Sentences with word «pistil»

150 g semi-wholemeal wheat flour 100 g cornmeal (OGM - free) 50 g almond flour a pinch of whole sea salt 3 tablespoons cream of tartar 150 ml agave syrup 50 ml extra virgin olive oil 150 ml unsweetened, unflavoured soy milk (OGM - free) 1 tablespoon natural vanilla extract 1/2 teaspoon grated lemon zest (organic) 200 g long, light green zucchini, grated 8 zucchini flowers, washed, stems and pistils removed, and cut into 4 parts
-LSB-...] of pistil owners hires armed guards.
Male flower parts, or stamens, produce pollen that fertilises female parts, known as pistils, to make seeds.
Moreover, the soft, flexible animal hairs did not damage the stamens or pistils when the drone landed on the flowers.
Many hypotheses advanced by previous investigators proved to be correct, but some of the defining characteristics of orchids — their tiny seeds, their requirement for fungi to germinate, and their fused pistils and anthers — were not themselves responsible for the high rate of orchid speciation.
Legend: a = anther, p = petal, s = sepal, pi = pistil, ovl = ovule - like structures.
When the researchers examined compatible and incompatible pistil - pollen combinations in tobacco plants, they found that S - RNase got inside the pollen in both cases.
The two species of Joshua tree pollinators (images to scale) and pistils from Joshua trees associated to each (images to scale).
Across the Mojave Desert, the shape of Joshua tree pistils correlates with the average length of yucca moths» ovipositors.
Whimsical pistil earring suspends from delicate post 18K yellow goldplated Fabric Post back Made in France.
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A little later, watch for the 4 — 5» - long curved pistils coming out of the flower.
Influenced by the troubling and not - too - distant practice of foot binding in China, Stoller's resulting work presents an idyllic scene of a darkened pond fitted with multi-piece sculptures of lily pads, lotus flowers and «golden lotus» feet, rising from within like deformed pistils.
The series begins with the striped and hooded bloom rendered with a botanist's care, continues with successively more abstract and tightly focused depictions, and ends with what might be the essence of the jack - in - the - pulpit, a haloed black pistil standing alone against a black, purple, and gray field.
If you rub the pollen from the lily on your fingertips and then lightly cover the center pistil, it should fertilize and produce seeds.
Each one flashed the exact same scene — a beautiful flower slowly blooming to reveal each petal, pistil, and stamen in exquisite super high definition detail.
Two terms could be used (from systematic botany): (a) hermaphrodite (from Lat., hermaphroditus, having the characteristics of both male and female), i.e., an individual biologically with both sex organs (unfortunately, the term is applied also to humans who possess both female and male sex organs); (b) monoclinous (Gk., monos, one + kline, a bed), i.e., a plant having flowers with both stamens and pistils — without regard to their spatial arrangement (such flowers are said to be perfect).
In plant taxonomy gynandrous refers to a fusion of male flowers (stamens, actually) on a style (part of the pistil or female reproductive structure) such as in orchids and milkweeds.
In self - pollinating flowers, the stamen sheds pollen directly onto the pistil.
In comparison with gymnosperms, which possess rather rudimentary male and female cones (like the pine cone), flowering plants present several innovations: the flower contains the male organs (stamens) and the female organs (pistil), surrounded by petals and sepals, while the ovules, instead of being naked, are protected within the pistil.
The female part of the flower, the pistil (fuzzy blue structure atop the olive stalk), contains the eggs.
At the center of the image is the pistil, or the female parts.
Six male anthers (white) containing four pollen sacks (red circles) surround the pistil.
Suspended in midair, he reaches out and paints pollen from one alula onto another's pistil.
In plants where multiple seeds are made from a single pistil (female reproductive organ = mother), all the seeds in the pistil are considered as children of the mother.
In other words, the mother can have children from different fathers within its pistil, and the father does not consider seeds resulting from other fathers as its own child.
On the other hand, pollen (male reproductive organ = father) that is generated from different male species can attach to a single pistil, and even though it is within the same pistil, only the seed that is generated from its own sperm cells is considered as the father's child.
The pistil of a flowering mustard plant Arabidopsis thaliana with a single HPAT gene mutation (left).
Only in the 1980s did researchers find a class of enzymes in the pistil, or female part of plants, that could destroy «incompatible» pollen.
Upon successful pollination on the stigma, the pollen tube grows down through the pistil towards the ovary.
Upon passing through the pistil, the pollen tube receives various substances, such as plant hormones and glycoproteins.
When pollen grains (male reproductive organ) germinate at the tip of the pistil (female reproductive organ), a pollen tube grows through the pistil.
Pollen tubes grow inside the pistil towards the ovule located in the placenta.
There have been many reports that suggest the presence of a compound that is present inside the pistil, which activates the pollen tube to respond to attractant molecules for fertilization, i.e. like a love potion sent out by the female organ to attract the male organ towards them.
(A) Pollen grains generated from the stamen pollinate at the tip of the pistil.
For fertilization to occur in seed plants (angiosperms), it is necessary for pollen grains to pollinate at the pistil, followed by germination and growth of a pollen tube through the pistil, with final delivery of the sperm cells to the ovules that contain the egg cells.
Vinyl over steel armature with attached vacuum - formed plastic leaves, cast urethane buds, cast dental acrylic petals, vinyl monofilament stamens and pistils; painted with lacquer and acrylic paint; dusted with volcanic ash from Mount St. Helens, WA, 1980, 72 × 15 in.
Residual petals and pistils, adhered by Colen's own pressure, are reminders that these works exist in the physical, as well as metaphysical, world.
The kingfuchsia is a hummingbird - like monster with a flower growing around its head and a beak in place of a pistil.
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