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102 Sentences With "main stems"

How to use main stems in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "main stems" and check conjugation/comparative form for "main stems". Mastering all the usages of "main stems" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He described plants that would make more flowers, stems and seeds when their main stems were cut off or eaten.
As he damaged their main stems, he started seeing indications that not only did they get bushier and produce more seeds, but they also ramped up their chemical defenses.
The open, spreading or infundibular shrub typically grows to a height of . It mostly has a "V"-shaped habit but is sometimes rounded shrubs and generally has three to six main stems but is sometimes single-stemmed and with a spindly habit. The rounded and moderately dense crown is open but sometimes bushy when regrowing. The smooth, mid-grey to dark grey coloured bark can be longitudinally fissured on main stems bases.
The spindly spreading tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It can be spreading, bushy or openly branched or have a rounded or obconic habit with up to six main stems emerging from ground level. Older specimens can appear gnarled with a spreading sparse canopy. The dark brown to grey or black coloured bark can be smooth on higher branches but longitudinally fissured and fibrous on the main stems especially toward the base.
The variable tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as . It usually has a few main stems that are sparingly divided around ground level with the upper branches forming a usually horizontally spreading crown on mature plants. The multi-stemmed juvenile plants are more likely to have a rounded habit. The main stems and limbs have attractive red Minni ritchi style bark tat curl back onto themselves into small scrolls.
The spreading spinescent shrub or tree typically grows to a height of but can be as high as . It has an openly branched habit with one or many main stems arising from the base. The grey bark is longitudinally fissured at the base of the main stems and is smoother on the upper branches and can be bronze through to yellowish orange or green in colour. It blooms from August to December and produces yellow flowers.
In the case of others such as the Mackenzie, it is the combined lengths of the main stem and one or more upstream tributaries, as noted. Excluded from the list are rivers such as the Dauphin, a short connecting link between lakes Manitoba and Winnipeg, with main stems of or less. Also excluded are rivers such as the Mississippi, the main stems of which do not enter Canada even though some of their tributaries do. Nine rivers in this list cross international boundaries or form them.
The main stems of this plant are found underground when growing on boggy terrain, but can occur above ground in dryer habitats. The stems are normally not more than 25 cm in length and root at intervals.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and have a diffuse, spreading, openly branched and multi-stemmed habit. The main stems are usually slightly crooked and support an open croen with smooth grey coloured bark on the main stems that becomes a light bronze colour on the on upper branches. The terete and glabrous branchlets have yelloish to bronze coloured but obscure ribbing and spint stipules with a length of that are found less as the plants ages. Like mosr pecies of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The species may form quite dense stands locally. Some of the locations have such sparse vegetation that fire is not sustained, and many old plants can be found, their main stems tightly wedged in the crevices between the rocks.
There is a tendency for main stems to more closely resemble P. lucens, and side branches P. gramineus. There is however no single character to identify this hybrid, and accurate determination is likely to rely on a combination of characters. Herbarium specimen of Potamogeton x angustifolius, detail.
In the main stems and branches it was X-shaped in cross-section, corresponding to the four rows of branches. In the final appendages it became circular in cross-section. The xylem development was 'mesarch', i.e. the first maturing protoxylem had later maturing metaxylem on either side.
It grows as an erect shrub or small tree, in height. It produces yellow flowers from April to September. It has either a single trunk or divides into four or less erect, straight main stems close to the base. The open to almost dense canopy has a delicate appearance.
Leptospermum lamellatum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of about or a tree to more than . The main stems have layers of papery, reddish bark. Younger stems are thin and covered at first with silky hairs. The leaves are narrow elliptical, long and wide and often slightly curved.
The four species assigned to the section Crassicaudex are sometimes called cylindric pincushions. These four all have a cylinder-shaped common base of the flowers in the same head. All are upright shrubs with several main stems that rise up from a woody rootstock underground. This makes the species very tolerant to fire.
Acacia cuspidifolia, commonly known as wait-a-while or bohemia, is a tree in the family Fabaceae. Endemic to Western Australia, it occurs on the floodplains east of Carnarvon. Wait-a-while grows to a height of about eight metres. It usually has many main stems, with foliage down to ground level.
Persoonia saccata is usually an erect, sometimes a spreading shrub and has many main stems. It grows to a height of with a large underground lignotuber. The bark on the trunk is mostly smooth and grey. The leaves are arranged alternately and are linear in shape with the edges rolled under, long and about wide.
Verticordia pritzelii, commonly known as Pritzel's featherflower, is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south- west of Western Australia. It is a compact, woody shrub with several main stems, small, linear to club-shaped leaves, and rounded groups of deep pink flowers from late spring to mid-summer.
Kunzea eriocalyx is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to a small area on the south coast of Western Australia. It is a shrub with spreading main stems with a few short side branches and which grows to a height of . It blooms between August and October producing pink flowers.
At the base of the main stems, there may be creamy-white bulbils. The rhizoids are star-shaped. Plants are either male or female. The oogonia (female reproductive structures) form at the base of upper branchlets and orange to red oocytes can occur, which help distinguish this alga from the rather similar musk-grass and brittlewort.
Eucalyptus copulans is a species of small, critically endangered tree only known in the wild from one or two individual plants in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales. It has smooth bark, usually with several main stems, lance- shaped adult leaves, flower buds in group of eleven or more and more or less spherical fruit.
Acaena minor is a prostrate herb. Its main stems grow to 700 mm long with erect lateral branches up to 50 mm high. The leaves are 15–80 mm long and 10–25 mm wide, glabrous above with long, silky hairs below. The leaflets occur in 6–7 pairs, the lowest very reduced and the others crowded.
Epacris rhombifolia is an erect shrub with several main stems and which grows to a height of . The young stems are reddish-brown and covered with short, soft, downy hairs when young. The leaves are rhombic, long and wide, more or less flat and overlap each other when young. They are glabrous, have indistinct veins and a petiole long.
Habit in Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve Leptospermum brevipes, commonly known as the slender tea-tree, is a species of shrub or small tree that is endemic to eastern Australia. It has fibrous bark on the main stems, smooth bark on young stems, narrow elliptical to narrow egg-shaped leaves, white flowers and hemispherical fruit that is shed when mature.
The sporophytes of Lycopodioideae species are relatively short herbaceous plants. They have stems with pseudomonopodial branching in which unequal binary branching produces the appearance of a main stem with secondary side branches. The main stems are indeterminate and of various forms, including rhizomatous, creeping, trailing and climbing. They usually form roots at intervals along their length.
Antipathypolyeunoa is one of many genera in the family Polynoidae which have an obligate commensal relationship with a host marine invertebrate. As the name suggests, Antipathypolyeunoa is associated with antipatharian corals (black corals or thorn corals), being found in hollow tubes in the main stems of the coral host. A. nuttingi's host taxon is Antipathes tanacetum.
The main stems (axes) of Hsua robusta are about an inch thick, with circinate, pseudo-monopodial side branches emerging from the sides. The small side branches emerge immediately above a dichotomous branching point of the main axis. The lateral branches are in a plane (planar). In the centre of the axes is a protostele with an elliptical cross-section.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has an obconic form. It has slightly crooked stems that are not fluted with fissured on present on the main stems and the upper branches. It has resinous new shoots with scattered reddish glandular hairlets. The glabrous branchlets can have some hairs between the non-resinous ribs.
Each flower has five-pointed sepals which can be as long as the petals, and five-notched petals in shades of white, light pink to lavender. This is a distinguishing factor for discriminating G. carolinianum from other species of Geranium. The flowers form in short tight clusters which grow off the main stems. The anthers do not have nectar spurs.
Kunzea similis is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of and has several main stems with few branches. Young branches are densely covered with silky hairs. The leaves are linear to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and long on a petiole about long. It differs from K. capitata in having leaves with a single vein.
Orchids in the genus Erythrorchis are leafless mycotrophic, climbing herbs that cling to surfaces with small, unbranched roots from the main stems. They usually cling to tree trunks. Densely crowded, resupinate flowers are borne on a highly branched flowering stem. The sepals and petals are fleshy, often fused to each other and spread widely, the petals narrower than the sepals.
Verticordia endlicheriana var. angustifolia is an upright shrub which grows to a height of and a width of , with one to several main stems at the base. Both the leaves on the stems and those near the flowers are linear in shape and long. The flowers are sweetly-scented and arranged in round or corymb-like groups on erect stalks from long.
An unusual factor of this tree is cauliflory. Where flower and fruit form on the main stems or woody trunks rather than from new growth and shoots. This is mostly a tropical feature, and unusual in rainforest trees so far south in New South Wales. In November to February, pink or orange flowers form in dense panicles on mature branches.
This hydroid branches rather sparsely and irregularly compared with Sertularella gayi. The main stems and side branches are thin, wavy, and of a pale straw colour. As in all Sertularella species, the side branches support alternate hydrothecae, one to each internode. The hydrothecae are bulbous at the base and become narrower towards the rim which has four cusps, and an operculum that consists of four triangular flaps.
Banksia oligantha grows as a single-trunked small tree or as an erect shrub with few main stems. Reports of its maximum height vary from to . When not in flower it is said to look somewhat like Banksia sessilis (Parrot Bush). It has smooth grey bark for the most part, though bark near the base of the trunk may be lightly fissured in older trees.
The weeping tree or tall bushy shrub typically grows to a height of . with the ultimate branchlets and phyllodes have a pendulous habit. It can have a single or many stems and can form a large crowns when growing in favourable conditions. It has hard dark grey coloured bark that is furrowed on main stems but becomes smooth and light grey on the upper branches.
Miniritchie grows is a shrubby tree to a height of and a width of and has a many branched, rounded or flat topped habit. It typically has several main stems. These are often twisted, and are always covered in distinctive red to brown coloured minni ritchi bark, which peels in small curly flakes. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The erect, slender and wispy shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers. The shrub often has a single stem but sometimes has three main stems arising from ground level. The spindly stems usually have a diameter of at breast height topped by sparse crown foliage mostly found at the ends of the slender drooping branchlets.
The Jamaican rain tree is a small drought-resistant tree that can grow around 20–30 feet tall and produces long, drooping branches. It has small, waxy 2-3 parted compound leaves that often appear to be simple. The leaves are densely borne in alternate formation on short spurs that are produced on the main stems. The bright yellow flowers develop on short indeterminate (racemose) inflorescences.
The low dense spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and to a width of about . It usually has multiple stems and can have few branches a ground level and has smooth, grey bark that can be fissured at the very base of the main stems. The branchlets have resinous ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The erect, obconic shrub typically grows to a height of with grey bark on the trunk that lightens to yellow-brown on upper branches. It usually has two to four main stems with a diameter of at the base. The crown is open and spreads to a width of around . It has terete and slender branchlets that are finely ribbed and densely covered in fine what hairs.
Verticordia amphigia is a shrub which grows to a height of , a width of and has one or several main stems with a number of branches. The leaves are linear to narrow lance-shaped, concave to almost circular in cross-section, long and have a pointed end. The flowers are scented, in rounded groups on erect stems long. Persistent, boat-shaped bracteoles with short hairs on their rim surround the flower.
Its stems were bare of spines but marked by longitudinal striations. Compared to P. dawsonii, both P. princeps and P. forbesii had a greater distinction between main stems and side branches, which may be considered an 'advanced' feature. P. crenulatum was found in New Brunswick, Canada, also in rocks of Emsian age. Its branches bore spines up to 6 mm long which divided into two or three projections at their tips.
Eucalyptus acies is a straggly mallee shrub that typically grows to a height of and has smooth grey bark. It usually has several main stems and its young branches are more or less square in cross section. Leaves on young plants are arranged in opposite pairs, elliptic, long and wide with the lower surface a slighter paler green. The adult leaves are thick and coarse, in length with a lanceolate blade.
Verticordia verticordina is a shrub with many main stems and which grows to a height of and a width of . The leaves are linear in shape, semi-circular in cross-section, long and crowded near the ends of the branches. The flowers appear in scattered upper leaf axils on thick, erect stalks long. The floral cup is shaped like a hemisphere, about long and hairy, especially near the base.
The Mississippi drainage basin includes the Missouri and the Mississippi rivers, the two longest main-stem rivers in the United States, as well as 18 more of the rivers on this list. The Mississippi main stem is highlighted in dark blue. The main stems of 38 rivers in the United States are at least long. The main stem is "the primary downstream segment of a river, as contrasted to its tributaries".
The low dense shrub typically grows to a height of and to a width of around . It has numerous slender main stems separating from each other at ground level that are covered in smooth or finely fissured, grey coloured bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The dull-green to greyish green phyllodes have an asymmetrically elliptic-obovate shape and are usually slightly sigmoid.
Verticordia endlicheriana var. compacta is a compact shrub which grows to a height of and a width of , with one to several main stems at the base. The leaves of the stems are linear in shape and long while those near the leaves are egg-shaped to almost round and long. The flowers are sweetly-scented and arranged in round or corymb-like groups on erect stalks from long.
Verticordia endlicheriana var. major is a compact, rigid shrub which grows to a height of and a width of , with one to several main stems at the base. The leaves on the stems are linear in shape and long while those near the leaves are egg-shaped to almost round and long. The flowers are lightly-scented and arranged in round or corymb-like groups on erect stalks from long.
Verticordia endlicheriana var. endlicheriana is a more or less compact shrub which grows to a height of and a width of , with one to several main stems at the base. Its leaves on the stems are linear in shape, while those near the flowers are oblong to almost round and long. The flowers are unscented and arranged in round or corymb-like groups on erect stalks from long.
Tree crown The crown of a plant refers to the total of an individual plant's aboveground parts, including stems, leaves, and reproductive structures. A plant community canopy consists of one or more plant crowns growing in a given area. The crown of a woody plant (tree, shrub, liana) is the branches, leaves, and reproductive structures extending from the trunk or main stems. Shapes of crowns are highly variable.
It grows into a moderate size, perennial woody shrub, branching from the base but with main stems extending for up to 2 meters. Is leaves are long and narrow, and may be toothed at the edge; they can be from long. It flowers from June to August, having clusters (cymes) of attractive bell-shaped blue, lavender or purple flowers. The plant has a sickly-sweet, minty, or rank smell, even when not in flower.
Verticordia ovalifolia is a shrub which usually grows to a height of up to and wide with several main stems and a few side branches. Its leaves are elliptic or egg- shaped, long, with translucent edges. The flowers are lightly scented and arranged in rounded groups near the ends of the branches, each flower on a stalk long. The floral cup is top-shaped, about long and glabrous with small appendages around its edge.
The U.S. Endangered Species Act listed steelhead as threatened and coho salmon as endangered. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife closed dozens of streams and rivers to fishing in 2014. Lehr said that he fears coho salmon may go completely extinct south of the Golden Gate Bridge in the near future. In early 2014 the main stems of the Eel, Mad, Smith, Van Duzen, and Mattole rivers were closed pending additional rainfall.
Verticordia pennigera is a shrub, often with a spreading habit, which grows to high and wide and which has several main stems with many short, leafy side-branches. The leaves are linear to oblong, long and have a covering of fine hairs. The flowers are lightly scented and arranged in spike- like groups, each flower on a stalk, long. The floral cup is top-shaped, long, glabrous, slightly warty and has two small green appendages.
Antarctic bedstraw is a perennial herb that grows up to 50 mm in height. Its main stems are weak, prostrate and leafless, rooting at the nodes; the young stems are erect, sparsely branched, smooth and leafy. The leaves and stipules are similar, 3-4.5 mm in length, green tinged with purple, smooth and fleshy. The flowers are solitary in upper axils; they lack a calyx and have a pinkish-buff corolla with long, yellowish stigmas.
Nouns in Gtaʔ ordinarily have two forms, one a free full form, the other a bound short form. These latter occur only when the noun is compounded with some other stem for derivational 9 purposes, and are hence labeled "combining forms". Combining forms occurring with verb stems can be echoed independently of the verb stems; those occur? ring with noun stems either remain intact or change at par with the main stems.
The leaves on the main stems are much bigger than branch leaves, but all the leaves are serrated with slightly bent or curved backward or downward edges. A single leaf is present at each node along the stem, forming an ascending spiral pattern (alternate arrangement; see phyllotaxis). Male flowers grow on the top of stem in the form of slim spike. One or two female flowers grow from the leaf axils below the male flowers.
Verticordia oculata is a shrub which grows to a height of between and sprawls to a width of . It has a lignotuber, from which several or many main stems emerge. The leaves are almost circular in shape, in diameter with a distinct white margin, lack a stalk and attach directly to the stem. The flowers are in diameter and are grouped in a spreading arrangement at the upper parts of the stem on stalks long.
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) defines a main- stem segment by listing coordinates for its two end points, called the source and the mouth. Some well-known rivers like the Atchafalaya, Willamette, and Susquehanna are not included in this list because their main stems are shorter than 500 miles. Seven rivers in this list cross or form international boundaries. Two—the Yukon and Columbia rivers—begin in Canada and flow into the United States.
Kunzea jucunda is a shrub with a few erect main stems and many short side branches. It usually grows to a height of and is mostly glabrous except for a few hairs around the flowers and youngest leaves. The leaves are glabrous, mostly elliptic in shape, about long and wide with a petiole less than long. The flowers are arranged in heads of mostly two to four on the ends of the side branches.
The tree grows to a maximum height of with dark grey, fibrous bark. The tree usually has a gnarled or erect habit and is most often found with a height of with a dbh of around . It usually has a single or two crooked main stems that form more branches at a height of with a dense to domed sprawling crown. The reddish terete branchlets have obscure ribbing and have a white powdery covering.
Verticordia endlicheriana is a shrub which grows to a height of with one to several main stems at the base. Its leaves on the stems are linear in shape, dished to almost round in cross-section, long and have a pointed end. The leaves near the flowers are oblong to almost round and long. The flowers are sometimes scented and are arranged in round or corymb- like groups on erect stalks from long.
Pemphis is a genus of maritime plants in family Lythraceae. It was recently thought have only one species (the type species, described in 1775, Pemphis acidula ) but is now believed to have at least two. Pemphis acidula, bonsai Pemphis are highly adaptive. Depending on environmental factors, they are densely branched, or low and spreading bushes or short trees, with main stems that can be furcated and lie nearly prone, or develop into one erect trunk.
S. junceum is a vigorous, deciduous shrub growing to tall, rarely , with main stems up to thick, rarely . It has thick, somewhat succulent grey-green rush- like shoots with very sparse small deciduous leaves 1 to 3 cm long and up to 4 mm broad. The leaves are of little importance to the plant, with much of the photosynthesis occurring in the green shoots (a water-conserving strategy in its dry climate). The leaves fall away early.
The main stems of the colony are bright yellow and relatively thick, composed of several fibres adhering to each other at the base, becoming monosiphonic with alternating zooids in the upper part of the colony. The side branches are approximately alternate and support the hydrothecae which are regularly alternate, one to each internode. As in Sertularella polyzonias they are bulbous in the basal region, and the margin is quadridentate. The operculum consists of four triangular flaps.
The main stems grow along the ground, rooting at the nodes. The lateral stems are erect. The small spoon to lance-shaped leaves are reddish at the base with the upper leaves concave and the lower convex; they are 2.8–4.2 mm long and 1.1–1.5 mm wide. The single flowers appear in the axils of the upper leaves; they appear from January to March: they have pink sepals and white petals about 2.5 mm long.
Asimina tetramera, commonly known as the four-petal pawpaw, is a species of flowering plant endemic to the state of Florida. It is a small tree or large perennial shrub with one or more main stems. There is a total population count of about 950 plants, all of which are limited to areas in Martin and Palm Beach Counties in Florida.Smithsonian Marine Station Fort Pierce This is a federally listed endangered species of the United States.USFWS.
In the lower parts of main stems it was circular, enlarging before it divided prior to dichotomous branching. Higher up it became elliptical in cross-section, corresponding to the two rows of fertile branching units. Within the branches of these units, the strand was more-or-less rectangular. The conducting elements of the xylem, the tracheids, were of the so-called 'P-type' in which the walls were strengthened by ladder- like (scalariform) bars with circular openings between them.
Halecium muricatum is a colonial hydrozoan. It is arborescent, forming stiff bushy colonies usually between in height but sometimes . The main stems are robust and mostly straight, with a few large side branches diverging irregularly, each forming an angle of 30° with the main stem. Finer tertiary branches are formed as the polyps each elongate and bud new polyps on alternate sides of the often single plane branch; there is a clearly defined node between each segment.
The probe holder headgear (e.g. LAM-RAK, DWL, Sipplingen, Germany) are used with a base support on two earplugs and on the nasal ridge. Two 2-MHz probes are affixed in the probe holder and insonation performed to determine the optimal position for continuous monitoring of both MCA main stems at 50 mm depth from the surface of the probe. A serial recording of MFV for each stimulus is acquired and latter used for Fourier analysis.
This helps the font developer to make major changes (e.g., the point at which the entire font's main stems jump from 1 to 2 pixels wide) most of the way through development. Creating a very well-hinted TrueType font remains a significant amount of work, despite the increased user-friendliness of programs for adding hints to fonts. Many TrueType fonts therefore have only rudimentary hints, or have hinting automatically applied by the font editor, with results of variable quality.
Kunzea praestans is a shrub with a few erect main stems and which usually grows to a height of . The leaves are glabrous, oblong to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide usually without a petiole. The flowers are arranged in more or less spherical groups of fourteen to twenty, often on the ends of branches which continue to grow after flowering. The flowers are surrounded by mostly glabrous, egg-shaped bracts and bracteoles.
Kunzea cincinnata is a shrub with a few main stems and many shorter branches and which grows to a height of . The leaves are linear to lance-shaped with the narrow end towards the base and long and less than wide with a leaf stalk is long. The flowers are arranged in groups of up to three on the ends of the shorter branches. The flowers are surrounded by hairy bracts long and shorter pairs of bracteoles.
Myoporum bateae is a pyramid-shaped, sweet-smelling shrub to about with one to a few straight main stems and slender horizontal branches with a few to many small, wart-like tubercles. The leaves are narrow, long, thin and soft with toothed edges and dotted with many small oil glands. The foliage is "rather sparse with the leaves elegantly curved downwards from the branchlets". Flowering occurs from September to November when there are clusters of 3 - 10 flowers along the branchlets.
Verticordia grandis is a species of Verticordia, a genus of the family Myrtaceae, which are noted for their exquisite flowers. It has been described as the most well known and desirable species of the genus. The large size and bright red flowers of this plant distinguish from it from its near relations. These shrubs are erect and may attain a height between 0.7 and 4.0 metres and one, or several, main stems that branch out 0.3 metres to 3.0 metres across.
Like Baskerville, he sets off his texts with wide margins and uses little or no illustrations or decorations. Bodoni achieved an unprecedented level of technical refinement, allowing him to faithfully reproduce letterforms with very thin "hairlines", standing in sharp contrast to the thicker lines constituting the main stems of the characters. He became known for his designs of pseudoclassical typefaces and highly styled editions some considered more apt "to be admired for typeface and layout, not to be studied or read."Bodoni, Giambattista.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as high as . It is generally V-shaped with an open and usually spindly form. It usually divides above ground level to form some main stems that are straight, diagonally spreading to erect and covered in smooth light grey bark except toward the base where it can become longitudinally fissured. The phyllodes are usually obliquely elliptic to narrowly elliptic in shape that becomes narrowed at both ends.
Kunzea clavata is a shrub or tree with several main stems and many branches and which grows to a height of . The leaves are linear, lance-shaped or shaped like a baseball bat, long and less than wide with a petiole less than long. The flowers are arranged in dense heads of 22 to 34 mainly on the ends of the longer branches. The flowers are surrounded by more or less glabrous bracts long and wide and shorter pairs of bracteoles.
Eucalyptus alaticaulis is a tree or mallee growing to a height of about with rough, grey, fibrous bark on the lower part of the trunk and main stems. The leaves on young plants are arranged in opposite pairs, broadly lance-shaped to egg- shaped, up to long, wide and glossy green but a lighter shade on the lower side. The adult leaves are lance-shaped, long and mostly wide and have a longer petiole than the juvenile leaves. They are the same colour on both surfaces.
Rivers in Boise National Forest offer the opportunity for rafting and kayaking through rapids up to class four, with the most difficult sections on the South Fork and main stems of the Payette River. Numerous developed boat launch sites provide access to rivers for whitewater enthusiasts, and Dagger Falls is the primary launching site for visitors to the Middle Fork of the Salmon River and Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. Motorized boating is permitted on Anderson Ranch Reservoir, Deadwood Reservoir, and Warm Lake.
The bushy slender tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It branches near or atnnear ground level into a few erect to ascending main stems. It has a soft, dense canopy that produces a hissing sound in windy conditions much the same as a Sheoak (Casuarina or Allocasuarina) or Athol Pine (Tamarix) would. It has smooth greenish bronze or reddish brown coloured bark that is often covered in a fine white powdery coating that is grey and roughened near the base of the trunks.
Kunzea newbeyi is a robust shrub with several main stems and many side branches and which grows to a height of . The leaves are glabrous, oblong to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and about wide, not including the petiole which is a further long. The flowers are arranged in more or less spherical groups of 15 to 35, on the ends of branches which continue to grow after flowering. The flowers are surrounded by glabrous, egg-shaped bracts and bracteoles.
Verticordia habrantha is a shrub which grows to high and wide and which has a few main stems with many short, leafy side-branches. The leaves on the side branches are linear to narrow elliptic in shape, roughly triangular in cross-section, long, while those on the flowering stems are elliptic to egg-shaped and up to long. The flowers are arranged in rounded or corymb-like groups near the ends of the long flowering stems, each flower on an erect stalk, long. The floral cup is about long and covered with short, soft hairs.
Panicle branches are angular, or flat, appear to be covered with minute scabs, and are shaggy with long, weak hairs, and have enlarged pulvini; they are glabrous or bearded in the axils, and hairy at the tips. The primary branch of the panicle (2–11 cm long) lacks branchlets. Racemes bear only a few fertile spikelets (two to 10 fertile spikelets per raceme). Main stems (5–6 mm long between nodes) are straight, have cilia on their margins, break easily at the nodes, and end in an abrupt, slanting tip.
Eucalyptus cornuta is a tree that typically grows to a height of with a crown wide, sometimes a mallee to , and forms a lignotuber. New stems may fork out from the trunk or the lignotuber or multiple main stems may replace a single trunk in older specimens. It has rough, fibrous, brown to almost black bark on all or part of its trunk, smooth greyish bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have egg-shaped to more or less round leaves long, wide and paler on the lower surface.
The AllMusic review stated "this stunning 1974 album, The Spiritual, finds the Art Ensemble of Chicago at their artistic height. Reduced to an unusual drummerless quartet for this session (reedsmen Joseph Jarman and Roscoe Mitchell, horn player Lester Bowie and bassist/banjo player Malachi Favors all double on various types of percussion), the group explores one of the main stems of jazz, New Orleans gospel and second-line music, without sacrificing its freer sounds. Indeed, without a traditional drummer, the group is free to play at its most unrestrained, unfettered by conventions of tempo".
The spreading tree or shrub typically grows to a height of with smooth fissured dark grey bark. The plant generally has a rounded or obconic habit with several stright to crooked, spreading main stems from the base with dense and spreading crown. The slightly shiny, glabrous, green to grey-green phyllodes are variable in shape and size They have a linear to narrowly oblong or narrowly elliptic shape and are in length with a width of about . The phyllodes are coriaceous and have an erect or spreading arrangement.
Verticordia halophila is a shrub which grows to high and wide and which has a few main stems with many short, leafy side-branches. The leaves on the side branches are crowded, oblong to egg-shaped, thick with a rounded end but with a short point and covered with soft hairs less than long. The leaves on the flowering stems are broadly egg-shaped to almost round. The flowers are scented and arranged in spike-like groups near the ends of the long flowering stems, each flower on a stalk, long.
A specimen of wila (Bryoria fremontii). Its thick, contorted main stems are distinctive of this species of Bryoria Wila (Bryoria fremontii), like almost all of the 23 other species of Bryoria found in North America, is a dark brown hair lichen that grow on trees (mostly conifers). Differentiating the different species of Bryoria can be difficult. The simplest characteristic that distinguishes wila from the other species of Bryoria is that its main branches grow to be quite thick (greater than 0.4 mm wide), and usually become somewhat flattened, twisted, and wrinkled in older specimens.
Pelargonium coronopifolium is a diploid with a base chromosome number of 10 (2n=20). It is an upright, herbaceous subshrub with main stems of up to high, that are rough under the level of the leaves because of the remains of old leaves and stipules. A plant may sprout several stems from the underground rootstock. All above-ground parts are covered in short hairs that are pressed stifly against the surface, and fewer glandular hairs, except for the pistils, stamens, staminodes, petals, and the inside of the sepals.
Kunzea micromera is sparsely branched shrub which typically grows to a height of , usually with a few main stems each with a few side branches. The leaves are elliptic to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, mostly long and about wide with a petiole less than long. The flowers are arranged in heads of mostly twelve to twenty on the ends of a few long shoots. The flowers are surrounded by egg-shaped bracts which are long and wide and mostly glabrous and by pairs of slightly smaller bracteoles.
However, the main lines of the W≤ never reached outside Ohio's borders. It also ran from Cleveland to Zanesville, with the lines crossing at Harmon, just east of Brewster, Ohio, which became the location of W≤'s corporate headquarters and locomotive shops. With two busy main stems crossing on the map of Ohio; the road's nickname for many years was "The Iron Cross". A branch between Steubenville and Martins Ferry, Ohio, was completed in 1891, which led to an indirect connection to Wheeling via the Ohio River bridge of the Wheeling Terminal Railway.
Instead, it is made of separate, irregularly branched units that end in tapered points. This type of capillitium, also present in the puffball genera Calbovista and Bovistella, has been called the "Bovista" type by Hanns Kreisel, who published a monograph on Bovista in 1967. Kreisel also defined the "Lycoperdon"-type (a capillitium comprising long, threads with occasional dichotomous or irregular branches), and the "intermediate" type (a transitional form between the Bovista type and Lycoperdon type, featuring threads that may be pored, with several thick main stems connected by multiple branches). All three types of capillitia structure are found in Bovista.
Eremophila mitchellii is a glabrous large shrub with a few main stems, or small tree which sometimes grows to a height of high although more regularly in the range . It has light grey bark which often flakes into small pieces, sometimes curling at the edges. The branches and leaves are glabrous and some parts are often sticky due to the presence of resin and the leaves are aromatic when crushed. The leaves are arranged alternately along the branches and are linear to lance-shaped, mostly long, wide, slightly sticky, have a distinct mid-vein on the lower surface and often have a hooked tip.
Illustration of C. scoparius from Köhler's Medicinal Plants (1887) Plants of C. scoparius typically grow to tall, rarely to , with main stems up to thick, rarely . The shrubs have green shoots with small deciduous trifoliate leaves 5–15 mm long, and in spring and summer are covered in profuse golden yellow flowers 20–30 mm from top to bottom and 15–20 mm wide. Flowering occurs after 50–80 growing degree days. In late summer, its legumes (seed pods) mature black, 2–3 cm long, 8 mm broad and 2–3 mm thick; they burst open, often with an audible crack, forcibly throwing seed from the parent plant.
The distinction between main stems and strongly branched lateral stems evident in species such as P. forbesii has been considered to be one of the key steps towards the evolution of the leaves of euphyllophytes (modern members of which are the ferns and seed plants), based on the theory that such leaves evolved through 'webbing' of flattened lateral branching systems. In 2004, Crane et al. published a simplified cladogram for the polysporangiophytes, based on a number of figures in Kenrick and Crane (1997). Part of their cladogram is reproduced below (with some branches collapsed into 'basal groups' to reduce the size of the diagram).
Peninsular Malaysia Precipitation Map on December 2004 showing heavy precipitation on the east coast, causing floods there. With 189 water basins and an average rainfall of over 2000-4000 mm per year, Malaysia is prone to riverine, muddy floods that range from hours-long flash floods, to prolonged flooding on flat, low-lying land along major tributaries and main stems. There have been 15 instances of major flooding in Malaysia since 1926. Flooding has been a major concern in recent decades due to rapid development in river catchment areas that has led to increased surface and river runoffs, increased sediment buildup in rivers, and a higher risk of overflowing rivers.
Four--the Yukon, Columbia, Porcupine, and Kootenay--begin in Canada and flow into the United States. Five --the Milk, Pend d'Oreille, Saint Lawrence, Red, and Saint John--begin in the United States and flow into Canada. Of these, the Milk and the Kootenay cross the international border twice, the Milk leaving and then re-entering the United States, the Kootenay leaving and then re-entering Canada. The drainage basins of these nine rivers extend into both countries; in addition, the drainage basins of six others--the Fraser, Assiniboine, South Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, Nelson, and Winnipeg--extend into the United States even though their main stems flow entirely within Canada.
Isabelia virginalis is often found epiphytically in semi-deciduous forest in São Paulo and Paraná from two to five hundred meters of altitude but can reach fifteen hundred in Minas Gerais mountains, not rarely living as a lithophyte at these elevations. It grows both on main stems and mid-height and high branches of trees, where it is exposed to plenty of luminosity, humidity and ventilation. Isabelia × pabstii, a natural hybrid of Isabelia pulchella and I. violacea, previously known as Isanitella × pabstii, is known from a collection only, in Paraná State, South of Brazil, growing in the crevices and debris pockets of eroded sandstone outcroppings in Vila Velha, near Ponta Grossa.Leinig, Milton (1971).
The Atlas of Oregon ranks 31 rivers in the state by average streamflow; the top five are the Columbia, Snake, Willamette, Santiam, and Umpqua. Not all Oregon rivers with high average flows are on this list of longest streams because neither their main stems nor any of their tributaries (including what are called "forks") are at least 50 miles (80 km) long. High-flow streams mentioned in the Atlas but not included in this long-stream list are the Metolius, Hood, Youngs, and Coos rivers. On the other hand, the list includes four low-flow intermittent streams—Dry River, Rattlesnake Creek, Rock Creek, and Dry Creek—that cross parts of the Oregon High Desert.
Historically, the geographic range of the species was broader and ranged from Tulula Creek to the main stems of the French Broad River and the Swannanoa River, but the Appalachian elktoe have not been spotted in these bodies of water recently, and it has been assumed that they no longer inhabit the areas. It has also been documented that the species used to live in the North Fork Holston River in Tennessee. Later studies at that site proved that a similar species of mussel was found in the area, but not the Appalachian elktoe itself. It is still somewhat of a mystery as to whether the species actually did at one time live in the North Fork Holston River, but even so, the species will not be found in that area today.

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