-
Connation in
plants is the
developmental fusion of
organs of the same type, for example,
petals to one
another to form a
tubular corolla. This is in contrast...
- as
variations in the proportions, compressions, swellings, adnations,
connations and
reduction of main and
secondary axes.[citation needed] One can also...
- petals,
within angiosperms (flowering plants). This is in
contrast to
connation, the
fusion among a
single whorl. Little, R. John; Jones, C. Eugene, eds...
-
sometimes appear very much like a
monocarpous gynoecium. The
degree of
connation ("fusion") in a
syncarpous gynoecium can vary. The
carpels may be "fused"...
- binational, cognate, cognatic, cognation, connascence, connascent, connate,
connation, connatural, denature, enascent, enate, enatic, enation, impregnate, innate...
- The term
political regime exists in English, but has
taken on
negative connations. Upon the
death of
Childeric I, his son,
Clovis I
became king of the Franks...
-
Strobiloideae (or
Ranalian line) with
connation of like
parts and the
Cotyloideae (or
Rosalian line) with
connation of
unlike parts,
which he ****igned as...
- sperm. This
molecule was
called a 'sperm receptor'
which has p****ive
connations,
whereas the
corresponding molecule on the
sperm is the 'egg
binding protein'...
-
other genera - may bear
flowers with
proximally connate petals, such
connation occurs only at the very base of the petals. In the past,
Macrostelia was...
-
denotes the specific, contact-dependent
interaction between two cells.
Connation, in plants, the
fusion of
organs of the same type This disambiguation...