Examples of 'carpels' in a sentence
Meaning of "carpels"
Carpel: a part of a flower that contains the ovary and eventually develops into a fruit after fertilization
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- plural of carpel
How to use "carpels" in a sentence
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carpels
Carpels have hair and are fused together.
A flower with only carpels is called gynoecious.
Carpels normally with one common style.
There are five carpels and one pistil.
The carpels are not joined at the base.
The pistil consists of two connate carpels.
The carpels often exist as a flat single whorl.
Mature fruiting receptacle and carpels unknown.
The carpels are fused together.
The ovary is made of three fused carpels.
They feed on the carpels of their host plant.
They open irregularly by detachment of the carpels.
Each of the three carpels bears six seeds.
A capsule is a structure composed of two or more carpels.
The number of carpels that form the gynoecium.
See also
A flower may have one or multiple carpels.
A silique consists of two carpels joined margin to margin.
Carpels are the female reproductive organs.
The pistils are composed of two to many connate carpels.
The number of carpels is variable.
Several stamen surround a cluster of carpels.
Carpels are linear and basally growing from one base.
There are mostly two to four rarely up to eight carpels.
Carpels with free styles.
Persian oranges are commonly divided into ten carpels.
The carpels are free and the anthers lack appendages.
This can be one or a number of carpels that are united together.
The gynoecium is unilocular and composed of three fused carpels.
At maturity and in fruit the carpels lie in a whorled arrangement.
A plant whose flowers contain both stamen and carpels.
The three to five carpels are partially fused at the base.
Gynoecium is the term for all of the carpels of a plant.
Stamens and carpels are not regularly present in each flower or floret.
A pistil may consist of a single carpel or a number of carpels fused together.
If the carpels are fused together then there is only one pistil.
The ovary is composed of three carpels with two or more ovules in each.
The carpels are invisible and the stamens have virtually disappeared.
A pome is an accessory fruit composed of one or more carpels surrounded by accessory tissue.
Within the carpels are ovules which develop into seeds after fertilization.
Fruits are formed of loosely cohering or almost free carpels the ripened pistels.
The carpels and stamen are compacted tightly within the seagrass flower.
Each flower has four projecting stamens and two fused carpels.
Five antesepalous carpels develop into a saccate gynoecium with axile placentation.
The fruit develops from several separate carpels of the same flower.
Ovaries consist of two carpels with each containing two single seeded locules.
Their fruit are round and smooth and formed from multiple fused carpels.
Flowers that contain both stamens and carpels are called perfect flowers.
The ovules are numerous and attached near the margins of the carpels.
Each flower has two large joined carpels which are bright green in colour.
The specific epithet transversa refers to the transversal ribbed carpels of the fruit.