- The
following terms are used to
describe leaf
morphology in the
description and
taxonomy of plants.
Leaves may be
simple (that is, the leaf
blade or 'lamina'...
-
these are in
reality compound with a
single leaflet and are
termed "
unifoliolate";
additionally their branched spines are
modified compound leaves). However...
-
these are in
reality compound with a
single leaflet; they are
termed "
unifoliolate"), and many
botanists prefer to
classify all
these plants in the single...
-
leaflets (rarely alternate),
while others are
trifoliolate or
simple or
unifoliolate (very
rarely simple leaves are palmate). Leaf
architecture is very diverse...
-
called tsori.
Leaves in
Commiphora are
pinnately compound (or very
rarely unifoliolate). Many
species are
armed with spines. Bark is
often exfoliating, peeling...
- trees, up to 5 m high;
branchlets slender, cylindric, glabrous.
Leaves unifoliolate,
leaflet 7.5-13.5 x 2.5-5.2 cm, elliptic-lanceolate or elliptic-oblong...
- is from the
Latin meaning "nearly one leaf",
referring to the
almost unifoliolate leaves.
Melicope subunifoliolata grows up as a
shrub or tree up to 15...
- genera,
Cyclolobium and
Limadendron by:
pinnately multifoliolate (vs.
unifoliolate) leaves, a
sessile (vs. stipitate) ovary, and an
indehiscent or late...
- ribs. The
lower leaves of
young plants are trifoliolate, the
others unifoliolate, stipitate,
alternate and opposite; sti****r
organ traversed by 3 confluent...
-
branchlets tomentose, yellow-tan,
glabrate in age.
Leaves are opposite,
unifoliolate, coriaceous, and elliptic.
Inflorescences in
axillary and ramiflorous...