10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «EPINASTICALLY»
Discover the use of
epinastically in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
epinastically and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Flora of Tropical Africa
Racemes neither spreading nor epinastically deflexcd, the inner faces of their
bases pcrmanentlycontiguous or parallel: annual IX. INVOLUCRATQ. Raceme-
bases produced into a large obovoidcuneate comucopiie-like appendage. 4-5 lin
.
2
Luo Biological Dictionary
Raceme-bases hairless; racemes dark red and epinastically reflexed at maturity.
USE: The most common thatching grass in Western Kenya, well grazed when
young. Olenge, Cymbopogon validus (Gramineae or Poaceae). A tufted
perennial ...
3
Flooding and Plant Growth
In a survey of over 200 species and cultivars, 44% responded epinastically to
applications of ethylene gas (Crocker et al., 1932). The increased production of
ethylene in flooded plants is discussed in Section Il,A. Consequently, it is likely
that ...
Theodore Thomas Kozlowski, 1984
4
Practical Physiology of Plants
(i) When a Ficaria plant is dug up, its leaves freed from the resistance of the soil,
curve (epinastically) strongly downwards. If such a plant is fixed with its axis
horizontal and parallel to the spindle of the klinostat, and if the klinostat is placed
with ...
Francis Darwin, E. Hamilton Acton, 2011
5
An Introduction to Agricultural Biochemistry
... growth, epinastically curved leaves and split stems, many of which are
probably a result of stimulation of ethylene production. A major advantage of
auxin herbicides is that they are selective in their action. Cereals and other
monocotyledons ...
J.M. Chesworth, T. Stuchbury, J.R. Scaife, 1998
6
Postharvest Physiology and Hypobaric Storage of Fresh Produce
... shortened internodes (Twigg and Link, 1951) are not epinastic, and retain an
ability to respond epinastically to applied gas.14 Changes in membrane fluidity
caused by compositional changes and superoxide radical production may alter
the ...
7
The Journal of the Linnean Society of London: Botany
A plant, whose leaves were bent epinastically backwards, was pinned (April 6th,
3.8 PM.) inside a tin box; so that the plant was in complete darkness. The
positions of the leaves having been noted, the box was fixed to the klinostat so
that the ...
8
Report of the ... Meeting of the British Association for the ...
The fact on which he bases this conclusion is this, that leaves which have
become curved, either epinastically or hyponastically, in consequence of having
been kept in darkness, return to the horizontal position when fully exposed to
light.
British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting, 1890
9
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
A plant, whose leaves were bent epinastically backwards, was pinned (April 6th,
3.8 RM.) inside a tin box; so that the plant was in complete darkness. The
positions of the leaves having been noted, the box was fixed to the klinostat so
that the ...
Linnean Society of London, 1881
But it may be objected that epinastically bent leaves tend to recover a normal
position independently of the direction of light. The following experiment shows
that this is not the case. Experiment 3. — A plant, whose leaves were bent ...
Linnean Society of London, 1881