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Cotiledones ausentes
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Se refiere a un embrión masivo en el que los cotiledones no son obvios. |
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Cotiledones carnosos
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Se refiere a los cotiledones gruesos y carnosos |
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Cotiledones foliares
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Se refiere a los cotiledones que tienen una apariencia similar a la de las hojas |
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Cotyledon
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The leaves (one in monocots and two in dicots) of an embryo that often emerge when the seed germinates. Some cotyledons, however, remain within the seed coat. |
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Cotyledons
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Seed leaves, i.e., the embryonic leaves. |
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Cotyledons
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Seed leaves, i.e., the embryonic leaves. |
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Cotyledons absent
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A massive embryo that shows no obvious cotyledons |
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Cotyledons absent (= embryo macropodial)
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A massive embryo that shows no obvious cotyledons. |
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Cotyledons arched
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Cotyledons that are bowed in such a way that there is an air space between which is usually an adaptation for water dispersal. |
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Cotyledons bowed
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Referring to cotyledons that are arched in such a way that they form an air chamber thought to aid in dispersal, either by the wind or by water. |
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Cotyledons carnose
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Cotyledons thick and providing nutrition to the developing embryo and seedling. When the cotyledons are carnose in the Sapotaceae endosperm is usually lacking. Same as cotyledons fleshy. |
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Cotyledons cryptocotylar
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A type of seed germination in which the cotyledons remain within the seed coat at germination. Compare with phanerocotylar. |
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Cotyledons cryptocotylar
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Cotyledons that remain within the seed coat at germination. In the Lecythidaceae the seed coat is thin and fragile and breaks apart as the embryo increases in size. |
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Cotyledons epigeal
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At germination the cotyledons emerge from the seed coat above the ground. |
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Cotyledons epigeal
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At germination the cotyledons emerge from the seed coat above the ground. |
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Cotyledons fleshy
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Cotyledons very thick, not leaf-like; e.g., the cotyledons of a bean. |
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Cotyledons fleshy, irregular (= cotyledons plano-convex)
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Seed leaves (= cotyledons) that are fleshy and irregular. |
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Cotyledons foliaceous (= cotyledons leaf-like)
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Cotyledons that look like leaves but differ in their opposite instead of alternate attachment. Same as cotyledons leaf-like which is the preferred term. |
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Cotyledons foliaceous (=cotyledons leaf-like)
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Referring to cotyledons that are not carnose but instead are thin and leaf-like. In the Sapotaceae, species with foliaceous cotyledons generall have endosperm. |
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Cotyledons hypogeal
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A type of seed germination in which the cotyledons are retained below the ground. |
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Cotyledons leaf-like
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Cotyledons that look like leaves. |
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Cotyledons leaf-like (= cotyledons foliaceous)
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Cotyledons that look like leaves but differ in their opposite instead of alternate attachment. |
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Cotyledons phanerocotylar
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A type of seed germination in which the cotyledons emerge from the seed coat at germination.. |
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Cotyledons plano-convex (= cotyledons fleshy, irregular)
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Same as cotyledons fleshy. We no longer use plano-convex because the cotyledons are very irregular and are not plano-convex as in, for example, the embryo of species of Gustavia. |
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Crasinucelada, crasinucelado
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Se refiere a la nucela con un tejido bien desarrollado entre la epidermis y el saco embrionario. Comparar con tenuinucelada. |
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