Carpels consist of a
stigma, usually mounted at the tip of a
style with an
ovary at the
base.
Full article >>>carpel -- A unit of the
pistil; it is
evolutionarily a modified
leaf.
casts --
Fossils formed when water containing
minerals leaks into a mold. The
minerals harden to form a copy of the
original structure or
organism.
Full article >>>carpels The female reproductive structures of a
flower; consisting of the
ovary,
style, and
stigma. PICTURE
carrageenan Chemical extracted from red
algae that is added to commercial ice creams as an emulsifying agent.
Full article >>>carpel The reproductive unit of
angiosperms composed of a
placental surface and
ovules. A component of the
gynoecium.
carpellate A uni
sexual flower having
carpels but no
stamens.
carpo
spore spores produced by the carpo
sporophyte form of red
algae ...
Full article >>>carpel(kar-pel) [Gk. karpos, fruit]
The female reproductive
organ of a
flower, consisting of the
stigma,
style, and
ovary.
Full article >>>Carpels the wrist bones
(carpo = wrist)
Caryophyllaceae
plant family commonly known as the pinks because the
flower petals have jagged edges as though cut with pinking shears; typically the stems are swollen at the joints ...
Full article >>>carpelThe female reproductive
organ of a
flower, consisting of the
stigma,
style and
ovary.
Covered in Lab 8
Seed Plant Reproduction ...
Full article >>>Plants adapted to outcross or cross-pollinise have taller
stamens than
carpels to better spread pollen to other
flowers.
Full article >>>Hermaphrodite is used in botany to describe a
flower that has both staminate (male, pollen-producing) and
carpelate (female,
seed-producing) parts. Other terms for this condition are bi
sexual and perfect.
Full article >>>plants with seeds enclosed by
carpels, that is, ovaries; contrast to
gymnospermSource: Noland, George B. 1983. General
Biology, 11th Edition. St. Louis, MO. C. V. Mosby
A
flowering
plant. Seeds are enclosed by a matured
ovary (fruit).
Full article >>>(Gr.
gymnos
=naked;
sperm=
seed): Woody
plants whose life histories include alternation of generations and
ovules are not enclosed in a
carpel. The pollen typically germinates on the surface of the
ovule. A
super
classin the
sperm plants ( ...
Full article >>>It surrounds Whorl 2, which is fated to become the
petals, the white inner floral leaves. Whorl 3 is fated to become
stamens, which contains the male
organs. The innermost whorl (Whorl 4) is fated to become the
carpels, which will form the
ovary (Fig.
Full article >>>'"/>