- angiosperms). E.g., Ostrya.
There are
three subtypes of
pinnate venation:
Craspedodromous (Gr****:
kraspedon – edge,
dromos – running) The
major veins reach to...
- palmate).
Secondary venation is eucamptodromous, brochidodromous,
craspedodromous or
cladodromous (rarely reticulodromous)
Cladodromous venation, if...
-
similar to D. subfalcatum]] but with
extremely high L/W
ratio and
craspedodromous venation.
Erlingdorfia E.
montana Johnson, 1996. In the Platanaceae...
-
germination develops into the seed-leaf or the
first set of leaves.
craspedodromous Pinnate venation in
which the
secondary veins terminate at the margins...
-
secondary veins diverge at the base of the
lamina and
rejoin at the tip.
Craspedodromous –
secondary veins run
straight to the leaf edge and end there. Furcate...
-
orange in spring. They are
triangular with
irregular minute teeth with
craspedodromous veins with all
secondary veins terminate at leaf
margins and spread...
-
parallel to the
primary veins for
almost half the lobe length, semi-
craspedodromous secondary venation, and a
predominantly toothed margin. Wolfiophyllum...
- ****atum.
However the
secondary veins are a
combination of
alternating craspedodromous veins and
forking veins. The
related living Sapindaceae genera Cardiospermum...
- have a
simple pinnate vein structure, with
secondary veins that are
craspedodromous,
reaching all the way to the leaf margins.
There are no intersecondary...
- the base to 13°-14°
nearing the
center area of the leaf. They form a
craspedodromous pattern with the
secondaries alternating along the
primary vein. The...