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Caducous
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Falling off early. Same as fugacious. |
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Caespitose (cespitose)
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Growing in dense clumps or tufts; e.g., the growth form of some species of Poaceae and Cyperaceae. The clumps are also called tussocks. |
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Callus
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A thickened part of an organ; e.g., in some Orchidaceae, the fleshy outgrowth of the labellum, or in the Poaceae, the hardened base of the spikelet or floret just above the point of disarticulation. |
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Calycine rim
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Referring to a calyx in which the calyx-lobes are fused at their bases to form a rim that extends beyond the summit of the ovary. |
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Calycine ring
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The scar or vestigal calyx-lobes left around the circumference of the fruit at the points where the calyx-lobes (sepals) were attached. |
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Calyculus
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Rimlike calyx of Loranthaceae or a lower row of phyllaries of Asteraceae that can be distinguished from the remaining phyllaries. |
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Calyx (plural = calyces)
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The outer circle or first whorl of floral parts; a collective term for the sepals. |
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Calyx-lobe
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Similar to sepal but used to describe the lobe of a calyx with the sepals fused at their bases and with free lobes at the apex; less frequenly to describe species of some families that have inferior ovaries with the lower part of the calyx hypothesized to be fused to the ovary at the base but with free lobes departing from the apex of the ovary. |
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Calyx-lobes
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The outermost whorl of floral parts and nearly equivalent to sepals. See the general glossary for definitions of calyx and sepals. |
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Calyx-lobes imbricate
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Overlapping of the adjacent edges of the calyx-lobes or sepals. |
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Calyx-lobes not imbricate
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The base of the sepals do not overlap. |
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Cambium
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The actively dividing tissue located between the xylem and the phloem which produces xylem to the inside and phloem to the outside of the trunk or the stem.. |
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Campanulate
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Broadly bell-shaped with a wide mouth; usually used to describe a corolla or the shape of a fruit. |
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Campanulate fruit
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Broadly bell-shaped fruit with a wide mouth. |
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Campina
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A Portuguese term referring to a vegetation type similar to savanna found on white sand soils in the Brazilian Amazon. |
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Campinarana
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A Brazilian name for a low forest growing on white sand which is the first step in plant succession starting with open, white sand areas caused by disturbance, then to campina, followed by campinarana, and finally to terra firme forest. |
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Campo rupestre
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A Portuguese term referring to a rocky kind of savanna, usually at midelevations in Brazil. Species of several plant families; e.g., Asteraceae, Eriocaulaceae, Melastomataceae, Velloziaceae, Xyridaceae, etc., are characteristic of this vegetation. |
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Camptódroma
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Se refiere a un tipo de disposición de los nervios en las hojas, en la que los nervios secundarios no alcanzan el margen y no forman una serie de prominentes arcos submarginales. Comparar con broquidódroma |
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Canaliculate
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A channel or groove that runs the length of a stucture such as a petiole or midrib. Used mostly to describe petioles and midribs. |
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Canaliculate
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A channel or groove that runs the length of a stucture such as a petiole or midrib. Used to describe petioles and midribs. |
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Canopy tree
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A species of tree in which adult individuals occupy the more or less continuous canopy layer of a forest which, in lowland neotropical rainforests, is less than 20 m in height. |
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Canopy tree layer
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A hypothetical layer in tropical rain forest consisting of trees that form a ± continuous layer commonly at a maximum height of about 25–35 meters in the Neotropics. |
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Capitate
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Shaped like a head; having or growing in a head (capitulum). |
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Capitulum (plural = capitula)
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A dense inflorescence of sessile flowers on a dilated receptacle or in a (sub) globose or head-like form; for example, the inflorescences of Asteraceae, some Cyperaceae, Laminaceae, and Rubiaceae. |
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Capsule
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A dry, dehiscent fruit that develops from a syncarpous ovary; it can open in the middle of the locules (loculicidal), along the septa (septicidal), or around the circumference (circumscissile). |
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Captiulum (plural = capitula
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A dense headlike inflorescence such as that of the Asteraceae and some Cyperaceae, Lamiaceae, and Rubiaceae. Same as head for the Asteraceae. |
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Carbohydrate
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A group of organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and including sugars, starches, cellulose, and gums. Carbohydrates are produced through photosynthesis and serve as a major source of energy for the plants that produce them and the animals that eat those plants. |
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Carina (carinate)
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A keel or ridge (possessing a keel, ridged like the bottom of a boat; same as keeled). |
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Carnivory (adj. = carnivorous)
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A plant which captures animals such as rotifers, mosquito larvae, adult insects, etc. which are decomposed on or within the leaves of the plant and the nutrients released (e.g., nitrogen) are assimilated by the plant. This term also applies to animals eating other animals. |
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Carpel
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The fundamental unit of the gynoecium, often considered to be a folded, specialized leaf. |
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Carpel
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The fundamental unit of the gynoecium, often considered to be a folded, specialized leaf. |
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Carpellate flower
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Referring to unisexual flowers with functional gynoecia but without functional stamens (staminodes may be present). Same as female or carpellate flowers. |
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Caruncle
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An appendage or outgrowth at the point of attachment of the seed to the funicle. Compare with aril. |
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Caruncle
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An outgrowth or appendage at or near the hilum or near the point where the funicle originates of some seeds, |
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Cat-claw tendril
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A tendril with the distal part divided into three equal, conspicuously recurved, spiny parts; e.g., in Macfadyena unguis-cati and Parabignonia steyermarkii (Bignoniaceae). |
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Catadromous
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Referring to a venation pattern in which the first vein in a given segment arises on the side of the leaf segment toward the base. |
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Catáfilo
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Bráctea escuamiforme localizada en las ramas terminales y/o protegiendo los nuevos brotes |
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Cataphyll
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Scale-like bract inserted toward the base of a newly expanded vegetative or reproductive shoot. |
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Cataphyll
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Scale-like bract on the proximal part of a new expanded vegetative or reproductive shoot. |
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Catkin
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A spike with closely congested, often apetalous, unisexual flowers; e.g., staminate inflorescences of species of Betulaceae. Same as ament. Catkins are generally associated with wind pollination. |
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Cauliflorous inflorescence
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Referring to an inflorescence that arises from the main stem of a plant or trunk of a tree. |
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Cauline
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Of or associated with the stem or trunk of a plant, such as a cauline inflorescence or infurctuescence. |
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Cauline inflorescence
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Refers to flowers or fruits that arise below the leaves from the main trunk of a shrub or tree. |
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Cauline inflorescence
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Refers to flowers or fruits that arise below the leaves from the main trunk of a shrub or tree. |
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Centrifugal stamen initiation
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A developmental process in which the stamens first initate near the center of the androecium (i.e., around the style) and then progressively toward the outside of the androecium. In other words, the stamens initiate and develop from the inside to the outstide of the androecium. |
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Centripetal stamen initiation
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A developmental process in which the stamens first initate on the outside of the androecium (i.e., around the edge of the staminal) and progressively develop from the outside to the inside of the androecium. |
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Cerebriform
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Referring to a globoid structure, such as a fruit, that has a convulted and folded surface similar to that of a brain. |
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Cerrado
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A Portuguese term referring to a type of vegetation with scatttered shrubs and relatively small, often contorted trees with thick bark and grasses and sedges dominating the understory. |
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Cerrado
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A Portuguese term referring to a savanna-like vegetation best developed in central Brazil but also found in patches in the Brazilian Amazon and in other South and Central American countries where it is called savanna. |
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Chalaza
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The part of an ovule or seed opposite the micropyle. In this part of the embryo sac the integument(s) are not differentiated from the nucellus.. |
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