The source of floral chaos.The source of floral chaos Virtually all flowering plants plants which have stamens and pistils, and produce true seeds; phenogamous plants; - distinguished from See also: Flowering display their blossoms in highly symmetric arrangements, spacing them evenly from top to bottom and left to right along each branch. Moreover, all flowers on a given plant tend to have the same number of petals, stamens and other parts. But on the honey locust, flower formation appears downright chaotic. This tree's saucer-shaped flowers orient themselves haphazardly, vary unpredictably in size, and sometimes have inverted inverted reverse in position, direction or order. inverted L block a pattern of local filtration anesthesia commonly used in laparotomy in the ox. carpels, the organs that hold the female reproductive tissue. Electron microscopy of six species of honey locust -- a primitive member of the legume legume (lĕ`gy m, lĭgy family -- reveals asymmetry even within unopened buds, says Shirley C. Tucker of Louisiana CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend the civil code, and to add to it such laws still in force as were not included therein. State University in Baton Rouge. Tucker proposes that the unruly flower formation stems from the locust's lack of bracts, the leaf-like sheaths that envelop en·vel·op tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops 1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" most flower buds. Her comparisons of plants with and without bracts suggest that these structures orient individual flowers and establish their pattern of distribution. Noting that several other primitive trees also exhibit floral asymmetry, Tucker says studies of those species may help to verify the bract's apparent link to floral chaos. |
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m, lĭgy
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