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Monad
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Referring to pollen grains that occur singly, i.e., they separate immediately after meiosis. |
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Monadelphous
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Referring to stamens united by their filaments into a single group. |
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Moniliform
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Cylindric but constricted at regular intervals and, thus, appearing like a string of beads; e.g., the staminal hairs of Commelinaceae. |
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Mono-
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A prefix meaning one. |
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Monocarp
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A unit of the fruit of apocarpous Annonaceae (e.g., Guatteria spp. and Unonopsis spp.), Menispermaceae, Monimiaceae, Ochnaceae, and Simaroubaceae.. |
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Monocarpy (monocarpic or monocarpous)
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Referring to plants that die after a single episode of flowering and fruiting; e.g., many bambusoid Poaceae and Tachigali (Fabaceae). Same as hapaxanthic and semelparic and opposite of iteroparic, pleionanthic, or polycarpic. |
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Monochlamydeous
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Referring to a flower with a single whorl of perianth parts; same as a uniseriate perianth. Compare with heterochlamydeous. |
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Monocliny (monoclinous)
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A species with functionally bisexual flowers; there is only one kind of monoclinous species. Same as homoecioius. Compare with dicliny. |
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Monocolpate
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A pollen grain with a single colpus. |
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Monocotyledon (monocot)
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One of the two classes of angiosperms usually characterized by having one cotyledon, parallel-veined leaves, and flower parts most often in threes. In the classification of Cronquist (1981), this class is called Liliopsida. In the APG classification it is not a monophyletic group. Palms and grasses are examples of economically important monnocots. |
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Monoecy (monoecious)
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Referring to the sexual condition of a species of plant that bears male (staminate) and (female) pistillate flowers on the same plant. This is also an example of one of the two kinds of monoclinous species. Compare with dioecious. |
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Monogeneric
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Referring to a plant family with a single genus. |
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Monograph
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A scientific publication that includes all information known about a group of plants throughout its geographic range; e.g., Flora Neotropica Monographs. |
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Monographer
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A botanist who prepares a monograph. |
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Monomorphic
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Referring to structures or organs within a species or individual that do not differ distinctly in form or size. Compare with dimorphic and heteromorphic. |
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Monophyletic
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A group derived from the same ancestral taxon. |
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Monopodial
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Referring to plants with indeterminate growth along one axis. Monopodial stems and branches appear straight. |
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Monopodial growth
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Referring to plants with indeterminate growth along one axis; i.e., the stem grows from the apex and the growth appears straight. |
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Monospecific
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Referring to a higher taxonomic unit, such as a genus or family, composed of a single species. |
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Monosulcate pollen
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Referring to a pollen grain with one groove or furrow. |
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Monosymmetric flower
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A flower capable of being divided into only two equal parts (mirror images) by a line passing through the middle of a flower, i.e., other lines passing the middle of the flower will not give mirror images of one another; same as zygomorphic, bilaterally symmetrical, and irregular flowers and opposite of actinomorphic, monosymmetric, radially symmetrical, and regular flowers. This term can refer to other plant parts as well. |
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Monothecous
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Referring to an anther with a single theca. |
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Monotypic
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Referring to a genus with a single species. |
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Morichal
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A Spanish name referring to a palm swamp dominated by moriche palms Mauritia flexuosa. Same as aguajal also in Spanish and burital in Portuguese. |
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Morph
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A phenotypic or genetic variant. |
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Morphology
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Referring to the study of the form and structure of organisms. |
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Moss life cycle
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Alternation of generations of a moss . The conspicuous, green, represents the gametophyte generation which is everything between the spore and the embryo in this illustration whereas the sporophyte is consists of the stalk and capsule elevated above the green gametophyte generation. |
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Mucilage
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A sticky, viscous liquid; e.g., that present among the leaf bases of Rapateaceae or in canals penetrating the ovary and sepals of some Lecythidaceae. |
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Mucilage ducts (= mucilaginous ducts)
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Longitudinally oriented ducts that penetrate the ovary and sepals of some species of Lecythis. These ducts produce a mucilage that is hypothesized as a way to protect the fruits from predation, i.e., insects and other animals get their mouth parts gummed up if they try to penetrate the fruit wall. |
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Mucro (mucronate)
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A sharp point at the apex of a leaf or a similar structure, e.g., a bract. |
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Muellerian bodies (also spelled Müllerian bodies)
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Glycogen-rich food bodies located on fuzzy pads (trichilia) at the base of the petiole of some species of Cecropia (Cecropiaceae). Compare with pearl bodies. |
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Multiple big bang phenology
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A flowering strategy in which abundant flowers are produced each day for a few days at several different times of the year. |
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Multiple fruit
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A fruit formed from the ovaries of more than one flower, e.g., the pineapple fruit which consists of the fusion of the ovaries of the flowers of an inflorescence as the fruits develop. |
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Multiseriado
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Se refiere a una estructura con más de dos verticilos o hileras, como el perianto. Comparar con uniseriado. |
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Multiseriate
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Referring to a structure, such as a perianth, with more than two whorls or rows. Compare with uniseriate. |
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Muricate
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Rough because of the presence of short, often stiff, protuberances. |
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Muticous
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Blunt, without a point. |
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Mutualism
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A symbiotic relationship between two organisms that benefits both; examples are the relationship of Azteca ants with species of Cecropia (the ants receive food and shelter and the plant is protected from preditors by the ants) and the relationship between mycorrhizal fungi and plants (the fungus receives carbohydrates and the plant receives nutrients). |
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Mycelium (plural = mycelia)
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The totality of hyphae that comprise the above and below ground parts of a fungus. |
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Mycoheterotroph (adj.= mycoheterotrophic)
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Unable to synthesize organic compounds from inorganic substrates, i.e., this kind of plant does not photosynethesize and is not green in color because it lacks chlorophyll. It is called a mycoheterotroph because it receives photosynthate from other plants through fungal ( = mycorrhizal) connections. |
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Mycoheterotroph (mycoheterotrophic)
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A heterotrophic plant that is without chlorophyll, lives on decayed plant material, and depends on a symbiotic relationship with a fungus to obtain food. |
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Mycorrhiza (plural = mycorrhizae)
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A mutualistic symbiotic relationship between certain fungi and the roots of many species of vascular plants. Both the fungus and the vascular plant benefit---the fungus receives carbohydrates from the plant and the plant receives receives mineral nutrients from the fungus. In order to facilitate the transfer of carbohydrate and minerals the hyphae of the fungus penetrate the roots of the vascular plant hosts. |
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Myrcioid embryo
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A type of embryo found in the Myrtaceae in which the cotyledons are normally thin, leafy, and folded, and the narrow, cylindrical hypocotyl is about the same length as the cotyledons and encircling them. Compare with eugenioid embryo and myrtoid embryo. |
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Myristicaceous branching
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A growth form found in the plant family Myristicaceae in which the main trunk is orthotropous and with spiral phyllotaxy, and the branches are plagiotropous with distichous phyllotaxy. |
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Myrmecochory
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Dispersal of seeds by ants. |
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Myrmecophory
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Referring to ants that carry away diaspores from parent plants. The ants are usually attracted to fleshy structures associated with seeds. Same as ant dispersal. |
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Myrmecophyte
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Referring to a plant with a symbiotic relationship with ants; in the Orchidaceae, this normally refers to a plant which has a specific species of ant inhabiting the roots or other structure such as the pseudobulb, e.g. in Calaurthron billamelatum, the pseudobulb is hollow and inhabitated by ants; in Tococa guianensis (Melastomataceae), the bases of the leaves have domatia which are inhabited by ants. |
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Myrtoid embryo
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A variable type of embryo found in the Myrtaceae in which the hypocotyl is the same length or much longer than the cotyledons; in genera with hard seed coats, the embryo is C-shaped; in genera with membranous or submembranous seed coats, the hypocotyl often is greatly swollen, and sometimes the whole embryo forms a spiral. Compare with eugenioid embryo and myrcioid embryo. |
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Myxocarpy
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The production of mucilage by fruits or seeds which may aid in seed dispersal by facilitating the attachment of the diaspores to dispersal agents. Same as myxodiasporic. |
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Myxodiaspory (myxodiasporic)
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The production of mucilage by fruits or seeds which may aid in seed dispersal by facilitating the attachment of the diaspores to to dispersal agents. Same as myxodiasporic. Do not confuse with mucilage ducts in fruit walls which are thought to produce mucilage that protects the seeds from predation by insects and other animals. |
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