-
gymnosperms are
anemophilous, as are many
plants in the
order Poales,
including gr****es, sedges, and rushes.
Other common anemophilous plants are oaks...
- the wind, in
which case the
plant is
described as
anemophilous (literally wind-loving).
Anemophilous plants typically produce great quantities of very...
- (a spike), with incon****uous or no petals,
usually wind-pollinated (
anemophilous) but
sometimes insect-pollinated (as in Salix). They
contain many, usually...
- bees visited,
although honey may also
contain airborne pollens from
anemophilous plants, spores, and dust due to
attraction by the
electrostatic charge...
-
mutlilobed integument. It is
suspected that the
extension was
involved in
anemophilous (wind) pollination.
Runcaria sheds new
light on the
sequence of character...
-
usually hermaphroditic —
maize being an
important exception — and
mainly anemophilous or wind-pollinated,
although insects occasionally play a role. Lemma...
-
Flowering occurs from
early summer to
early autumn;
pollination is
anemophilous. The
fruit is a
small achene. Seed
dispersal occurs by gravity. A. absinthium...
- gynomonoecious, polygamodioecious, polygamomonoecious, and polygamous.
anemophilous Adapted to
pollination by wind.
anemophily Adaptation to pollination...
- sterile,
without seeds. The
seeds are
mostly small and winged, and are
anemophilous (wind-dis****d), but some are
larger and have only a
vestigial wing...
- the t****el
dehisce and
release pollen,
which is dis****d by the wind (
anemophilous). Ears
consist of a corncob, or rachis, with rows of
sessile spikelets...