species, while the latter is characteristically multinodal. ❋ George Russell Shaw (1892)

Perhaps these lakes may be too large to manifest the uninodal rhythmical oscillations which have been so successfully studied by Forel in the smaller lakes of Switzerland. [ ❋ George Wharton James (1890)

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