Biology, asked by jhilam77, 7 months ago

sepal petal stamen carpel flower
odd one out​

Answers

Answered by navneetamayuran
1

Answer:

flower because the rest are parts of the flower

Explanation:

Answered by NikhilKuamar
1

Answer:

The following is a glossary of terms used in all chapters of the book. For the terms from Chapter 9 (Plant Morphology), the character to

which a character state belongs is noted in parentheses following the definition. Symbols used are: Abbr = abbreviation; Adj = adjective;

Cf = compare; Pl = plural; Syn = synonym.

! Abbreviation for the confirmation of a name in an annotation

label.

abaxial Surface most distant or away from the axis, the lower or

outer surface of organ. Syn: dorsal. (position)

ABC model A model of floral development, in which gene

products of the so-called A, B, and C classes combine to

produce the four major floral organs: sepals, petals, stamens, and

carpels.

acaulescent Lacking an above-ground stem other than the inflorescence axis. (stem habit)

accession number A number assigned to each specimen placed

into a permanent herbarium collection.

accessioning The assignment of a number to all new specimens

placed into a permanent herbarium collection.

accessory bud Bud(s) lateral to or above axillary buds. (bud type)

accessory part A portion of the mature fruit that is not directly

derived from the ovary or ovaries, may include bract(s), stem

axes, receptacle, hypanthium, or perianth. (fruit part)

accrescent Parts persistent and continuing to grow beyond what is

normal or typical, e.g., calyx of Physalis, Solanaceae. (duration)

acetolysis A standard acid treatment used to dissolve all but the

exine of pollen grains in order to better observe pollen wall structure with the light microscope.

achene A one-seeded, dry, indehiscent fruit with seed attached to

pericarp at one point only, e.g., unit fruits of sunflowers and other

Asteraceae. (fruit type)

achenecetum An aggregate fruit of achenes, e.g., Fragaria

(strawberry), in which the achenes are on the surface of accessory

tissue, an enlarged, fleshy receptacle. (fruit type)

achlamydeous Lacking a perianth. (perianth merosity)

achlorophyllous Lacking chlorophyll/chloroplasts.

acicular Needlelike, often round in cross-section, with margins

straight and parallel, length:width ratio >12:1. (shape)

acrocaulis Positioned at the apex of the stem. (position)

acrocidal capsule A capsule dehiscing by means of apical slits.

(fruit type)

acrodromous With two or more primary veins or strongly developed secondary veins running in convergent arches toward the

leaf apex but not recurved at the base. (leaf venation)

actinodromous With three or more primary veins diverging

from one point, inclusive of ternate or palmate venation. (leaf

venation)

actinomorphic Radially symmetrical, with 3 or more planes of

symmetry. (symmetry) Syn: polysymmetric, radial.

aculeate With prickles, sharp nonspine, nonthorn appendages.

Syn: prickly. (epidermal excrescence)

acuminate Apical margins abruptly incurved (concave), the apical

intersection angle <45°. (apex)

acute Apical margins approximately straight, the intersection

angle 45°– 90°. (apex)

adaptation A structure or feature that performs a particular function and which results in increased survival or reproduction.

adaxial Surface toward or nearest the axis, the upper or inner

surface of organ. Syn: ventral. (position)

adherent With unlike parts joined, but only superficially and

easily separable. (fusion)

adnate With unlike parts integrally fused, not easily separable.

(fusion)

advanced Derived.

adventitious roots A root arising from an organ other than a root,

usually from a stem. (root type)

adventive embryony Development of an embryo from a cell of

the surrounding tissue, such as megasporangial or integument

tissue.

aerial roots Adventitious roots that absorb moisture and minerals

from the air or runoff, common in some epiphytic plants, e.gExplanation:

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