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CATKINS

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Voorbeelden van het gebruik van CATKINS in een zin

  • The flowers are catkins with elongate male catkins on the same plant as shorter female catkins, often before leaves appear; they are mainly wind-pollinated, but also visited by bees to a small extent.
  • They are characterized by alternate simple leaves with pinnate venation, unisexual flowers in the form of catkins, and fruit in the form of cup-like (cupule) nuts.
  • The staminate flowers are borne in catkins that develop from the leaf axils of the previous year, and the pistillate flowers develop from the axils of the current year's leaves.
  • The staminate flowers develop from leaf axils of the previous year and the catkins emerge before or at the same time as the current leaves in April or May.
  • The flowers are produced very early in spring before the leaves, and are monoecious, with single-sex catkins.
  •  sylvatica male flowers are borne in the small catkins which are a hallmark of the Fagales order (beeches, chestnuts, oaks, walnuts, hickories, birches, and hornbeams).
  • The flowers are produced very early in spring, before the leaves, and are monoecious with single-sex wind-pollinated catkins.
  • It is dioecious, with male and female catkins on separate trees; the male catkins are 4–5 cm long, the female catkins 3–4 cm long at pollination, lengthening as the fruit matures.
  • The flowers are soft silky, and silvery 3-7-cm-long catkins are produced in early spring before the new leaves appear; the male and female catkins are on different plants (dioecious).
  • They are dioecious, with male and female catkins on separate trees; the male catkins are 4–6 cm long, the female catkins are also 4–6 cm long, with the individual flowers having either one or two nectaries.
  • Pussy willow is a name given to many of the smaller species of the genus Salix (willows and sallows) when their furry catkins are young in early spring.
  • Image:2024-02-08 09 51 05 Pussy willow buds enlarging into catkins (pussies) along Windybush Way in the Mountainview section of Ewing Township, Mercer County, New Jersey.
  • Chrysolepis is related to the subtropical southeast Asian genus Castanopsis (in which it was formerly included), but differs in the nuts being triangular and fully enclosed in a sectioned cupule, and in having bisexual catkins.
  • Like other trees of the order Fagales, such as oaks, hickories, chestnuts, and birches, it is monoecious, with wind-pollinated catkins.
  • Male (staminate) flowers are inconspicuous, yellow-green slender catkins that develop from axillary buds and female (pistillate) flowers are short terminal spikes on current year's shoots.
  • The flowers bloom in early spring before the leaves, and are unisexual, with single-sex catkins; the male pale yellow and 5–10 cm long, the female very small and largely concealed in the buds, with only the bright red 1–3 mm long styles visible.
  • Staminate flowers are borne on long-stalked catkins at the tip of old wood or in the axils of the previous season's leaves.
  • Piratic flycatchers wait on an exposed perch high in a tree, occasionally sallying out to feed on fruit (such as berries), their staple diet, as well as the catkins of Cecropia and insects (such as dragonflies).
  • While the Congdon silktassel manifests separate male and female plants, the pendant male catkins are much more evident, up to 25 centimeters long; those of the female are shorter and silver-grey.
  • The flowers are pistillate and staminate, which consist of 3 branched catkins, and tightly crowded clusters.
  • Pistillate catkins at maturity are 8 to 20 cm long with rotund-ovate, tricarpellate subsessile fruits 5 to 8 mm long.
  • The male inflorescence is a catkin, up to 18 cm in length; it may grow alone from the current or previous year's growth, in a panicle of up to six paired catkins, or rarely at the base of an androgynous panicle, which ends in the female inflorescence.
  • They have been recorded sipping moisture at puddles and has also been found nectaring at willow catkins.
  • If it runs out of catkins the larva bore into the base of a bud, hollowing it out and ejecting the frass which can be seen in a small pile on the bud.
  • The common spangle gall on the underside of leaves and the currant gall on the male catkins or occasionally the leaves, develop as chemically induced distortions on pedunculate oak (Quercus robur), or sessile oak (Quercus petraea) trees, caused by the cynipid wasp Neuroterus quercusbaccarum which has both agamic and bisexual generations.



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