Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"ovoid" Definitions
  1. like an egg in shape

1000 Sentences With "ovoid"

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

Her mouth was intensely ovoid, an almond mouth, of citrus crescents.
Is the White House dropping the ball — or rather, the ovoid?
No, the ovoid space in which Judas kneels doesn't fully convince.
The PowerEgg may be the only one to adopt an ovoid shape.
But then the driver stops beside an ovoid skyscraper towering over the lightless river.
The servers and the bartender at the ovoid bar yelled out a Japanese welcome.
They come in all sizes, though most of them are comically large and weirdly ovoid.
In short order, Bernstein and Wilson had attached a smaller ovoid to a Sphero using magnets.
For a recent Pace Gallery show, he built an ovoid viewing chamber with a light-diffusing muslin ceiling.
It's a very simple, straightforward device, a little ovoid puck designed to get the Google Assistant into more rooms.
A large maquette for the "Ovoid Theater" from the World's Fair design is on display alongside the information kiosk.
If the ovoid forms in some of her smaller works suggest new life, this entire work celebrates that inevitability.
"Nun" (1921) shows a ruddy face, barely visible through an ovoid gap formed from the woman's tight fitting wimple.
Slim, dark, ovoid forms, each of which looks like a manhole with the sewer cap removed, appear throughout the series.
Several of the canvases hang around a pink onyx sculpture, in which twin ovoid shapes are encased in a sarcophagus or urn.
Janine Antoni's "Caryatid (Crackled green glaze over red oxide on an ovoid bodied vase with a truncated neck)" (2003) is an inverted monument.
Today, Beijing-based PowerVision made its ovoid camera drone, the PowerEgg, available to international customers via pre-order on the company's website for $1,288.
The creator of the PowerEgg, an ovoid flying robot, has begun accepting orders for its newest creation, a submersible camera drone for home use.
One by one she arranged them around one of two wooden, winglike structures, turned on its side so that it created an ovoid wall.
His sizable, ovoid frame gives him a commanding presence in any room, and his pristinely bald head gives his already piercing eyes more prominence.
"We did a small dissection of the brain tissue and what we saw was a very well encapsulated, firm lesion that was ovoid," said Rasouli.
The National Performing Arts Centre near Tiananmen Square in Beijing, Paul Andreu's titanium ovoid (it is nicknamed the "Big Egg"), is arguably the most significant.
Thierry Mugler knitted bodysuit, corset, and pant; Lady Grey Ovoid Earrings, $384, available at Lady Grey; Sophia Webster Jumbo Lilico Sandal, $650, available at Sophia Webster.
On the first floor of the gallery Hammons has affixed hair from a black barbershop to a large ovoid rock, turning it into a faceless head.
The first work in Matsuyama's series Object was a still image of a giant ovoid-shaped CG dazzle object in the middle of a rain-soaked Shibuya street.
The frozen ovoid island is like a period in a chain of ellipses linking North America to the United Kingdom, Europe, and Scandinavia, making it a perfect stopover point.
Several of her works depict "arches," or what I might describe as abstract ovoid images which, quite obviously, posit a kind of feminist figuring onto the brightly painted landscapes.
The most prominent piece was a large sculpture, also called "Selah," which takes its shape from one of the "BAM" figures, with an ovoid face and a hollow interior.
Because the star and its planet are so close to each other, the exolanet's round shape has become more like an ovoid football as it faces the star's gravity.
All chocolate, even white chocolate, starts with the fruit of the cacao tree, an equatorial, Seussian-looking plant with plump, bumpy, ovoid pods that grow directly from the trunk.
The large, ovoid vessels are smooth, slip-cast, or hand-built ceramic, punctuated by golden accents and offshoots — actually gold-plated copper that Kalman transfers to wax molds via electroforming.
"They have an ovoid shape in the cheek, which is an egg shape that extends from the corners of the mouth to the outside of the eye," Dr. Ishii says.
That included an ovoid sound-absorbing room divider by Vera & Kyte and an inscrutable black tubular piece by Petter Skogstad that's somewhere between a throne, a table, and a valet.
The ovoid forms, in beige, puce and black, recall human breasts as much as cows' udders or sex organs, and for Rama, anyway, sexual readings were never to be evaded.
For those who like to run a bit more wild, Nice One Projects of Cambridge, MA, presents an ovoid structure bristling on all sides with thatch bundles like a sukkah anemone.
But that was a good 10 minutes before Lynch went full "Eraserhead," transporting us to an otherworldly dimension wherein a humanoid figure belches out a viscous stream of ominous ovoid shapes.
DAG features notable works in bronze, such as "Nest" (1975), "Halves" (1979) and "Genesis I" (1971), which mark his style of containing abstract ideas within the roundedness of his trademark ovoid shapes.
Duchesse cotton bubbled out in ovoid curves, fur was used to make curving rosettes, and floor-length capes of ostrich feathers hand-knotted into long strings floated as if in zero gravity.
Haider Ackermann sliced and diced suiting so that a sharp, perfectly cut collarless jacket turned to reveal an ovoid curve cutout at the back, playing hide and seek with a muscle tank.
In a photograph that greets visitors on the entry wall of the gallery, Kalman is nude and pictured from the waist up, holding a medium-sized white ovoid topped by a gold nipple.
"Ovoid Solitude," a new work by the Kosovar Albanian artist Sislej Xhafa, features a nearly 80-year-old Cuban egg seller, who will work from a replica of his real shop in Havana.
At the old-fashioned Santa Clara Market, he plucked a yellowish ovoid fruit called a taxo off a fruit stand and cracked it open to reveal countless seeds enveloped in bright orange globules, like alien eggs.
Silicon Valley firm Knightscope is best known for its K5 security robot: an ovoid tower on wheels that — when it's not knocking over toddlers or falling into fountains — patrols a few dozen of California's parking lots and malls.
The unique buildings that starchitects produce often set themselves apart from the fabric of their locations—amid a neighborhood of brick town houses there will suddenly appear, for instance, a silver blob like the ovoid spaceship from Arrival.
From above, the Lisbon museum, known as MAAT, resembles a germinating seed: a plump ovoid structure with a tendril-like bridge connecting the site to the city center, with a walkway along the Tagus river forming its root.
"I'm essentially appropriating architecture," says Pardo, who now lives in Mérida, Mexico, in another structure that could be considered both art piece and functional living space — a "birdcage in the jungle" complete with a hand-painted mural and ovoid pendant lights.
Like many directors with a strong background in advertising (as Mr. Scott has), he can load seemingly inconsequential visual details with significance, using Morgan's ovoid face and androgyne appearance to underscore Lee's insistence on viewing her as no more than a neutered product.
Thomas Heatherwick of London, who designed the building, created the ovoid atrium by slicing through 237.6 of 22015 concrete tubes running from the top of the silo to its basement, where conveyor belts once shuttled millions of tons of grain to trains outside.
Commissioned in 1958 for the Cabinet Building by its architect, Erling Viksjo, Ms. Ryggen's 13-foot-high, hand-woven work shows monumental male and female figures embracing before a blue ovoid form that represents the world, suspended amid planets in a night sky.
Filling in DRS at 25A and TSARS at 4D gives me the rest of the corner, including OVULAR, because God knows crosswords can use as many ways as possible to describe an oval (I'm still bitter about OVOID from the Monday puzzle).
Kalman is nude in the photographs, stretching her mouth to accommodate golden dental appliances, flopped stomach-down and head turned away over a rolling ceramic pelvic mold, or back to the camera edging precariously down onto a large ovoid ceramic base with a nodule presumably entering her anal cavity.
" Larson describes a dinner party hosted by Churchill, where he practiced bayonette drills while wearing a "gold silk dragon dressing gown" and a bespoke pale blue jumpsuit: "He called it his 'siren suit,' and when he put it on, because of his ovoid shape, he really did look like an Easter egg.
The distinguished supporting cast further includes Nick Holder's Peachum, an ovoid figure of fear, and a bespectacled Rosalie Craig as his daughter Polly, one of the many intendeds, as it turns out, of Mr. Kinnear's take-no-prisoners Macheath, who cuts as sharp as the knife that gives his character both a career and a name.
Placed beneath a glossy color photo of a pair of flat, ovoid stones — evidently, a close-up view of a chimney — is an index card from the archive of Buchanan's personal research bearing a frustulum of typewritten text: LEON'S CHIMNEY–Part 2 Interview Question: Would you say knowing that SLAVE hands built this chimney has a special meaning or says something about SURVIVAL?
Fruits are ovoid to urceolate in shape with dull to semi-glossy red-brown ovoid seeds.
Pupa ovoid with cremaster hooks. Cocoon truncated and semi-ovoid. Larval host plant is Grewia species.
The Tits ovoid is also referred to as the Suzuki ovoid. He wrote several textbooks in Japanese.
The ovoid ovary is long and wide. The singularly locular capsule is ovoid and held by the sepals. The three styles, measuring long, are distinct, short, and have capitate stigmas. The ovoid capsules measure long and wide.
They each have a level to descending disc with three or four valves containing grey-black seeds with an ovoid to flattened-ovoid shape.
The red or green fruit is large, globular or ovoid, with strong spines that are lost on maturity. It contains large black seeds, ovoid or kidney-shaped.
Thorax bulbous. Larval food plant is Memecylon. Pupation occurs in a cocoon at the base of mid-rib. The cocoon is semi-ovoid and the pupa is ovoid.
The fruit is a woody, conical capsule long, wide. The seeds produced are red-brown with an ovoid to flattened-ovoid or cuboid shape with a length of .
The fruit is a green to light brown globose to ovoid capsule of 3–4 mm long, each locule of which opens separately. Seeds are minute and ovoid in shape.
Male trees have 1–4 pollen cones, narrowly ovoid. Female trees have 1 or 2 seed cones, which are ovoid and 18–20 cm long. The seeds have a red sarcotesta.
Flowers have 25 to 40 stamens, the longest of which measure . The trilocular, ovoid ovaries are long and wide. The ovoid capsules are long and wide. The cylindrical, yellow-brown seeds are long.
Later it forms smooth ovoid glabrous fruit that are long.
Later it forms ovoid simple hairy fruit that is long.
The smooth seeds are narrowly ovoid, about 1.5mm in diameter.
Conidia are aseptate, ellipsoid to ovoid and with longitudinal striations.
The ovoid orange fruit, growing to , is edible but bland.
The bulb is fleshy, globose to ovoid. The ring is membranous, white, superior, skirt-like. The volva is membranous, limbate, and fulvous-white. The spores measure 7 - 8 × 6 µm and are ovoid to subglobose.
Its dark brown acorns are ovoid and measure up to long.
Later it forms ovoid, simple and hairy fruit that is long.
The fruits are whitish purple when ripe, ovoid, up to long.
It will produce a simple hairy ovoid fruit that is long.
These are followed by ovoid fruits that are 15 mm long.
Ovicell pedunculate ovoid, adnate to the rachis, with a lateral opening.
An ovoid of W_{2 n-1}(q) (a symplectic polar space of rank n) would contain q^n+1 points. However it only has an ovoid if and only n=2 and q is even. In that case, when the polar space is embedded into PG(3,q) the classical way, it is also an ovoid in the projective geometry sense.
Later it forms oblong or ovoid glandular hairy fruit that are long.
Later it forms ovoid, glandular hairy, red-brown fruit that are long.
Later it forms ovoid or ellipsoidal simple hairy fruit that is long.
The brown seeds within have a flattened ovoid shape and are long.
Later it forms warty ellipsoidal or ovoid glabrous fruit that is long.
Fruits in heads ovoid to subcylindric in shape, 17–25 mm long.
The roundish to ovoid fruits measure up to long with brown seeds.
The roundish to ovoid fruits measure up to long with black seeds.
Its brown acorns are ovoid to roundish and measure up to across.
The brownish acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
The spores are ovoid-elliptic with warts up to 1 micrometre high.
The brownish acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
Capsule 9-15 x 8-10 mm, ovoid to narrowly ovoid-conic, turning > bright red during maturation. Seeds dark orange-brown to reddish-brown, 1-1.1 mm long, narrowly cylindric, narrowly carinate with terminal expansion, shallowly linear-foveolate.
Fruits globose to ovoid, brownish. Seeds oblong, 1 mm long, black or brown.
The seeds are dark brown with an ovoid shape and a length of .
Filaments tomentose at base. Anthers ovoid, pale yellow. Style long-exserted. Stigma peltate.
The pale golden- brown seeds have a flattened ovoid shape and are long.
The brown seeds inside have a flattened ovoid shape and a length of .
The brown seeds within have a flattened ovoid shape and are in length.
Stamens are inserted near base of corolla tube and the anthers ovate. Ovary ovoid, 3 X 2 mm, stellate tomentose except for lower third; stigma subcapitate. Capsules ellipsoid, stellate tomentose, approximately 4 X 3 mm. Seeds unwinged, ovoid to ellipsoid.
The flowers, hermaphrodite, are gathered in short racemes, the calyx is pubescent with lanceolate teeth, the corolla is yellow. They bloom in May and June. The fruits are ovoid legumes of about 10 mm, with 2 to 4 ovoid, brownish seeds.
An example of an ovoid is the elliptic quadric, the set of zeros of the quadratic form ::: x1x2 \+ f(x3, x4), where f is an irreducible quadratic form in two variables over GF(q). [f(x,y) = x2 \+ xy + y2 for example]. If q is an odd power of 2, another type of ovoid is known – the Suzuki–Tits ovoid. Theorem. Let q be a positive integer, at least 2.
Fruit a white, pubescent, leathery capsule with 3 to 5 valves. Seeds ovoid, glossy.
The shorter lip is ovoid. It shows the same variations in color and markings.
The leaf underside is hispid and its sinus is cordate. The plant has long, membranous and brownish stipules; it has a yellow-green pedicellated and glabrous inflorescence. The ovoid flowers appear from May to July, they produce ovoid and urn-shaped fruits.
Thornmint styles are slender and their fruit is ovoid in shape with smooth exterior texture.
They may contain three to six ovoid, black seeds. Flowering occurs between June and August.
Fruit is an ovoid or globose berry, 13 x 11mm, fleshy and ripens bright red.
Petals 5, entire or retuse. Stamens 20. Capsule ovoid, irregularly dehiscent from base. Reniform seeds.
In female genitalia, ovipositor lobes angular. Ductus bursae medium long. Corpus bursae smooth and ovoid.
The brown seeds within the fruit have a flattened ovoid shape and a length of .
The ovoid fruits measure up to long. Mediusella bernieri flowers and fruits from February to July.
Ascospores are oblong-ovoid to tear-shaped, simple (rarely 1-septate in P. leprosa), and hyaline.
The ovoid fruit are horned woody capsules long by wide and taper to two prominent horns.
Two stamen are longer and stamens of pistillate flowers are rudimentary. The style protrudes outside of the mouth of the flowers. The fruits are nutlets, which are oblong-ovoid, ellipsoid, ovoid, or obovoid in shape. The surfaces of the nutlets can be slightly ribbed, smooth or warty.
The flowers are coloured purple. The staminate (male) flowers are in length; the pistillate (female) flowers are in length. The shape of the fruit is ovoid; the nut is an ellipsoid/ovoid shape and contains 1-3 seeds. Ripe fruit has a yellow and sweet-sour flesh.
Species of Platanthera are perennial terrestrial herbs, erect in habit. The roots are fasciculate and typically fleshy and slender, although they may be somewhat tuberous; if tuberous they are lanceolate to fusiform and not ovoid. The leaves are generally fleshy and range from oblong or ovoid to lanceolate. Leaf shape often varies with the lower leaves more ovoid in shape, progressively becoming more lanceolate as they progress up the scape; floral bracts, if present, are lanceolate to linear.
Males build an ovoid nest with grass and palm strips. Females lay two eggs and incubate them.
Australian Museum, Sydney. There is an ovoid brown or black mark on the back, behind the rhinophores.
The acorns grow singly or in pairs and are light brown, broadly ovoid with a rounded apex.
Flowers are yellowish, approximately 12 mm. Fruits are ovoid up to 45 mm: with 5-10 segments.
Kandelia species grow as small mangrove trees. Inflorescences bear 4 to 9 flowers. The fruits are ovoid.
It flowers in the summer, between June and August. The 3-parted fruits are long and ovoid.
These are usually flattened disk-shaped or ovoid, often lobulate externally like the surface of a kidney.
The Stamens with anthers have an ovoid shape. It forms yellow seeds with a cylindrical-ovoid shape. The species was first formally described as Crassula decumbens by the botanist Thunberg in 1794 in the work Prodromus Plantarum Capensium. Synonyms for the species include Tillaea trichotoma and Bulliarda trichotoma.
The golden yellow, occasionally tinged pink petals are long and wide, equal or shorter than the sepals. The twelve to twenty-one stamens are obscurely five-fascicled, the longest measuring . The sessile pistil is about long, ovoid in shape. The ovoid to ellipsoid ovary is long and wide.
The sarcotesta is 2-3.5 mm thick and orange, the sclerotesta flattened and long ovoid, with a network of shallow grooves. The male cones are solitary, narrow ovoid, 13–17 cm long and 7–9 cm diameter, brown, the sporophylls 33–40 mm long with an apical spine.
These are followed by ovoid seed capsules. The species is native to Europe but has become naturalised elsewhere.
The tree has numerous bright yellow flowers between September and November followed by bright red-orange ovoid fruits.
Most other medullosaleans produced large ovoid pre-pollen with a monolete mark, and assigned to the genus Schopfipollenites.
Dacryodes elmeri has a trunk diameter of up to . The fruits are ovoid and measure up to long.
The capsules are red and ovoid, approximately , containing seeds which are usually single and up to in diameter.
Sucrose nitrate synthesize AGAR: gas filaments slightly pink, white. Spore filaments are non-helical. They are ovoid, spherical.
After fertilization, an unsymmetrical ovoid capsule forms, filled with brown seeds, each with a circular "wing" around it.
The brown ovoid seeds within have a length of and a width of and have a long aril.
Meronts: These occur in erythrocytes. 5-32 merozoites are produced by budding. Gamonts: These are spheroid or ovoid.
The seeds have two wings, are ovoid to cordate in shape, and are up to 5 mm long and 4 mm wide. The pollen-bearing cones are small, globose to ovoid, 1–5 mm long and 0.5–4 mm wide, and oppositely arranged on specialized stalks with one terminal cone.
Flowers are large, funnelform, 9–30 cm long, usually white, sometimes pink, purple, rarely cream, yellow, greenish, and open at night. Fruits are globose to ovoid to oblong, 3–13 cm long, fleshy, naked, usually red but sometimes yellow, pulp white, pink or red. Seeds large, curved ovoid, glossy black.
The flower heads have a flattened oblong-ovoid shape and are around wide. the flowers have a brown base and two long opposite primary bracts. Between 6-22 flowers form in a terminal cluster, the flowers have a brown to yellowish colour. Brown ovoid fruit follow that contain small soft seeds.
Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in the basal third and cylindrical above. Upper pitchers are more cylindrical throughout.
In females, the ovaries are ovoid in shape and are roughly 2.8 mm long and 0.8 mm in diameter.
House, 1993. 187-88. Print. The flowers are red, ovoid, smooth. The whole plant is used in medicinal purposes.
Pupation begins on a tree or the fungus in a tight-fitting cocoon which is semi-ovoid in shape.
Flowers are hermaphroditic and are pinkish white in color. It has ovoid yellow fruit that turns red as it ripens.
The flowers are paired or in clusters and are very small; the ovoid fruits that follow are sometimes more conspicuous.
Female plants produce oblong or ovoid fruit, usually with one seed, red to brown in color and covered in scales.
The flowers are fragrant and deep pink. The hips are globose to ovoid, 10–13 mm diameter, orange to brownish.
Their insertion at the end of the lamina is apical. Rosette and lower pitchers are either infundibular in the lower third to half and ovoid above, or ovoid throughout. They reach 25 cm in height and 9 cm in width. A pair of fringed wings (≤15 mm wide) runs down the front of the pitcher.
In Neurofibromatosis Type 1, the spots tend to be described as ovoid, with smooth borders. In other disorders, the spots can be less ovoid, with jagged borders. In Neurofibromatosis Type 1, the spots tend to resemble the "coast of California," rather than the "coast of Maine," meaning the edges are smoother and more linear.
The pistillate flowers are larger with broadly imbricate sepals and valvate petals; there are three toothlike staminodes borne at the side of the ovoid, uniovulate gynoecium. The three stigmas are prominent and reflexed nearing antithesis; the ovule is pendulous. The ovoid fruit is red to brown at maturity carrying one seed with a basal embryo.
The fruit is an almost globose or ovoid berry, smooth, fleshy, with a thick rind. The seeds are large and flat.
The flowering period extends from May until July. The fruits are ovoid reddish-brown legumes long containing one or two seeds.
The gametocytes are round to ovoid in shape. They occupy a polar position in the erythrocytes which are enlarged and deformed.
The acorn is ovoid to ellipsoid, 9-13 × 7–10 mm, with a scar that is 4–6 mm in diameter.
It is also hairy. The seeds are ovoid, smooth, wrinkled or pitted. At one end there is a colorless, conic appendage.
The seeds are blackish brown with a flattened-ovoid to cuboid shape and are released through the gap between the valves.
The dark brown to black seeds have a semi-flat ovoid shape and are around in length and a width of .
It has reddish purple, or lilac style branches, which are 3 cm long with deeply fringed (fimbriated) edges. After the iris has flowered, it produces an ovoid- globose, or ovoid-cylindrical seed capsule, between June and August. It is cm long, with veining. Inside the capsule, are pyriform (pear shaped) black brown seeds, with a white aril.
P.davidiana mesocarps (the flesh of the fruits) dry out, the other species' fruits remain moist. P.davidiana has a number of other distinguishing characters, and is also genetically divergent from the other peaches. P.kansuensis winter buds are ovoid to long ovoid and glabrous, P.persica winter buds are conical and pubescent. P.kansuensis petioles are about long, P.persica petioles are about long.
The ovary is supreme. The fruit Is an ovoid capsule 10–14 mm diameter shaped like a skull, containing numerous small seeds.
They are ovoid and can be up to long, with a moderately firm texture. Their flesh is juicy, acid, whitish and aromatic.
Cocoon semi ovoid, dirty fuscous in color and boat shaped. Larval host plants include Vatica, Terminalia, Shorea, Anogeissus, Tectona and Saccharum species.
Atuna cordata grows up to tall. The smooth bark is grey-green with white mottles. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
The seed pod is about long and wide, and ovoid in shape (with truncated ends). The plant generally flowers in mid-spring.
Each oogonium is ovoid, about 1.8 mm long and 1.0 mm wide at widest point, and tapers slightly towards point of attachment .
Plants are monoecious, and flowering occurs from October to January. Fruit is an ovoid, silver-grey ribbed nut, about 1.5 mm long.
Deep ocherous reniform stigma is ovoid. A conspicuous black spot in its lower half. Orbicular stigma tiny. Forewing costa straight in male.
The acorn cups are deep and the acorns grow singly or in pairs and are light brown, broadly ovoid with a rounded apex.
20, longest c. 11-12 mm, about equalling petals. Ovary c. 2.5 x 1.5mm, narrowly ovoid-ellipsoid; styles 8-9 mm long, c.
Fruit is broadly ovoid, 1 mm, laterally compressed. In Manipur, the leaves are eaten as a substitute for Indian pennywort. Flowering: June–July.
The cocoon is spherical to ovoid, reddish brown to dull brown, consisting of a single, thin and flimsy layer with incorporated larval setae.
The larva is green and of the cylindrical type, and spins a thin ovoid silken cocoon, fastened to the leaf above and below.
Palaquium elegans grows up to tall. The twigs are brownish. Inflorescences bear up to 10 flowers. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
There are three stamens, sometimes six. The upper part of the ovoid capsules is reddish-brown, and they are 2–3 mm long.
The snout is obtuse in profile. The canthus rostralis is sharp. The tympanum is ovoid and distinct. The fingers and toes bear disks.
The ovoid fruits are single-seeded and about 3 mm long, becoming brown and dry. The main flowering season is December to January.
The ovary is 3, rarely from 2.5 mm to 4.5 mm long, and 2-2.5 mm wide and more or less narrowly ovoid. The five styles are 5–7 mm long, erect, outcurved below the apex; the stigmas are small. The capsule is 8–10 mm long and 5–7 mm wide, broadly ovoid, shorter than the sepals. The seeds are c.
They are very slow-growing, semi-deciduous or deciduous, and succulent perennials with a few branches and many small, ovoid leaves along the stems. Branches are pale-barked smooth with papery cortex. These woody- stemmed desert shrubs have many short and ovoid gray-green leaves. Flowers, born on peduncles of 13–17 mm long, with some minute ovate bracts 4 mm long.
Tulipa albanica is a bulbous perennial reaching in height. The bulb is ovoid to ovoid-globose and in diameter. The stem is erect, glabrous, glaucous to greyish-green and the leaves, which vary from 3–5, reach a size of about long by , and are glaucous to greyish-green. They grow alternately along the stem and the lowermost ones have strongly undulated edges.
Canarium hirsutum grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The fruits are oblong to ovoid and measure up to long.
The oblong to ovoid shaped nut that forms later has a length of and is dark brown to black and orange near the base.
Its 1 cm-long fruit is ovoid and turns yellow to orange, red or black when ripe and may be toxic if consumed excessively.
The seeds are 7 × 5 mm in size, ovoid-ellipsoid in shape, smooth surfaced, and dull, pale greyish-brown flecked and spotted with darker brown.
Nummular dermatitis is characterized by chronic or relapsing itchy coin-sized ovoid- shaped red plaques. They can occur on the trunk, limbs, face, and hands.
Dorso-lateral tubercles are pale yellow. Pupation occurs in an oval tapered cocoon. Pupa dorso-ventrally flattened and semi- ovoid. Larval host plant is Macaranga.
Lilium bosniacum Beck ex Fritsch 1909 Section 3b Syn.: L. carniolicum var. bosniacumno Bulb: ovoid, 6–7 cm in diameter, yellowish. Stem: 30–90 cm.
The smooth, pale to dark brown, ovoid nut is 2.7–4.0 mm long and 1.3–1.8 mm in diameter. It flowers in spring and summer.
The small Uranian ovoid features coronae that are very large in relation to its size. They may be formed by diapirs: upwellings of warm ice.
Males have small nuptial spines. The tadpoles are large: the longest measured tadpole was . The body is ovoid and measures about among the largest tadpoles.
The seeds are globose to broadly ovoid and about 16 mm long and 12 mm wide and have a smooth shell about 1 mm thick.
Cotoneaster tenuipes bears its fruit from September to October. They are purplish black, ovoid pomes (~ 8.5 X 5.5 mm), each contains one or two pyrenas.
The basidia are club-shaped, usually two-spored, and with long filiform sterigmata. Spores are 12–26 µm long, and ovoid to ellipsoid in shape.
The capsules dehisce (split open), laterally (similar to Iris korolkowii). Inside the capsules, are brown, ovoid, globose or pyriform seeds. which have a circular aril.
Agathis kinabaluensis grows as a tree up to tall. Its bark is dark brown. The male cones are cylindrical in shape, the female ones ovoid.
At the base of the leaf the leaflets are reduced to thorns. The spine is normally straight and stiff, but can sometimes be slightly twisted. It is a dioecious species, with ovoid blue-green or yellow male cones 30–50 cm long by 9–12 cm in diameter, and blue-green or yellow ovoid female cones 30–60 cm long by 10–20 cm in diameter.
Natural History Publications (Borneo), Kota Kinabalu. Rosette pitchers may be ovoid throughout or narrowly ovoid in the lower half and cylindrical above. They grow up to 10 cm high and 4 cm wide. Two fringed wings, up to 8 mm wide, run along the front of rosette pitchers. The peristome is cylindrical in cross-section and up to 4 mm wide, bearing indistinct teeth.
The petiole is sometimes armed with spines, and terminates in a spine or pair of leaflets. The female cones are open, with sporophylls 7 cm long and 3.5–5 cm wide, and dense grey to orange tomentose, with 6-9 ovules per sporophyll. The sarcotesta is thick orange tomentose, and the sclerotesta flattened ovoid shaped. The male cones erect, narrow ovoid, with a broad apical spine.
The female cones are open, with sporophylls 16–21 cm long, with two to four ovules per sporophyll. The lamina is narrowly triangular, with toothed margins and an apical spine. The sarcotesta is yellow-brown with a waxy coating, the sclerotesta ovoid and flattened. The male cones are solitary, ovoid, 16–20 cm long and 7–10 cm diameter, brown, and with an upturned apical spine.
The fruits are lignous ovoid capsules, long, which contain bean-sized black seeds surrounded by a mass of fibrous, fluffy matter reminiscent of cotton or silk.
Concretions, spherical or ovoid-shaped nodules found in some sedimentary strata, were once thought to be dinosaur eggs, and are often mistaken for fossils as well.
Dacryodes macrocarpa grows as a medium-sized to tall tree. The bark is reddish brown and cracked. The ovoid or ellipsoid fruits measure up to long.
The fruits that follow are ovoid capsules, with lids, containing black seeds with wrinkled cuticles. The plants develop orange and red hues in the cool season.
Jointed hydroids live in sheltered areas and are common on the southern Cape coast. The reproductive bodies are ovoid with a distinct depression in their apex.
Sepals are long with 5–7 veins and are ovate-lanceolate; petals are long and ovate. The fruit is an ovoid capsule up to in length.
Six adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid in shape. The snout is short. No tympanum is present.
They may appear in a raceme of up 22 flowers. The smooth to roughish fruit are ovoid long by wide with two distinct slightly incurving beaks.
Diospyros puncticulosa is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs dry to black. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
Each cupule contains one ovoid shiny dark brown nut that is edible. A natural hybrid of Castanea pumila and Castanea dentata has been named Castanea × neglecta.
The flowering period extended from mid Summer until early Fall. Fruits are ovoid to elliptical capsules, containing numerous minute seeds. This plant has scaly underground rhizomes.
Most leaves are long by under wide. The relatively small fruit are smooth, compressed and ovoid shaped long by under wide ending with a small beak.
The initially green or glaucous epimatium becomes red at maturity and varies from subglobose to ovoid-pyriform in shape with a length of 18-25 millimeters.
The pods are about long and wide and usually curved or coiled. The hard brown seeds are ovoid to globular in shape and about to long.
Diospyros euphlehia is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to 15 flowers. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
The ovoid seed capsule is 10 mm long, containing narrowly winged, dark brown seeds. The plant flowers from October to January and fruits from December to March.
Later it forms ovoid glandular and hairy fruit that is long. The popular garden plant, Grevillea' 'Dorothy Gordon', is a hybrid between G. sessilis and G. paradoxa.
A shell of Haminoea zelandiae These bubble snails have thin, inflated shells ranging in shape from ovoid to flat and oval. They have an involute (sunken) spire.
5.0~7.0 mm, ovoid, subovoid to ellipsoid, apiculate, green to black, coriaceous, weakly rugose, sparsely hairy, glabrate; mucilage yellow. Seeds 2–6, irregular, globose, lustrous dark black.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is oblong to ovoid, occasionally circular. The epidermis is opaque, green yellow. Mines usually cross the midrib.
Its leaves are opposite, simple, and ovate, from long, entire or with a few sparse shallow teeth. Its fruit is a hairy, ovoid capsule approximately inches long.
The plants are dioecious and bear spermatangia near the apices of the branches. Cystocarps are ovoid or globular and tetrasporangia are formed in series near the apices.
Platanthera may be distinguished from Orchis and Habenaria by the absence of stigmatic processes, and the absence of ovoid roots. Some Platanthera species are pollinated by mosquitoes.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid in shape. The snout is short. No tympanum is present.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is vertical in profile. The parotoid glands are large and ovoid. Dorsal ground colour is greyish green.
Payena kinabaluensis is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to seven flowers. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
Barringtonia ashtonii grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is brown. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
There may be up to 60 stamens with short filaments with basifixed, elongated anthers. The exine is tectate and reticulate; pistillodes are not present. The pistillate flowers are longer and ovoid with three sepals forming a cup, and three imbricate petals with thick, valvate tips. There are six tiny staminodes with ovoid, uniovulate gynoecium matted in thin brown scales and bearing a three-angled stigma; the ovule is ± pendulous.
The ovary is densely pubescent; style terete, silvery gray tomentose on lower half. The nut is ovoid or narrowly ovoid, densely appressed tomentose; the calyx tube is up to 2.8 cm in diameter, glabrous and glaucous; the winglike calyx segments are linear-lanceolate, 12-15 × ca. 3 cm, glabrous, minutely papillate near much- ramified solitary midvein. Flowering is from March to April, and fruiting occurs in June and July.
Seeds are produced in the fruit and can be collected between October and February. Seeds are blackish-brown in colour long, angularly ovoid or flattened ovoid with 150 to 300 viable seeds per gram. E. occidentalis is closely related to Eucalyptus sargentii, which is also a rough-barked tree species usually found on saline sites but differing in having terete peduncles, smaller fruit and smaller buds in clusters of seven.
Pupae are black- brown, with a white or yellowish ovoid cocoon.Lepiforum.de This species is rather similar to Zygaena algira, Zygaena maroccana, Zygaena occitanica, Zygaena orana and Zygaena youngi.
Parinari argenteo-sericea grows as a tree up to tall. The brown bark is lenticellate. The inflorescence is up to long. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
The virus has an outer envelope with a thick layer of protein studded over its surface. The whole virion is slightly pleomorphic, ranging from ovoid to brick-shaped.
The biconic, medium-sized shell has its varices dissected into spines. The aperture is ovoid and smooth inside. The anal sinus is almost closed. The columella is smooth.
Calyx teeth obsolete or minute. Stylopodium conic; styles 3–4 times longer than stylopodium. Fruit ovoid, 1.5–3 × 1–2 mm; lateral ribs slightly broader than the dorsal.
The fruit of E. strictus superficially resemble stunted cherries. They are drupes measuring 2.5 – 4 mm, are ovoid or globose, shiny, and green to purple-black in coloration.
Aeginetia flava grows as a herb with stems tall. The flowers, solitary on the stem, feature bright yellow petals. The ovoid fruits are capsules measuring up to long.
The male cones are solitary, narrow ovoid, 25–30 cm long and 5–7 cm diameter, brown, the sporophylls 25–30 mm long with an upturned apical spine.
Roseovarius litoreus is a species of bacteria. It is gram-negative, non- flagellated and ovoid- to rod-shaped. Its type strain is GSW-M15T (=KCTC 23897T = CCUG 62218T).
The flowers are widely lanceolate. Its style is long and the stigmata are exserted. This plant produces many seeds. These ovoid seeds are about 0.6 mm in size.
Diospyros crockerensis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to nine flowers. The fruits are oblong to ovoid, up to long.
The bulb is ovoid (egg-shaped) and is 2-3.5 cm tall and 2-3.5 cm in diameter. Their size is smaller than that of L. brownii.F. Porter, Smith.
The glossy balck seeds have an ovoid, ellipsoid or obovoid shape with a length of and a width of with a creamy-grey or greyish coloured many folded aril.
Generally, it appears as short chains of spherical or ovoid cells. These chains are somewhat longer in broth cultures than milk. Some cultures form extremely long chains in broth.
Mastixia glauca grows as a tree measuring up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The pale green fruits are oblong-ovoid and measure up to long.
Mastixia macrocarpa grows as a tree measuring up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The pale green fruits are oblong-ovoid and measure up to long.
Arthroleptis variabilis is a robust frog with moderately robust limbs. Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head is somewhat broad. The tympanum is distinct and ovoid.
After the iris has flowered, it produces a capsule, that is triangular, capsule, which is 4–5 mm long and 3 mm wide. The capsule contains elongated ovoid seeds.
Ghrelin cells are found in oxyntic glands (20% of cells), pyloric glands, and small intestine. They are ovoid cells with granules. They have gastrin receptors. Some produce nesfatin-1.
This species has an ovoid shell that is amber to brown in color, and has 3 to 3.5 whorls. It can reach a maximum length of about 6.5 mm.
Twigs are deep red, 1–2 mm in diameter and glabrous. Terminal buds are red-brown, ovoid to subconic, 2.5–5 mm, and glabrous or with scales somewhat ciliate.
The plants are dioecious. Spermatangial branchlets are borne near the apices of young branches. Cystocarps are ovoid and slightly stalked. Tetraspores occur in spiral series in the upper branches.
The plastid does not have a genome, but genes are targeted to it from the nucleus. Rhodelphis is ovoid with a tapered anterior end bearing two perpendicularly-oriented flagella.
The seed is ovoid to circular, compressed, with leathery, smooth or papillose seed coat. The seed contains the half-annular, uncinate or curved embryo and copious perisperm (feeding tissue).
On the flank, there are several wavy dorsal lines. A yellow sub-lateral stripe is present. Pupation occurs in a white ovoid cocoon, which is dull, hard and smooth.
Tolypangium is a subgenus of the genus Stylidium that is characterized by ovoid to longish capsules. This subgenus was part of the earliest taxonomic division among the triggerplants (genus Stylidium). Stephan Ladislaus Endlicher first split the genus into two subgenera in 1838: Tolypangium with its ovoid capsules and Nitrangium with its linear capsules. Subsequent authors generally followed this classification, which is based almost entirely on the features of the capsule.Erickson, Rica. (1958). Triggerplants.
Diospyros britannoborneensis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs dry greyish or blackish. The fruits are ovoid to round, up to in diameter.
The lower portion of the column is a dull orange to bright red colour, with the upper portion being brownish, containing a round to ovoid verrucae in rows oriented longitudinally.
Diospyros lateralis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers. The fruits are round to ovoid, up to in diameter.
Flowers occur in 3 cm catkins. Fruits are 1.5 cm acorns, stemless, ovoid, with hairy cupules, maturing in a year. Mature bark is reddish; young twigs are thin and hairy.
Glycosmis macrantha grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The large flowers are whitish in colour. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is ovoid. The epidermis is opaque, brown. All mines cross the midrib and consume 60%-90% of the leaf surface.
The three styles are long. The stigmas are broadly capitate. The ovoid to cylindric-ellipsoid capsule is long and wide, rounded at its summit. The light brown seeds are long.
In some, the shape is more ovoid, particularly in old specimens. Some Serrasalmus species can exceed (S. manueli and S. rhombeus, according to OPEFE), placing them among the largest Serrasalmidae.
Alangium nobile grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is brown. The ellipsoid to ovoid fruits measure up to long.
The tree grows to a height of < 15 m / About 49 Feet, and has a compact, slender, ovoid crown comprising ascending branches, making it particularly suitable as a street tree.
These are followed by blue to purple ovoid berries that are between 5 and 10 mm long. It occurs in the Australian states of Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales.
The limbs are barred. The iris is copper with fine, black reticulation. The tadpoles are large, with a Gosner stage 25 specimen measuring , of which the ovoid body makes 34%.
Diospyros mindanaensis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers. The fruits are round to ovoid, up to in diameter.
Diospyros sulcata is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers. The fruits are ovoid or roundish, up to in diameter.
After the iris has flowered, it produces an ovoid seed capsule, that is long and 1 cm wide, with 3 sections, which contain 15–20 oval grey or yellowish seeds.
The berries are red when ripe and are not quite round, being subglobose or ovoid. While the flowers are in bloom they also produce heat. They die after five days.
Phaleria perrottetiana grows as a shrub or small tree up to tall. The twigs are dark brown. Inflorescences bear 20 or more flowers. The fruits are ovoid, up to long.
It flowers between late May and August. Each flower has numerous stamens (up to 650) and three-parted ovaries which, at maturity, form an ovoid capsule and blackish-brown seeds.
Basidiospores are ovoid or ellipsoid, hyaline, smooth, with dimensions of 4-6 × 3-4 µm. The basidia are club-shaped, 4-spored, with dimensions of 14-16 × 5-6 µm.
Diospyros fusiformis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to 10 flowers. The fruits are ovoid to spindle-shaped, up to in diameter.
Diospyros ferox is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers. The fruits are oblong-ovoid to round, up to in diameter.
Erythrobacter marinus is a Gram-negative, ovoid to rod-shaped and non-motile bacteria from the genus of Erythrobacter which has been isolated from seawater from the Yellow Sea in Korea.
The inflorescences are in clusters subsessile or with peduncle up to 1 cm, ovoid to cylindrical, , while bracts reach . Petals are yellow and glabrous. This plant blooms from June to August.
After the iris has flowered, it produces an ovoid shaped, with 3 angles, seed capsule (between long and wide) between June and August. Within the capsule are small boat-shaped seeds.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is ovoid. The epidermis is opaque, yellow green. Mines normally cross the midrib and consume 30%-95% of the leaf surface.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is found on the upperside of the leaf. It is ovoid to triangular. The epidermis is opaque with a yellow tan.
The alimentary system is made up of mobile sphincteric lips which surround the terminal mouth. The oral sucker is small and ovoid when contracted, changing to a truncated cone when relaxed.
4, 3rd ed. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY. is a genus of gram-positive bacteria, placed within the family of Leuconostocaceae. They are generally ovoid cocci often forming chains. Leuconostoc spp.
The pores on the underside of the cap are circular to angular. Spores are held in tubes and are ovoid to ellipsoid, with dimensions of 7–9 by 6–7 μm.
Altererythrobacter oceanensis is a Gram-negative, ovoid-rod shaped and strictly aerobic bacterium from the genus of Altererythrobacter which has been isolated from deep-sea sediments from the Western Pacific Ocean.
There are probably several generations per year. The wingspan is 7–9 mm. The forewing is short and broad, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present.
The broadly ovoid snail has a maximum recorded length of 20 mm.Welch J. J. (2010). "The "Island Rule" and Deep-Sea Gastropods: Re-Examining the Evidence". PLoS ONE 5(1): e8776. .
The pistillate flowers are smaller, ovoid, and occasionally hairy; both sepals and petals are imbricate, the latter bearing scales. There are three united staminodes forming a small cup, the gynoecium is ovoid and uniovulate; the pendulous stigma has three lobes. The fruit is egg-shaped with a wrinkly exterior, divided into lobed segments when dry, and mature at orange or red. The epicarp is fibrous, the mesocarp fleshy, covering a five-lobed seed, resembling the dry fruit.
The infructescences bear between 2 and 3 nuts at the end of a stout stalk. The nuts, in diameter, are ovoid to almost circular in outline and enclosed in an involucre composed of 2 bracts. While most specimens consist of paired involucres with ovoid nuts or nut casts, several paired or isolated nuts are known. On the nuts themselves basal attachment scars cover a small area of nut; distal scars and style remains are preserved in several specimens.
The male flowers have four ovate greenish sepals often tinged red and no petals. The female flowers are also petal-less but have three styles which subdivide into white hairs which give the inflorescence a furry appearance. Its 3-lobed capsule is depressed-globose to ovoid, grows up to 5 mm across, with typically 3 ovoid, wrinkled seeds that are around 2 mm in length and brown with low bumpy ridges. Flowering time is from June to NovemberDiscover LifeSEINet .
The fruits have an ovoid to ovoid-conical shape, ranging between to in size. The smaller, less mature fruits show the distinct structuring of styles and perianth. The styles have flared tips and are short, while the perianth has distinct lobes that are closely placed to the styles. As is typical for acorns of section Quercus, the youngest specimens still have the aborted second ovule and dividing septum present near the base of the developing fruit.
Calyx small with 4 minute, acute sepals. Petals 4, obovate-oblong. Stamens 8, free; anthers ovoid. Ovary seated on an annular disk, 2-locular; each locule with 2-collateral ovules; stigma subcapitate.
The skull is slightly ovoid. The muzzle is large, black and almost square. It has a developed jaw and the upper lips do not cover the bottom lips. Its lips are black.
There is a distinct double dorsal line on the caterpillar with red, brown or black speckles. Only primary setae present. Pupation occurs in an ovoid truncated cocoon which is brown. No cremaster.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine has the form of a blotch mine on the underside of the leaf. Pupation takes place within an ovoid white silken cocoon.
The plant displays numerous fragrant flowers from March to May, which attract the bees that pollinate it. The drupe is about 1 cm long, ovoid, light brown and pubescent with thin flesh.
Maclurodendron porteri grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The fruits are roundish to ovoid and measure up to in diameter. The wood is locally used in construction.
Alangium havilandii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is greyish. The ellipsoid-ovoid fruits ripen pink and measure up to long.
In mathematics, an ovoid O of a (finite) polar space of rank r is a set of points, such that every subspace of rank r-1 intersects O in exactly one point..
Flower are light purple, borne in umbels on the ends of branches. Fruits are ovoid, up to 9 mm (0.35 inches) long.Mathias, Mildred Esther, & Constance, Lincoln. 1973. New and reconsidered Mexican Umbelliferae.
Diospyros tuberculata is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Inflorescences bear up to five or more flowers. The fruits are ovoid to round, up to in diameter.
Rhizophora stylosa grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is dark brown to black. The fruits are ovoid to pear-shaped and measure up to long.
Buds broadly ovoid. Flowers 7-parted, 1 cm across, greenish-yellow. Calyx glabrous, cut halfway down into deltoid subacute segments. Petals deltoid-lanceolate, acute, 4 mm long, greenish- yellow with reddish nerve.
Canarium apertum grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The scaly bark is grey-brown. The flowers are yellow- brown. The fruits are ovoid and measure up to long.
The operculum is membranous, barely 1 mm high, denticulate. The ovary is ovoid, tapering at apex. Fruit is subglobose, 2 to 3 cm in diameter, deep pink. Seeds are oblong, about 5 mm.
Ovoid-elongate in body shape that is dorsoventrally flattened and brown in coloration. They can range in length.Arnett, R. H. (2000). American Insects: A Handbook of the Insects of America North of Mexico.
The fruits are ovoid to round, up to in diameter. The tree is named for the German botanist J. G. Hallier. Habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp forests. D. hallieri is endemic to Borneo.
The plants are dioecious. Spermatangia are borne in loose clusters in clusters. The cystocarps are ovoid or round or slightly urceolate with a large ostiole. The tetrasporangia occur spiral series in the branches.
The fruit disc is wide and flat or slightly raised with three or four needle-like exserted valves. Fruits contain brown ovoid shaped seeds with a slightly wrinkled surface that are and wide.
Dacryodes rostrata grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The dark grey bark is smooth to scaly. The oblong or ovoid fruits ripen blue and measure up to long.
The leaves are large, shiny dark green, broadly ovoid, 7–14 cm long and 4–8 cm broad, with an entire margin. The fruit is a black drupe about 1–2 cm long.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is ovoid to quadrate. The epidermis is opaque yellow tan. All mines cross the midrib and consume 60%-95% of the leaf surface.
Inflorescences of 1–9 white flowers are borne on scapes long. The 2–10 leaves are each wide and half to equally as long as the scape. The fruits are ovoid capsules, long.
They are irregular in shape but tend to be round or ovoid. Within each schizont are 4-8 merozoites. These are usually arranged in a fan like fashion but may occur at random.
The perianth long and white. Flowering occurs from July to November. The small ovoid fruit are coarse, warty, or smooth long and usually under wide ending with an outward curving sharp horn long.
The flowers are wide with long pedicels. The sepals are purple and the four petals of each flower are purple or white with purple veins. The ovoid seeds are about long and wide.
Barringtonia sarawakensis grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is light to reddish brown. The fruits are green, ovoid to oblong, up to long.
Fruits are usually ovoid and long by wide. They have a blackish, tough, thick outer shell (pericarp). They contain kidney-shaped, laterally-flattened seeds. The seeds have an oil content of 11 percent.
The pores, initially round, become angular or irregular in age. The club-shaped stipes have a dry surface, with striations at the top but no reticulations. Spores have an ovoid to ellipsoid shape.
The gamont has a truncated anterior mucron. The spherical to ovoid nucleus is located in anterior third of the body. It has a central nucleolus. Syzygy is lateral and often involves multiple associations.
The oldest cosmetic palettes from the Badarian, or Naqada I period are less adorned than later versions; also some gradation of ornateness should be considered for graves and tombs of less high-status individuals being interred, as these were common forms of grave goods during the Naqada periods. Most of the ovoid shaped fish were like the hieroglyphs later used, the Bulti Fish-(Gardiner's Sign List) K1, Tilapia nilotica, K1, or a very ovoid form of the hieroglyph K5, K5.
Other examples of these towns, such as Braunau and Hall, have been modified by the building of later castles. Under Charlemagne, the Bavarians moved eastwards down the Danube and into modern Hungary. The original defensive layout of Korneuburg, to the north of Vienna, is almost ovoid in plan and predates the internal street grid layout, which dates from around 1298."Lechner", 359 Zistersdorf, close to the Slovakian border, also has an ovoid layout, modified by the building of the later castle.
The fruits are ovoid, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "crowded flowers". Habitat is lowland forests. D. confertiflora is found in Peninsular Thailand, Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo.
The sutures are deeply impressed. The aperture is elongately ovoid with only a faint siphonal canal. The thin outer lip has no inner lirae. The umbilicus is closed or sometimes with a narrow slit.
Dacryodes incurvata grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is grey-brown and smooth. The ellipsoid or ovoid fruits ripen yellow then purplish and measure up to long.
Thoracic segments greyish in dorsum with a quadrate orange mark. Pupa semi-ovoid without cremaster. Cocoon is woven using brown, black-speckled silk. Larval host plants are Grewia, Trema, Ziziphus, Hibiscus, Celtis and Xylia.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is oblong to ovoid and the epidermis is opaque, yellow green. Most mines cross the midrib and only mature mines have a single fold.
Canarium littorale grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . Its grey bark is smooth to scaly. The fruits are ellipsoid to ovoid and measure up to long.
Kandelia candel grows as a shrub or small tree up to tall. Its flaky bark is lenticellate and coloured greyish to reddish brown. The flowers are white. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
The males guard the female from other males until she lays the eggs. The female lays about 2,000 pale-green ovoid eggs about 1 mm in length into crevices in bark with her ovipositor.
The spores are brown, subglobose or ovoid, punctate (spotted), 5–7 µm in size and dispersed by wind and rain until only a few delicate threads of the sporangium remain, resembling soft foam padding.
The male flower spikes are up to 17 cm long. The female flowers, which occur on separate plants, appear in clusters. These are followed by ovoid capsules which are about 1 centimetre in diameter.
The leaves are alternate, consisting of one pair of leaflets, 12-17mm in length, leathery, yellowish green and downy. The leaves are ovoid with a pointed tip and tapering base and a short stalk.
The ovoid buds are rounded at the top. The calyx prefloration is quincuncial. The ovate sepals which are rounded at the tip are 1.2 to 1.5. mm long and finely pubescent on the back.
When disturbed, the caterpillar produce a fluid from tubercles. A thin, indistinct white dorsal line is present. Pupation occurs in a smooth fat short chalky-white ovoid cocoon. The larval host plant is Carallia.
Chionanthus polycephalus grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is dark grey. The flowers are creamy white. The fruit is yellowish, ovoid, up to long.
The ovoid fuselage version became known as the B.28 Aerodinamico. The Alcione dates from either 1937 or 1938, with registration dates supporting the latter. Images identify three examples and the register a fourth.
Betaguttavirus is a genus of viruses, in the family Guttaviridae. Aeropyrum pernix archaea serve as natural hosts. There is currently only one species in this genus: the type species Aeropyrum pernix ovoid virus 1.
This form produces smooth, colorless conidiophores (specialized stalks that bear conidia) measuring 20–230 by 2–3.2 µm. The conidia are roughly spherical to ovoid, smooth, translucent (hyaline), and 4.6–7.0 by 3.0–3.8 µm.
Like many phasmids it is parthenogenetic so it can reproduce on its own by laying eggs. The eggs are ovoid-shaped with some distinguishable glyphics around them and a sponge-like shape on the top.
Leaf blade elliptic or ovate-lanceolate, 6–17 × 2–6 cm, leathery, margin sharply coarsely-serrate. Stamen baculate to terete; thecae shorter than connective. Stigma subcapitate. Fruit globose or ovoid, 3–4 mm in diam.
1 mm, sterile anthers sagittate; ovary ovoid, ca. 1.5 mm in diameter, style present, stigma thickly discoid. Drupe black and globose, endocarp stony, 5 mm long, 4 mm across, pedicel 2 to 3 cm long.
Botryococcus is a genus of green algae. The cells form an irregularly shaped aggregate. Thin filaments connect the cells. The cell body is ovoid, 6 to 10 μm long, and 3 to 6 μm wide.
Arthroleptis adolfifriederici is a moderately robust frog with long, slender limbs. Males measure (two specimens only) and females in snout–vent length. The head is broad. The tympanum is distinct and circular, tending toward ovoid.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is nearly ovoid in dorsal view and anteriorly inclined in lateral view. The tympanum is partly concealed. The canthus rostralis is acute but not prominent.
The petiole is generally bristly. The leaf blade is pinnately toothed or lobed. The fruit is 2–7 mm wide and generally enclosed by the calyx. The fruit itself is spherical to ovoid in shape.
The fungus produces ovoid to ellipsoid basidiospores that measure 5.0–6.2 by 4.0–5.0 μm. Molecular analysis of internal transcribed spacer DNA sequences indicate that L. ailaoshanensis is a unique lineage in the genus Laetiporus.
Castanopsis densinervia grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish bark is smooth. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
The pupa is brown, ringed, and ovoid and measures long. Pupation occurs in the ground with the pupal phase from the spring generation lasting two or three weeks. Late-generation pupae overwinter in the soil.
The wingspan is 7.5-9.5 mm. The forewing is relatively narrow, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. All crosslines are present and black. The antemedial line is prominent, sharply angled subcostally, then slightly curving.
The base of the shell is moderately long. It is marked by the feeble continuations of the axial ribs and five subequal, equally spaced spiral striations. The aperture is ovoid. The posterior angle is acute.
Underside of forewing costa blackish. Hindwings whitish with two black dots on outer margin below apex. The caterpillar is sluggish and is found on the underside of leaves. Its body is a perfectly semi-ovoid.
The main months of flowering are from August to December in the species' native range. The flowers are followed by hairy, leathery, ovoid fruits (follicles) that are between long. These split open, releasing winged seeds.
Palaquium hexandrum grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is dark brown. The inflorescences bear up to 18 flowers. The edible fruits are round or ovoid, up to long.
Pareiorhaphis is a genus of catfish in the family Loricariidae native to South America. This genus can be readily distinguished from other neoplecostomines by the unique combination of having fleshy lobes on lateral margins of head ornamented with hypertrophied odontodes on nuptial males, caudal peduncle ovoid in cross section, abdomen usually naked, dorsal fin spinelet ovoid and adipose fin usually present. The color pattern is usually dark brown and mottled with the abdomen white. Most species in to Pareiorhaphis were originally described in Hemipsilichthys.
When considering Manuel Casimiro’s work it is necessary to bear in mind that he gives a paramount importance to the idea within the work of art, the “cosa mentale” in Leonardo da Vinci’s words. The ovoid, and its use in interventions and other works, provides a focal point around which the work of art is re-evaluated and reconsidered. The artists himself seldom talks about the ovoid leaving it to the spectator to supply meaning within that void form.CkS Artport blog , text by António Cerveira Pinto.
The length of the shell attains 7 mm, its diameter 3 mm. The elongate-ovoid, solid shell has numerous, longitudinal, obtuse ribs. The sutures on the convex-conical spire are impressed. The shell contains 6 whorls.
Dacryodes costata grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The grey-brown bark is smooth to flaky. The flowers are white. The fruits are ellipsoid or ovoid and measure up to long.
Microscopically, the cellular structure is distinguished by a round-ovoid shape containing ample eosinophilic cytoplasm and an irregularly shaped nuclei. The uniformly positioned cells are separated through the fibrous strands and lymphocytic infiltration is commonly observed.
Pactolinus gigas has a black body, flat and ovoid. Elytra are shortened and antennae are elbowed with clubbed ends. The mandible mouthpart is well developed. These beetles feed on dung beetle larvae of the genus Ontophagus.
Tabernaemontana elegans grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Its fragrant flowers feature white, creamy or pale yellow corolla lobes. Fruit consists of 2 separate ovoid or ellipsoid pods, up to each.
Petals are white or yellow, and the fruit ovoid or ellipsoid. There are about 125 to 140 species in the genus.Güner, E. D., et al. (2011). Pollen morphology of the genus Seseli L.(Umbelliferae) in Turkey.
Inflorecense axillary, in large brownish red panicle, very pubescent with very fine, soft, granular trichomes. Flowers are dioecious. Petals are small, very fine pubescent. Drupe hard, ovoid, yellowish brown when young and brownish red when ripe.
The anthers are also red or yellow. Flowers are borne from June to August. The seeds are dark brown, glabrous, long, and wide. They are elliptic, ovoid or reniform in shape, with longitudinal ribs bearing spines.
The odorless, nectar-less flowers do not rely on insect pollinators for pollination, rather setting seed well through self-pollination (autogamy). The black ovoid seed forms in a dehiscent capsule and is 1 to mm long.
Eucomis humilis is a short summer-growing bulbous plant. Its bulb is ovoid, across. Six to eight leaves emerge from the bulb, each about long and across. The bases of the leaves are sometimes spotted underneath.
The ringwork is ovoid and consists of a raised central area enclosed by a high earthen bank, an external fosse and an external bank. The entrance is to the south has a causeway across the ditch.
These are small beetles (body size 1.46–1.76mm) with short antennae and small, ovoid eyes. They can be distinguished from similar genera of Trichonychini from their small size, short first antennal segment and pronotum without sulci.
Castanopsis borneensis grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is smooth or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
A condyloid joint (also called condylar, ellipsoidal, or bicondylar) is an ovoid articular surface, or condyle that is received into an elliptical cavity. This permits movement in two planes, allowing flexion, extension, adduction, abduction, and circumduction.
Allisonella is a Gram-negative, ovoid-shaped, histamine-producing and non- motile genus of bacteria from the family of Veillonellaceae with one known species (Allisonella histaminiformans). Allisonella is named after the American microbiologist M. J. Allison.
The fruit is globose or ovoid, beaked, with apical stigmatic remains and covered in vertical rows or magenta to brown scales. The single seed has a basal embryo, a thick sarcotesta and a sweet, homogeneous endosperm.
The fruits are ovoid, up to long. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "long pedicel", referring to the flower. Habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp forests. P. longipedicellata is found in Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo.
Castanopsis microphylla grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is smooth, occasionally flaky. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
Fruit is an ovoid drupe, green when mature and 3mm in diameter. Monotoca elliptica is superficially very similar, but can be distinguished by its terminal spikes, and its leaves tend to be wider and less linear.
Castanopsis foxworthyi grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is blackish brown. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
The fruits are ovoid, up to long. The tree is named for forest botanist Meng Wong Khoon. Its habitat is lowland forest at about altitude. P. khoonmengiana is endemic to Borneo and known only from Sabah.
It is an ornamental medium-sized tree. Bears smooth ovoid green fruits the size of about 2.5 cm long. Recommended varieties are local cultivars (round and oval fruits). It has a brown seed inside the fruit.
Catenulidae is a family of freshwater catenulid flatworms. Catenulids are characterized by an ovoid brain located in the preoral region. The brain lacks a distinct division into anterior and posterior lobes, although a constriction may occur.
There is a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present, well marked and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The hindwing is brown, with an indistinct discal spot.
The brownish inflorescence is a very small, narrow terminal head, with the basal pointed, ribbed green glume the same length as the rest of the head. The fruit is an ovoid, three-sided nut in diameter.
Pegia species grow as shrubs, sarmentose trees or lianas. They are polygamous, woody climbers. The ovoid or oblong fruits have a red or purple skin with a red mesocarp. Pegia species grow naturally in tropical Asia.
Plants are dioecious. Staminate flowers have eight stamens and a rudimentary or missing pistil; pistillate flowers have staminodes. The fruit is in the form of an ovoid or three-angled achene, which is smooth and shiny.
The ovoid panicle is long. The branches of the panicle are either spreading or reflexed and have large basal pulvini. The branches solitary or occur in pairs. The elliptical or oblong spikelets are long and broad.
Ceriops decandra grows as a shrub or small tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is pale brown. The flowers are white. The ovoid to conical fruits measure up to long.
Each flower has a purple (lilac to dark purple) veining. The falls often have a slight yellowish signal patch. The flowers have 2-lobed stigmas. After flowering, it has a (oblong-ovoid shaped) seed capsule (measuring approx.
The fruit is an ovoid drupe up to 6 cm × 5 cm, bright red. The drupe is single-seeded. Seed 3–3.5 cm long. In Gabon the tree flowering from March to April and fruiting in August.
The flowers are yellow, with oblong sepals and longer, obovate petals. Later, it produces a fruit capsule, long cylindrical with a short beak. It contains 2 rows of yellow brown seeds, which are ovoid or ellipsoid shaped.
The petals have two or three veins and lack glands. The five to sixteen stamens are rarely grouped, the longest measuring . The pistil is long and unilocular. The ovoid to ellipsoid ovary is about long and wide.
The flowers are coloured cream-yellow or purple. The pistillate (female) flower is only 0.5–0.8mm in length; the staminate (male) flower 0.8-1mm. The shape of the fruit and that of the nut within is ovoid.
The spore-bearing cells, the basidia, are 12–18 by 4–10 µm in size, pear-shaped, and four-spored. The roughly ovoid Basidiospores are 5.5–6.5 by 3.5–4.5 µm, hyaline, smooth, and have thin walls.
Radiographically, the nasopalatine cyst appears as a well-demarcated round, ovoid, or heart-shaped structure presenting in the midline of the maxilla.Elliott, KA, et al. _Diagnosis and surgical management of nasopalatine duct cysts_. Laryngoscope 2004;114:1336-1340.
Castanopsis pedunculata grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is flaky to lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
The Corolla is yellow in colour while the keels that are by have one awn that is long. The Fruits are in length and are straight, containing by transverse to ovoid seeds of a yellowish-brown colour.
Its carapace is dark brown, ovoid, and lacks patterns in adults. The plastron is dark brown to black with or without dense, black, radiating lines. The head is greenish yellow. The throat and neck are uniformly dark.
Castanopsis evansii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish bark is smooth, sometimes flaky. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
The sepals are fused in a tube about an 8 to 10 millimeters long. The flowering period extends from May to August in the Northern Hemisphere. The fruit is an ovoid capsule, up to 9 mm long.
The wingspan is 7–8 mm. The forewing is relatively broad and the reniform stigma bright, ovoid and yellow. The hindwing is dark grey without a discal spot. The underside of both wings is unicolorous light brownish.
Chionanthus pubicalyx grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is whitish or grey. The fragrant flowers are white or pale yellow. Fruit is purple, ovoid, up to long.
Polytremis pellucida has a wingspan of about . Upperside of the forewings is dark brown, with a row of small white spots and markings. Also the hindwings are dark brown and have four elongate to ovoid white spots.
Sarcotesta 3 mm thick, and yellow in color, with smooth sclerotesta. Male cones solitary and erect, spindle shaped to narrow ovoid, 50–60 cm long, 12–13 cm in diameter, with orange color. Prominent apical spine present.
The digestive organs include an anterior, terminal mouth, an ovoid small pharynx, a long narrow oesophagus and a narrow posterior intestine with two lateral branches provided with numerous secondary branches; the intestine extends to the base of the haptor. Each adult contains male and female reproductive organs. The reproductive organs include an anterior genital atrium, armed with numerous very spines, a medio-dorsal vagina, a single large ovary and 51 to 58 ovoid testes located in the posterior part of the body, in the intercecal area, in two rows.
The digestive organs include an anterior, terminal mouth, an ovoid muscular pharynx, and a posterior intestine with two branches provided with small lateral diverticula and penetrate the haptor freely to its terminal end. Each adult contains male and female reproductive organs. The reproductive organs include an anterior genital atrium, with spines arranged in concentric circles, a dorsal vagina opening in front of the egg at the beginning of the seminal vesicle, a single ovary in form of a question mark, 13 ovoid or slightly spherical testes which are posterior to the ovary.
The spores of C. helenae have a spherical or ovoid shape, with dimensions of 12–14 µm long by 15–19 µm wide. They tend to be slightly narrower at one end, and commonly have a spore wall thickness of 1.5 µm. Cyathus helenae is distinguished from the more common C. striatus by its faint inner-surface plication (C. striatus has a more pronounced plication), the nodular arrangement of the hairs on the outer surface, and microscopically by the spore shape – ellipsoid in C. striatus, ovoid or spheroidal in C. helenae.
The sepals are typically unequal, lanceolate, and have linear glands that become punctiform distally. The 50 to 80 stamens are about long. The ovoid ovary is long with two to three styles ranging long. The seeds are long.
Madhuca borneensis grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. Inflorescences bear up to seven white flowers. The fruit is reddish-brown, ovoid to ellipsoid, up to long.
Dacryodes laxa grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The grey bark is smooth to scaly. The flowers are white. The oblong or ovoid fruits are pink, ripening blue, and measure up to long.
The flowers are arranged in panicles long, on the ends of branchlets or in leaf axils, with four sepals long, four white petals long and eight stamens that alternate in length. The fruit is an ovoid follicle long.
There is one stamen exserting the flower. The ovoid ovary bears two subulate papillate stigmas. The flowering and fruiting phase reaches from July to November. The fruit is enclosed by the fleshy, somewhat inflated, three- angled, shiny perianth.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is oblong to ovoid. The epidermis is opaque to green yellow. Mines are all located to one side of the midrib on the lower half of the leaf.
Small narrow underleaves are present. Asexual reproduction occurs by gemmae can be found on the margins of the upper leaves. Mylia taylorii is dioecious but fertile plants are uncommon in Britain. The dark brown capsule is ovoid - globose.
The stem is pubescent and 30–60 cm. Flowers measure at 1 cm, while the ovoid fruit measures at 4 mm. The plant prefers dry soils and can be found in locations such as near roads and railroads.
The larva is flattened and ovoid in outline, with a short, squared off "tail". It is a bright yellow green with yellow and green stripes along its length. Small craters dot its topside. Maximum length is 15 mm.
Attractive flowers form in spring. The six petals are pink with purple anthers, flowers around 15 mm across. A wrinkled ovoid capsule forms, 2 to 4 mm wide. Inside are a small number of yellow or brown seeds.
Alangium longiflorum grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is dark brown. The flowers are white. The ellipsoid to ovoid fruits ripen pinkish and measure up to long.
Female flowers have a short calyx, and a tubular corolla 3 mm long, with lobes shorter than the tube. Female plants produce orange-red ovoid drupes, which are about 8 mm in diameter and 10 mm in length.
The branches are slender, terete and glabrous. The bisexual flowers are in diameter, with four white petals and a center of numerous orange yellow stamens. The fruit is an ovoid to globose capsule with one to two seeds.
Diospyros pendula is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The fruits are round to ovoid, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "hanging down", referring to the inflorescence.
Certain factors related to the anatomy of teeth can affect the anchorage that may be used. Multi-rooted, longer-rooted, triangular shaped root teeth usually provide more anchorage than the single-rooted, short-rooted and ovoid rooted teeth.
The fruits are round to ovoid, up to in diameter. The tree is named for the English botanist Henry Nicholas Ridley. Habitat is mainly lowland mixed dipterocarp forests. D. ridleyi is found in India, Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo.
It is the former railroad track that gives East Lansdowne borough's western boundary that vaguely ovoid shape. The borough of Yeadon is south of the SEPTA Media/Elwyn Line Railroad tracks, about one block south of East Lansdowne.
The fruits are ovoid to ellipsoid, up to long. The specific epithet ' is from the Greek meaning "small-leaved". Habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp to montane forest, from sea level to altitude. P. microphylla is endemic to Borneo.
Individuals of these species are shrubby and evergreen plants that grow up to 150 cm tall. The plant has lanceolate-ovoid leaves. The leaf margin is sawn. In the upper part, the leaves are arranged like a rosette.
Payena grandistipula is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The fruits are ovoid, up to long. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "large stipules".
Castanopsis fulva grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is smooth or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid or conical nuts measure up to long.
Each simple axillary conflorescence is made up of three to seven flowered umbellasters supported on narrowly flattened and angular peduncles. It forms obovoid and pruinose buds followed by ovoid to urceolate fruits with depressed discs and enclosed valves.
The disease usually last 5–15 days (patent period). Oocysts can be observed in a microscope measuring 23–43 µm x 17–23 µm, ovoid shape, having a double-layered wall with a micropyle in the narrower end.
These eyespots attract male bees to perform pseudocopulation with the orchid's blossom. The petals are ovoid and taper at the tip, and are similar in hue to the sepals. The lip and column are hidden within the tube.
The stems is 5 to 15 cm long. The leaves are skewered, swallowed, their portions are ovoid. There are four 13-15 mm long petals coloured from bright yellow to orange. The stamens are numerous with yellow anthers.
Lithocarpus blumeanus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is scaly. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its acorns are ovoid and measure up to long.
Flowers: leathery calyx coloured pinkish; size of the calyx 20 to 25. calyx membranous, upper calyx "wings" appear petalous. lilac light violet Fruit: The fruit is ovoid or oblong in shape, with a fleshy pericarp. The seed is large.
Fruits are ovoid in shape, typically 10 mm long and 7 mm in width. This species grows in moist woods and thickets, at altitudes up to 1000 m; trees bloom and start to bear fruit from March to June.
There are three conspicuous fleshy stigmas, reflexed, with a basally attached ovule. The beaked fruit is ovoid to pear shaped, covered in reflexed scales, with a thin mesocarp. Each fruit carries one basally attached seed with a basal embryo.
Like other species of Maratus, males of the species are colorful and have a unique pattern. The species can be distinguished from other species by its atypical ovoid-shaped opisthosoma. According to researchers, the species is small and harmless.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is found on the upperside of the leaf. It has an irregular shape, either circular or ovoid. The epidermis is opaque greenish yellow and often found across a midrib.
Dracontomelon costatum grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is cracking in appearance. The flowers are pale yellow. The ovoid to ellipsoid fruits ripen black and measure up to long.
The pitcher lid or operculum is sub-orbiculate and has no appendages. An unbranched spur (≤15 mm long) is inserted at the base of the lid. Lower pitchers are wholly ovoid, with the hip located just below the peristome.
Pinnate veins are reticulate. Tendrils can be up to long and may or may not have a curl. Rosette and lower pitchers are rarely produced. They are infundibular in the lower two-thirds to three-quarters, and ovoid above.
Dacrymyces ovisporus is a species of fungus in the family Dacrymycetaceae. It was first described scientifically by German mycologist Julius Oscar Brefeld in 1888. The fungus produces roughly spherical to ovoid spores, and both one- and two-spored basidia.
Twigs are orange-brown with a felty coating of hairs. Leaves can be as much as 80 mm long. The acorn is ovoid-ellipsoid or globose, 15-20 × 13–15 mm, with a scar 5–7 mm in diameter.
Profuse reddish-purple flowers up to long appear in spring in thick clusters in the leaf axils, sometimes on old wood. These are followed by smoothish ovoid woody seed capsules that are approximately wide ending with an upturned beak..
The type series consists of two adult males and two adult females. The males measure and the females in snout–vent length. The snout is ovoid in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The canthus rostralis is well-defined.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust and ovoid. The head is much narrower than the body; the snout is rounded. All but the first finger are fringed; no webbing is present.
Castanopsis buruana grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is smooth or scaly. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid to roundish nuts measure up to long.
The legs are carried above the body. Males are highly active and can be seen moving on the surface of the leaf. Females are ovoid-shaped. Larval stages, as well as eggs are about half the size of adults.
Castanopsis javanica grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is smooth or scaly. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its discoid to ovoid nuts measure up to long.
Castanopsis hypophoenicea grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish bark is rough, sometimes smooth. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid or ellipsoid nuts measure up to long.
Male vocalizations are unknown. The tadpoles have a dark and ovoid body. The tail fin and axis are spotted, and the tail fin converges evenly towards the tip. Specimens in length have hind legs and are thus approaching metamorphosis.
The fruits are round to ovoid, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "with pilose or hairy anthers". Habitat is forests from sea level to altitude. D. pilosanthera is found from Indochina to Malesia.
Duplex hollowayi is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Michael Fibiger in 2008. It is known from Seram Island in Indonesia. The wingspan is about 9 mm. The forewing has a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma.
The forewing is relatively narrow, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present, black and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The hindwing is grey, with an indistinct discal spot.
The forewing is relatively broad, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present, black and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The hindwing is grey, with an indistinct discal spot.
The forewing is relatively narrow, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present, black and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The hindwing is grey, with an indistinct discal spot.
Car styling during the 1990s became gradually more round and ovoid, the third-generation Taurus and Mercury Sable being some of the more extreme examples. Safety features such as airbags and shoulder belts became mandatory equipment on new cars.
The fruit is obovoid, coriaceous and capsular and reaches about 1 cm in diameter. It is probably green, and perhaps turning dark purple or black when ripe. There are ca. 9 ovoid seeds of about 6 mm in length.
They have fused lateral sepals (synsepals), which splits at its end. They are quite colorful : tan overlaid with contrasting reddish-purple spots. The long, lateral petals equally end in a thickened club-shaped tip. The shorter lip is ovoid.
The sarcotesta is yellow, the sclerotesta rough, ovoid. The male cones solitary and spindle shaped, yellow, 12–14 cm long and 3–4 cm diameter. The species is named after the Greek word for short, brachys, and spine, acantha.
Complete eggs range from to in size. They are elongated and ovoid shaped (i.e., with one blunt end and one pointed end). Known nesting traces contain from three to six eggs arranged parallel to each-other in linear rows.
Aphendala recta is a moth of the family Limacodidae first described by George Hampson in 1893. It is found in Sri Lanka. Forewings grayish brown with indistinct external fasciae. A pale ovoid shading near the outer margin of forewing.
The trophozoites are found in the intestinal lumen. They measure 23-31 microns x 11-15 microns. They are initially ovoid and become vermiform as they mature. The single nucleus lies at the anterior end and has one nucleolus.
Prunus mira grows to 3–10m tall and the trunks 16cm in diameter (DBH). The leaves are lanceolate, 5–10cm long and 1.2–4cm wide. The flowers are pinkish white. The 2-by-3cm ovoid fruit has white flesh.
It is a cycad with a largely underground stem, no more than 30 cm high and with a diameter of about 20 cm. [2] The leaves, pinnate, 40–60 cm long, are arranged in a crown at the apex of the stem and are supported by a short spiny petiole; each leaf is composed of numerous pairs of lanceolate leaflets, with whole or slightly toothed margins, on average 10-14 cm long, of glaucous green color, inserted on the rachis with an angle of 45-80 ° It is a dioecious species with male specimens showing 1-3 cones, cylinder-ovoid, 8–10 cm long and 3–4 cm broad, of bluish-green color and female specimens with solitary ovoid cones, 20–25 cm long and with diameter of 10–12 cm. The seeds are coarsely ovoid, 20–25 mm long, covered with an orange-red sarcotesta.
It is a cycad with an arborescent habit, with an erect or decombent stem, up to 2.5 m tall and 30-45 cm in diameter. The pinnate leaves, arranged like a crown at the apex of the stem, are 1.4-2.2 m long, supported by a 12-15 cm long petiole, and composed of numerous pairs of lanceolate, leathery leaflets, up to 25 long cm, insert on the rachis at right angles It is a dioecious species, with male specimens presenting from 6 to 14 closely ovoid cones, erect, 18–20 cm long and 5 cm broad, olive green in color, and female specimens with 1-3 large cylindrical-ovoid cones, long to at 80 cm and 30 cm wide, initially dark green, olive green when ripe. The seeds are coarsely ovoid, 3.2-3.6 cm long, covered by a yellow to red seed coat.
A biconical shell up to 23mm high with 6–7 shouldered whorls. Its diameter is 10 mm. Buff in colour with brownish marks. Description. – Shell of medium size, of a slightly ovoid elongated curve, a little more developed above than below.
The flowers exude a strong fragrance and are of pale green color and blossom between July and August. The seeds ripen between September and October. The fruit is ovoid and has a diameter of 14 mm. Common names include cranberry gourd.
Males in the type series measure and the sole female in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid with a triangular head and small, protruding eyes; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is indistinct. Fingers are slightly fringed but not webbed.
Each proglottid is capable of reproducing via self fertilization. Eggs are typically ovoid in shape with tapered ends. Finally, should the head and neck be severed from one or all of the proglottids, S. erinaceieuropaei can regenerate a new body.
A related cypress also found on Taiwan, Chamaecyparis formosensis (Formosan Cypress), differs in leaves which are green below as well as above without a conspicuous white stomatal band, and longer, slenderer ovoid cones 6–10 mm long with 10–16 scales.
Ornithogalum narbonense reaches on average of height, with a maximum of . The bulbs are whitish and ovoid. The stems are erect and the long leaves are fleshy and lance-shaped, wide. The raceme is pyramidal, with 25-75 hermaphrodite flowers.
Pollen-producing cones fusiform (tapering at both ends), microsporophylls (male, pollen-producing) up to 45 mm long. Megasporophylls (female, ovule-producing) up to 30 cm long, each with 2-5 ovules. Seeds flattened to ovoid, orange-brown.Lindstrom, AJ, & KD Hill. 2002.
Two to three longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib. Pinnate veins are oblique. Tendrils may be up to 15 cm long. Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid to ventricose in the lower parts and cylindrical above.
The body of the caterpillar is cylindrical, slightly wider centrally and a dull, wrinkled, a plain watery grass greenish. Head shining light orange, with long brown setae. Pupation takes place in a close, ovoid silk cocoon. Pupa lack a bloom.
Calyx 5–6.5 mm; teeth 1–1.5 mm. Corolla creamy yellow; tube 4–5.5 mm not exserted; upper lip 23–2.5 mm; lower lip 2.2-3.5 mm, the middle lobe shallowly notched. Nutlets 1.5 mm, ovoid. Flowers from Mars to July.
Cynosaurus has simple canines with an ovoid shape that lack cingulum (Botha- Brink et al., 2007). The post canines are posterior accessory cusp and Cynosaurus have a second posterior accessory cusp in the posterior-most teeth (Botha-Brink et al., 2007).
The white, round pits are poisonous and fruit is of eclipse shape with a diameter of . Each fruit has one to two brown, ovoid, and anatropous seeds per fruit. The extract of the plant has been evaluated for potential pharmacological uses.
The shell of this species is slender, greyish brown to reddish brown. It is conical-ovoid in shape with 7 to whorls. The shell is slightly translucent and shows regular axial lines. There is some microgeographical variation in its shell size.
A benign melanocytic nevus (also known as a "Banal nevus," "Common acquired melanocytic nevus," "Mole," "Nevocellular nevus," and "Nevocytic nevus") is a cutaneous condition characterised by well-circumscribed, round or ovoid lesions, generally measuring from 2 to 6 mm in diameter.
Castanopsis motleyana grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The cracked or scaly bark is reddish to brown. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its conical to ovoid nuts measure up to long.
Castanopsis oviformis grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brownish bark is scaly or cracked. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long and are considered edible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is ovoid. The dorsa-lateral folds start from above the tympanum and extend to the groin.
Males measure (based on just two specimens in the type series) and females in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid with short head. The snout is short and truncate in dorsal and rounded in lateral view. No tympanum is visible.
There are 3 to 4 stamens and 3 stigmas 3 which are free to the base. The capsule is three valved and narrow-ovoid to elongate-cylindrical, and the seeds are black, shiny, and smooth and 0.7–1 mm in diameter.
The ovoid earthwork is 8 to 10 feet high and 100 feet in diameter. Historical graves in the mound have prevented archaeological investigation and more precise identification of the mound's builders. Shannon is part of the Maysville Micropolitan Statistical Area.
A pod Ecosphere. The EcoSphere and "Original Ecosphere" are trademark names for sealed blown-glass miniature aquaria produced by Ecosphere Associates, Inc., of Tucson, Arizona, United States. Spherical or ovoid, the aquaria range from roughly baseball-size to soccer-ball-size.
The bright yellow, obovate petals are long and wide, with linear glands becoming punctiform distally. The thirty to fifty stamens are long at the most. The ovoid to cylindric ovary is long and wide. The three styles are about long.
According to Milan Zúbrik et al (2013), the sexual generation of the gall is unknown, but likely to be on Turkey oak (Quercus cerris). A very small, ovoid gall on the catkins of Turkey oak may be the sexual generation.
The female flowers are about 1 mm long, have no staminodes absent, and the stigmas are exserted and long (about 4 mm). The fruit is broadly ovoid (about. 2 mm high) and is surrounded at the base by a persistent perianth.
The interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) is an unpaired, ovoid cell group at the base of the midbrain tegmentum. It is located in the mesencephalon below the interpeduncular fossa. As the name suggests, the interpeduncular nucleus lies in between the cerebral peduncles.
Castanopsis lucida grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is glabrescent, lenticellate, fissured or occasionally smooth. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long.
The primite is distinguishable from satellite. The parasites associate with one another prior to syzygy in a head to tail (caudofrontal) fashion. There is marked anisogamy. The gametocysts open by simple rupture; The oocysts are ovoid or spherical in shape.
The capsule is ovoid to globose, and the stigma persists. It usually has three seeds which are about 5 mm long and reddish- brown. It flowers in spring. In New South Wales it is usually an understorey shrub in mallee communities.
The webbing on the feet red or reddish purple. The iris is bronze with black reticulations. The tadpoles measure up to in total length and have an ovoid, slightly vertically flattened body. The tail is muscular with relatively narrow fins.
Males have paired vocal sac. left The male advertisement call is loud, modulated, and variable, resembling the grunting of a pig. Three tadpoles in Gosner stages 34–37 measured . Of this, the ovoid body made little more than one third.
Syndesmis longicanalis are red to red-orange in coloration in life. The body is flattened ovoid in shape, with the front end rounded and the rear end tapering to a nipple-like tip. The entire body is covered with cilia.
Xanthophyllum velutinum grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is grey or pale brown. The flowers are yellow or white, drying brownish orange. The brown fruits are ovoid and measure up to in diameter.
The holotype is in height, ovoid in shape, and has a relatively low, eroded spire. The shell is pale yellowish grey in color. The body whorl is large. The aperture is elongate–oval and has an evenly curved outer lip.
Lithocarpus andersonii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brownish bark is smooth. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its purple brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to long.
Dipterocarpus oblongifolius grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Bark is greyish brown. The fruits are ovoid to spindle-shaped, up to long. The specific epithet oblongifolius is from the Latin meaning "oblong leaves".
Herakles fighting Geryon, amphora, circa 540 BC, Louvre F 55. The main vase shape painted by the group E artists was the belly amphora of type A. Older shapes were abandoned totally (e.g. ovoid neck amphorae) or mostly (e.g. column kraters).
The fruit in an ovoid, compressed utricle with membranous pericarp. The erect seed is brown or reddish brown, oblong, with smooth surface. It contains copious perisperm (feeding tissue), and a half-annular embryo. The chromosome basic number is x = 9.
Barringtonia curranii grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is grey, greyish green or dark brown. The fruits are ovoid, up to long. Habitat is forest from sea level to altitude.
Pseudocyphellae are not present. Cell walls contain the α-glucan compound isolichenan. The apothecia of Melanelixia have an abundantly fenestrated or pored epicortex. Ascospores are ellipsoid to ovoid in shape, thin-walled, and measure 9–15 by 5–11.5 μm.
Each fertilized flower produces a tetrad of black nutlets, cylindrical to ovoid, 2 mm long, partially or fully covered by the calyx. The basal end is flat and attached to the receptacle, while the top end is rounded or pointed.
A design with the parameters of the extension of an affine plane, i.e., a 3-(n2 + 1, n + 1, 1) design, is called a finite inversive plane, or Möbius plane, of order n. It is possible to give a geometric description of some inversive planes, indeed, of all known inversive planes. An ovoid in PG(3,q) is a set of q2 + 1 points, no three collinear. It can be shown that every plane (which is a hyperplane since the geometric dimension is 3) of PG(3,q) meets an ovoid O in either 1 or q + 1 points.
Although the lower pitchers on immature rosettes are similar in general morphology, the species differ in the shape of lower pitchers on rosettes sprouting from mature plants. Those of N. sumatrana are ovoid throughout, with an orbicular lid and the hip immediately beneath the peristome, and are contracted at an angle of 45° to the mouth. Those of N. longifolia are ovoid in the lower parts, having the hip around the middle and an ovate lid. In addition, the upper pitchers of N. longifolia do not give off a noticeable smell, whereas those of N. sumatrana have a sweet, fruity fragrance.
The basic form of the house - a multi-storied, semicircular apse springing from an anchoring block, with the entrance at their juncture - is closely related to Furness's 1888 design for the University of Pennsylvania Library (now the Fisher Fine Arts Library). In the library, the architect placed the grand staircase in a tower at the front, separating circulation to the building's upper stories from the reading rooms behind. The library's two- story, ovoid-shaped Rotunda Reading Room is wrapped by an arcing cluster of one-story seminar rooms. "Idlewild'"s porch echoes this, wrapping around the house's ovoid parlor.
Diospyros eucalyptifolia is a small tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The fruits are ovoid to round, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin, referring to the leaves' resemblance to those of the genus Eucalyptus.
Flowers have a moderate, spicy fragrance, and are generally borne singly or in small clusters. The buds are long, pointed and ovoid. 'Rio Samba' blooms in flushes from spring to fall. Foliage is large, semi-glossy, leathery and dark green in color.
The fruits are oblong or ovoid, drying black, up to long. The tree is named for the Dutch botanist P. W. Korthals. Habitat is mixed dipterocarp forests from sea-level to altitude. D. korthalsiana is found in Borneo, Sulawesi and the Philippines.
Another form of pottery found are jars (12.5%). They range in shape from ovoid to globular. The jars ranged from a height of 10 cm to over 40 cm. A jar with covered with ochre powder and a complex dot decoration was found.
Three or more of these shapes are ovoid areas located towards the trailing edge. The median band is fluted and normally edged narrowly with white. The sub-terminal line is generally well marked. The spring brood is an overall brown rather than grey.
Cells of vernix are typically polygonal or ovoid in shape and lack nuclei. Nuclear ghosts are frequently observed. Vernix corneocytes lack desmosomal attachment and this distinguishes them from corneocytes found in mature stratum corneum. Thickness of a corneocyte is 1-2 µm.
While very similar in morphology to A. stewarti, the two related species can be separated by the overall nutlet morphology, with A. hillsi having an asymmetrically inflated nutlet of more ovoid outline while A. stewarti has a fully inflated nutlet of circular outline.
While very similar in morphology to A. hillsi, the two related species can be separated by the overall nutlet morphology, with A. hillsi having an asymmetrically inflated nutlet of more ovoid outline while A. stewarti has a fully inflated nutlet of circular outline.
It flowers from November to April. The fruit is a berry olive-like seed each. Large, shiny dark green, broadly lanceolate to ovoid leaves. These have a much finer, very exquisite aroma in contrast to the strongly scented leaves of Laurus nobilis.
Lithocarpus lampadarius grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is scaly or fissured. Its coriaceous leaves measure up to long. The dark brown acorns are ovoid to roundish and measure up to across.
Lithocarpus confragosus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brownish bark is smooth, scaly or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its brown acorns are ovoid to roundish and measure up to across.
Lithocarpus conocarpus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is scaly. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark brown acorns are conical or ovoid and measure up to across.
Their shell varies in size according to the species, from 3 mm to 30 mm. The shell is ovoid, thin and translucent. It may be smooth or have spiral grooves (striae). The umbilical apex is sunken or enclosed and no longer visible.
Anther bases are sharply sagittate, with oblong tips; the ends of the styles manifest a somewhat swollen node, with a cylindrical superior appendage. The smooth brownish fruits are four to five millimeters in diameter, but distinctly ovoid; many pappus bristles are exhibited.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is ovoid and the epidermis is opaque, tan. All mines cross the midrib and consume 70%-95% of the leaf surface. The mines are solitary and usually have two folds, but often one.
The capsule has no wing, and is strongly asymmetrical. The seeds are ovoid and 2.0-3.6 mm by1.0-1.8 mm wide and have a covering of fine white hairs over the whole seed and thicker recurved hollow hairs next to the aril. .
The pistil is short and thick. The fruit can be elliptical, ovoid or round, measuring by in size. Fruits look much like small potatoes and are borne in clusters similar to grapes. The larger fruits are on the variety known as duku.
Murrill described the characteristics of the genus as follows: "Hymenophore large, perennial, epixylous, sessile; context woody, purple, tubes cylindrical, stratose, thick-walled, black; pores ovoid, smooth, hyaline." He noted that Nigrofomes was distinguished from similar genera by its purple context and black tubes.
Ponerorchis species grow from an ovoid tuber. They are slender plants with one to three usually slightly fleshy leaves. The flowers are all borne on the same side of the stem. The upper sepal and the two lateral petals form a hood.
The tepals persist into the fruiting stage. The stamens have filaments joined to each other at the base and to the base of the tepals. The ovoid seeds are black. They have a prominent whitish hilum which distinguishes the species from related genera.
Castanopsis psilophylla grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brown bark is smooth or with fine fissures. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its ovoid nuts measure up to long and are considered edible.
The snout is long and ovoid in dorsal view, depressed and somewhat pointed in lateral view. The canthus rostralis is sharp. The supra-tympanic fold becomes distinct only behind the tympanum. The fingers have no lateral keels and have weakly bulbous tips.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subovoid to subelliptical from above and rounded in profile. The tympanum is distinct; it is round in males but ovoid in females. The fingers have discs and weak lateral keels.
The dull white to yellow flowers are monoecious, and have a strong, unpleasant odour. They are borne in terminal spikes or short panicles. The fruits are smooth ellipsoid to ovoid drupes, yellow to orange- brown in colour, with a single angled stone.
The fruits are indehiscent. The ovoid to ellipsoid seeds are small, around in length and are not winged. They are very numerous but do not remain viable for long. Being recalcitrant (unable to survive drying and freezing temperatures), it's impossible to store them.
Prairie nymph -- Herbertia lahue Herbaceous and perennial plants, from tunicate, ovoid bulbs with brown, dry, brittle and papery tunics. The stems are simple or branched. The leaves are few, with the basal ones larger than the others; the blade is pleated, linear-lanceolate.
The fruits are ovoid, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "rough with short, hard points", referring to the fruits. Habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp forests from sea level to altitude. D. muricata is endemic to Borneo.
Flower head ovoid to cylindrical, 15 mm (0.6 inches) long and 6 mm (0.24 inches) in diameter. Flowers yellow- green.Dusén, Per Karl Hjalmar, & Wolff, Karl Friedrich August Hermann. 1911. Arkiv för Botanik utgivet av K. Svenska Vetenskapsakademien 10(5): 2, pl. 1.
The bright yellow to occasionally orange-yellow petals are long and wide, about twice as large as the sepals. The forty to two-hundred stamens are, at the most, long. The ovoid ovary is long and wide. The three styles are long.
The fruits are roundish to ovoid-ellipsoid, up to in diameter. The specific epithet ' is from the Greek meaning "fiery red or yellow fruits". Habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp forests. D. pyrrhocarpa is found from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands to the Philippines.
The smooth fruit are ovoid in shape tapering to a small beak. They may be found in clusters or spaced along the branchlets. Hakea multilineata is tolerant of medium frosts and grows best in an open sunny position that is very well drained.
They become yellow-green at maturity and are longitudinally striate. The inner leaf blades grow to about long and are yellow-brown to red-brown in colour. The narrow- ovoid to ovoidinflorescence is in length with a width of containing may pseudospikelets.
Sarcosperma paniculatum is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The flowers are yellow to greenish- white. The fruits are ovoid to round, ripening red and purplish-black, up to in diameter.
The carapace of this species is reddish brown, ovoid to elongated, with or without fine, radiating, black patterns. The plastron is mostly yellow with or without fine, radiating, black lines. The head is speckled and the throat is yellow. The neck is striped.
Solanum physalifolium is an annual herbaceous plant growing from a taproot. It reaches a height of . There are no leaves at the base of the stem. The leaves along the stem are ovoid to deltoid (egg-shaped to triangular), long by across.
Manilkara huberi is a large tree, reaching heights of . The leaves are oblong, approximately in length, with yellow undersides. The flowers are hermaphroditic; white with 3 sepals. The edible fruit is yellow and ovoid, in diameter, containing one seed (or occasionally two).
The forewing is relatively narrow with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present and black or brown and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The hindwing is grey, with an indistinct discal spot.
Later it forms a ribbed ovoid hairy fruit that is . It is only able to regenerate from seed. The plant is closely related to Grevillea fistulosa but differs in having a ring of hair in the perianth, and yellow instead of red flowers.
The ovoid shell is heavy and yellowish white. It measures 5.3 mm. The small whorls of the protoconch are almost completely immersed in the first of the succeeding volutions. The five whorls of the teleoconch are inflated and increase rapidly in size.
Chionanthus rugosus grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. The fruit is green, ovoid, up to long. The specific epithet rugosus is from the Latin meaning "rough", referring to the fruit.
Lithocarpus cantleyanus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is scaly or fissured or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its brown acorns are ovoid and measure up to across.
It pollinates in June, has matured seeds in August, and flowers from May. Seed cones are solitary or opposite at nodes, sessile, and ovoid at maturity. The mature cones are fleshy, red, and glucose, 6–9 mm long, 5–8 mm across.
The fruit is an ovoid dark blue to purple drupe long, containing a single seed (rarely two or three), mature in late summer to mid fall.Missouriplants: Chionanthus virginicusOklahoma Biological Survey: Chionanthus virginicus Huxley, A., ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. Macmillan .
Zygosepalum labiosum has scandent rhizomes with ovoid pseudobulbs. Its leaves are long. The orchid's inflorescence is up to long with one to three flowers. The flowers are up to in width, with greenish sepals and petals with red markings at their base.
The fruit is an ovoid red berry about 1 cm long,Parnell, J. and Curtis, T. 2012. Webb's An Irish Flora. Cork University Press.soft and juicy, with the aspect and odour of a tiny tomato, and edible for some birds, which disperse the seeds widely.
Lithocarpus dasystachyus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth, flaky or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
Lithocarpus elegans grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is fissured or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its edible brown acorns are ovoid to roundish and measure up to across.
Detail of the distinctive leaves It reaches heights of 1.3 to 1.8 meters, and typically has small, ovoid, club- shaped leaves. These succulent leaves are deciduous, and densely coat its stems. The stems are stout and grow upwards, forking. They are very slow- growing.
The fruit is an acorn which measures 0.9-1.1 cm in length by 0.8 cm across; ovoid, apex depressed but mucronate; silky; short peduncle (1.5–3 cm); enclosed 2/3 by cup; cup 0.8-1.1 cm in diameter, scaly; maturing in 1o r 2 years.
The fruit is an ovoid berry, black when mature. Leaves have 5 to 17 cm long, petiolate and alternate. Form available variables: ovate elliptic oblong lanceolate ... and leathery, deep green and glossy, more for the beam on the underside. It is a dioecious species, i.e.
Lithocarpus lucidus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to and buttresses measuring up to high. The brown bark is smooth. Its coriaceous leaves measure up to long. The brown purplish acorns are ovoid and measure up to across.
Lithocarpus confertus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is scaly or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark brown or purplish acorns are ovoid and measure up to across.
Lithocarpus coopertus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth, flaky or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
There are two stamens and an ovoid ovary with two stigmas. In fruiting phase, the perianth becomes thick and spongy and encloses the fruit. Towards the apex, the perianth is widened, flattened, and furnished with a wing-like margin. The fruit wall (pericarp) is membranous.
Upper pitchers are similar in most respects to their lower counterparts. They are up to 20 cm high and 3 cm wide. They are infundibular in the lowermost part, narrowly ovoid in the next part, and cylindrical above. The peristome lacks teeth in upper pitchers.
Two to four longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib. Pinnate veins arise obliquely from the midrib. Tendrils reach 15 cm in length. Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in the lowermost quarter and cylindrical above, frequently widening just below the peristome.
Phytophthora palmivora produces abundant sporangia on V-8 agar under continuous fluorescent light. However, light is not required for sporangia production on infected papaya fruit. Sporangia are usually produced in clusters sympodially. Sporangia are papillate and ovoid with the widest part close to the base.
Lithocarpus ferrugineus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth or scaly or lenticellate. Its coriaceous leaves measure up to long. The reddish brown acorns are ovoid and measure up to across.
The roots spread widely but not deeply. The leaves are highly variable in shape. The flowers are borne as catkins, those of the male are long, those of the female . The fruits are ovoid-lanceolate capsules, long, containing tiny seeds enveloped in silky hairs.
The fruit is a subglobose dry loculicidal dehiscent capsule, that produces between one and a few seeds per loculus that are globose to ovoid, red-green and often viviparous (begin to develop before separating). Chromosome number: 11 (2n=22), but rarely 2n=24 or triploids.
Mastixia trichotoma grows as a tree measuring up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth to fissured bark is yellowish grey to grey-brown. The flowers are green to yellowish green. The ovoid to ellipsoid fruits measure up to long.
The parasite was first described by Lainson et al in 2010. Prevalence of infection is low (5%). Trophozoites The trophozoites are initially tear-shaped and possess a large vacuole. As they mature they may assume an irregular shape but ultimately becoming spherical or broadly ovoid.
Lithocarpus hatusimae grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth or fissured. Its coriaceous leaves measure up to long. The dark brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
Ponerorchis graminifolia is a short herbaceous perennial growing from an ovoid tuber. It reaches a height of 10–15 cm (less often 25 cm). It has two to four linear leaves, 7–15 cm long. The inflorescence is a raceme containing 2–15 flowers.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is vertically ovoid; the supra-tympanic fold is weakly developed and granular. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes have basal webbing; the discs are almost round.
The awl- like rudimentary leaves are up to 12 centimeters long. The red flowers are up to 6 centimeters long. The long, warty hypanthium is covered by rudimentary leaves up to 2 centimeters long. The fruit are ovoid or club-like and sometimes thorny.
Just to the south-west of the station building, but north of Gill Street, is a concrete pedestrian underpass (1890). Stairs descend at each end to an ovoid tunnel, which is truncated along its base by a pathway. Concrete walls with capping mark either entrance.
The fruits are ovoid, up to long. The specific epithet ' is from the Greek meaning "giant", referring to the tree's large size. Its habitat is mixed dipterocarp to montane forests from to altitude. P. gigas is endemic to Borneo and known only from Sabah.
Leaves along the stems are alternate and odd-pinnate. Water parsnip flowers are perfect (both male and female) and are self-fertile. The pedicles are 3–5 mm long and the fruit is ovoid. The fruit is dry but does not split open when ripe.
The gametocytes are spherical or ovoid averaging 6.7 × 5.0 micrometres (range: 4.5 – 9.0 × 3.0 – 7.0) in size with a length-width product of 33.7 (range: 15 – 54) and a length/width ratio of 1.4 (range: 1.0 – 2.3). By dimension they are not sexual dimorphic.
Its flowers have multiple carpels that form a cone-shaped gynoecium. Its 4-sided, prism-shaped ovaries are 0.9-1 millimeters long. Its fleshy, quadrangular styles are 0.9-1 millimeters long and terminate in ovoid stigmas. The outermost styles are covered in fine glandular hairs.
The white, shiny, slightly ovoid shell grows to a length of 1.6 mm. The teleoconch contains four smooth, turreted whorls. The body whorl measures ⅔ of the total length of the shell. The growthlines are leaning forward (adapically) with respect to the direction of the cone.
Lithocarpus bancanus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The yellowish to greyish brown bark is smooth to scaly. The leaves measure up to long. Its brownish acorns are ovoid to roundish and measure up to long.
The male cones are cylindrical, growing to 3–15 cm long; they are often clustered. The female cones are elongate-ovoid and grow to 6–15 cm long and 4–6 cm in diameter. Pollination is by certain insects, namely the belid weevil Rhopalotria slossoni.
Lithocarpus bennettii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark purplish brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to long.
The petioles are covered in brown tomentum and armed with sharp spines. The female cones are open, with sporophylls 28–32 cm long. Orange tomentose covering cone, with serrations along margins of the lamina. The sarcotesta is orange and glaucous, the sclerotesta ovoid and flattened.
The thorax is cordate in shape and often has hind corners. There are 10-20 setae on the thorax margins, but are seldom found on the hind corners. The elytra are ovoid in shape, lacking distinct shoulders. The elytra are sometimes coloured brown-black.
Lithocarpus caudatifolius grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth, scaly or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to long.
Picrasma javanica grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is dark and smooth. The flowers are white to yellow or green. The fruits are green to red or blue, ovoid to roundish and measure up to in diameter.
Cryptococcus bhutanensis is a fungus species. It was isolated from soil in Bhutan. The cell is encapsulated with an extended ovoid shape. when the cell buds, it creates birth scars, and the neck of the new yeast fits inside of the bud scar neck.
Of Mutability was Chadwick's first major solo exhibition, held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1986. Chadwick utilised the ceremonial character of the elegant neo-classical rooms of the upper galleries to house an installation made up of a number of autonomous artworks. One room was at the centre of the exhibition and took the name of The Oval Court (1984–86), an ovoid platform that lay in the middle of the space. The platform presents a twelve-part collage of layered blue toned A4 photocopies made directly of the artist’s naked form, dead animals, plants and drapery suspended in an ovoid pool.
The stem is 30 cm high for a diameter of 15–20 cm. The leaves are 50 to 150 cm long, dark green in color, with leaflets that branch off opposite to an angle of 180 ° from the rachis and that are reduced to thorns towards the base of the leaf. It is a dioecious species, with yellow, ovoid male cones 20–25 cm long by 5–7 cm in diameter, and yellow, ovoid female cones 25 cm long by 12–15 cm in diameter. The seeds are oblong in shape, 25–30 mm long and 15–20 mm wide, with a red sarcotesta.
Using an equation derived by Conroy (1987) based on the mesiodistal length of preserved teeth found, it is estimated that the species within the genus Lufengpithecus had a body mass between 55.4 and 67.6 kg. Analysis from an excavated skull shows that male L. lufengensis possess supraorbital ridges which are ovoid and the transverse diameter is slightly longer than the vertical diameter; in females the supraorbital ridges are predicted to be quadrangularly shaped rather than ovoid. The glabellar region which is located between the eyebrows and above the nose along with the frontal triangle are both very depressed. The midsagittal line of the face is also concave.
CT scanning is more sensitive and better at detecting pulmonary laceration than X-rays are, and often reveals multiple lacerations in cases where chest X-ray showed only a contusion. Before CT scanning was widely available, pulmonary laceration was considered unusual because it was not common to find with X-ray alone. On a CT scan, pulmonary lacerations show up in a contused area of the lung, typically appearing as cavities filled with air or fluid that usually have a round or ovoid shape due to the lung's elasticity. Hematomas appear on chest radiographs as smooth masses that are round or ovoid in shape.
It is a cultivar of weak vigour, with an erect growth form. The leaves are short and narrow, with an elliptic-lanceolate form. The olives are of medium-high weight, and of an ovoid quite symmetrical shape. They are rounded both at the apex and the base.
Lithocarpus daphnoideus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth or fissured. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark brownish or red-brown acorns are conical or ovoid and measure up to across.
The ovary is inferior. The fruits are ovoid, blackish non-fleshy capsules, with one seed per locule. Alphitonia species are used as food plants by the larva the hepialid moth Aenetus mirabilis, which feed only on these trees. They burrow horizontally into the trunk, then vertically down.
The wingspan of Adela reaumurella ranges from 14 to 18 millimeter.UK Moths Wings have an ovoid-elongated shape with rounded apex. The upper wings of both sexes are bronzy or metallic greenish, close along the body. The hind wings are dark brown with a bronze-violet shine.
Grammatonotus is a genus of fish in the family Callanthiidae native to the Indian and Pacific Ocean. These fish are ovoid to elongated in shape, with short, rounded snouts. The anterior nostril is tubular. They have large teeth with one to two canine teeth on each side.
Since the introduction of the potato to Germany in the seventeenth century, Schupfnudeln have also been made with potatoes. They are traditionally given their distinctive ovoid shape through hand-shaping. They are often served as a savory dish with sauerkraut but are also served in sweet dishes.
The inflorescence has a diameter of . The flowers, usually hermaphrodite, range from white to glowing rose or soft-pink and are gathered in umbels with 11 to 16 stalks. The flowering period extends from June to August in its native habitat. The fruits are ovoid, long.
Flowers are hermaphrodite, zygomorphic, of calyx five-lobed almost entirely separate and corolla color white to pink or purple. Fruit in the form of a capsule that gives off ovoid seeds of black color.Thomas Gaskell Tutin et al. (Ed.): Flora Europaea, Volume 3: Diapensiaceae to Myoporaceae .
The Henneguya salminicola parasite is found in fish as an ovoid spore with two anterior polar capsules and two long caudal appendages. It is stated to be a far cousin of jellyfish who lost their tissue, muscles and basically everything else over a long period of time.
Cell shape and size of Chlorodendrales cells varies depending on the species. The cells range greatly in size from species to species, with an upper limit of ~25 µm in length. Cells can be round, ovoid, elliptical, flattened, or compressed; there is great diversity in Chlorodendrales cells.
The spermatheca is spherical or ovoid. Oviduct is usually short and sometimes thinner than penis and vagina. Atrium is short. Carpathica differs from Daudebardia in the presence of an appendix or flagellum at the apical end of the penis; vas deferens inserts subterminally (in Daudebardia terminally).
Pinnate veins are not easily distinguished. Tendrils may be up to 5 cm long. A rosette plant with lower pitchers Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in the lower third and cylindrical above. They are small, reaching only 10 cm in height and 2.5 cm in width.
The wing terminated in small tip bodies. The fuselage was built in two sections that bolted together. It was ovoid in cross-section, tapering aft to a conventional but integral tail. The fin was straight edged with a rounded tip and a small fillet at its base.
Kibara coriacea grows as a shrub or tree measuring up to tall with a diameter of up to . The smooth bark is pale grey. The ovoid fruits are drupes (pitted), ripen to deep blue, purple or black, and measure up to long. The fruits are considered edible.
They are up to 20 cm high and 4 cm wide. On the inner surface, the glandular region covers the ovoid portion of the pitcher cup. The pitchers lack wings, bearing a pair of ribs instead. The pitcher mouth is round and has an oblique insertion.
Wattoo Wattoo Super Bird is a French cartoon series created in 1978. Consisting of 60 five-minute episodes, the series was intended to teach morals to children. The eponymous Wattoo Wattoo is a black and white ovoid bird. He comes from a cube-shaped planet called Auguste.
Trifolium pannonicum is a perennial non-climbing clump-forming herb with lanceolate, dark green leaves. The upright hairy stem can reach a height of about . It bears ovoid spike inflorescences of cream or pale yellow flowers, about 2.5 cm long, blooming in late Spring and mid Summer.
The fruit is an ovoid to ellipsoidal schizocarp, cylindrical or compressed, with ciliate primary ribs and secondary ribs with a row of hooked spines. Some species have a small pale or white edible taproot, similar to a radish, which may or may not be bitter in taste.
The spindle-shaped or ovoid gall is formed in the petiole or midrib of a leaf and is 10 mm long and 5 mm wide and contains one larva. It can be found on white willow (S. alba), Babylon willow (S. babylonica), S. blanda, crack willow (S.
Guttulina is a genus of nodosariacean forams belonging to the Polymorphinidae and subfamily Polymorphinidae. The test is ovoid to elongate, inflated chambers added in a quinqueloculine spiral series, 144 deg. apart, each successive chamber extending further from the base but strongly overlapping. Sutures depressed, aperture radiate.
The adult is a sphinx-like moth with dark reddish-brown wings and a lighter margin. One or two yellowish spots are found on the forewings. The female lays off-white to light brown eggs which are ellipsoidal. It has a single lateral ovoid brown spot.
The first two dentary teeth are large and procumbent; and the premaxillary and anterior maxillary teeth are much enlarged relative to the posterior maxillary teeth. The third cervical vertebra has a deep, rimmed, ovoid pleurocoels on the anterolateral surfaces of both the centrum and the neural arch.
Two adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length (females are unknown). The head is narrower than the body; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is ovoid and the membrane is barely differentiated. The supra-tympanic fold is low and not obscuring the tympanum.
Tadpoles are grey or light brown (Duellman 2001). The tail has more yellow undertones (Duellman 2001). The tadpole body is ovoid, with a rather long tail that ends in a distinct point (Duellman 2001). The upper caudal fin is much deeper than the lower (Duellman 2001).
It is and oblong in shape. Most supervolcano calderas of explosive origin are slightly ovoid or oblong in shape. Because of the vast scale and erosion, it took scientists over 30 years to fully determine the size of the caldera. La Garita is considered an extinct volcano.
The pedicel is long and thickly covered in cream-white to deep yellow, flattened silky hairs. The perianth long and the pistil long. The large ovoid fruit are rough and corky long by wide ending with a curving short beak. Flowering occurs from September to October.
The pedicel is smooth, perianth cream- white and the pistils long. Flowering occurs from August to November. The small, slightly curved ovoid fruit are in groups of 1-4 on a thick stem, long, wide and tapering gradually to a beak with an easily broken point.
The adult flukes can live up to 20 years. The eggs are golden brown in color and are asymmetrically ovoid. They have a very thick shell. As seen above, these trematodes have a very complex life cycle with seven distinct phases involving intermediate hosts and humans.
Phyllopertha horticola is approximately in size.Bloomsbury Concise Insect Guide Unlike Mimela of the family same family, these beetles have a non-ovoid body. They have chestnut-brown wing casings which are covered with a long upright pubescence. On each elytron run six longitudinal bands of small dots.
Ovary ovoid-oblong, densely adpressedly villose and up to 2mm long. Flowers February–May. Fruit septicidally 4-5 valved, dark brown with valves pubescent on the back and glabrous at the sides. Epicarp mature fruits splits off from endocarp, which splits ~1/4 of its length.
The pistil is ovary superior, ovoid, and five-celled; the style is columnar; the stigma is simple; the disk is ten-toothed, and ovules are many. The fruit is a capsule, downy, five-valved, five-angled, and tipped by the persistent style; the pedicels are curving.
The ornamentation is granular between echinae (short spines). The ulcerate aperture is 3 μm in diameter. Pollen grains measure an average of 30 × 14.5 μm in size. On female trees, the inflorescence is a single ellipsoid or ovoid syncarp, or fruiting head, with off-white bracts.
The ovoid shell is milk-white. It measures 1.5 mm. The nuclear whorls are deeply, obliquely immersed in the first of the succeeding turns, above which only the tilted edge of the last volution projects, which is smooth. The five post-nuclear whorls are very slightly rounded.
The reniform stigma is bright, ovoid and yellow. All crosslines are present and black. The antemedial and postmedial lines are prominent, the former being sharply angled subcostally, the latter waved. The subterminal line is waved and the terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots.
Syzygy occurs in the tail-to-tail, head-to-head and lateral positions. The gamonts are extracellular. They are foliaceous or cylindroid in shape and have longitudinal striations. The oocysts are spherical or ovoid, are 12-18 microns in diameter and their wall is 1 micron thick.
It counts with 11 or 12 stamens, while its anthers are subsessile and ovoid, each up to long; the ovar is indistinct. The style is long, while the stigma is disc-shaped and is thick, its central part white with 5 purple ribs, with 22-24 teeth.
Lithocarpus bullatus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The greyish brown bark is smooth or fissured or lenticellate. The coriaceous leaves measure up to long. Its dark brown acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
The sheaths remain at the basal tuft when dead. The ligules measure . The capillary leaf blade are long and soft, measuring long and wide, and arise from the basal tuft. The inflorescences are typically cylindrical or ovoid panicles that are long, though they can occasionally be racemes.
Barringtonia pendula grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is reddish brown. The fruits are ovoid or musiform (banana- shaped), up to long. The specific epithet pendula is from the Latin meaning "dangling", referring to the inflorescence.
Trigonidium egertonianum has densely clustered pseudobulbs, ovoid in shape with two leaves. The orchid's inflorescence arises on mature growths, ranging from in length. Its flowers are long and bell shaped. The sepals, petals, and lip are yellow-green to pinkish brown, with brown veins and markings.
An ovoid seed capsules evolves subsequent to the corollas of the flowers turning brown and falling off. The seeds capsules are initially light green and uncovered (no coating), and later turns brown and splits open to release the seeds. It is rhizomatous with occasional vegetative colony growth.
In fruiting phase, the perianth remains membranous or becomes spongy, crustaceous, or horny. The fruit wall (pericarp) may be membranous, fleshy, chartaceous, crustaceous, woody, or horny. The seed is disc-shaped, lenticular, ovoid or wedge-shaped. Its surface may be smooth, papillose, reticulate, tuberculate or longitudinally ribbed.
Upper pitchers are more elongated and less ovoid, with no wings or fringe elements. The peristome is flattened and only slightly expanded. The lid is large and sub-orbicular in shape. The leaves are linear-lanceolate in shape, slightly decurrent towards the base, and have a sessile attachment.
Elliptical galaxy IC 2006. Elliptical galaxies are characterized by several properties that make them distinct from other classes of galaxy. They are spherical or ovoid masses of stars, starved of star-making gases. The smallest known elliptical galaxy is about one-tenth the size of the Milky Way.
The length of the shell attains 6.7 mm, its diameter 3.7 mm. Thin shell has an ovoid shape. The spire is of mediocre length, occupying hardly more than a third of the total height. The shell is composed of 6 convex whorls, separated by a well-marked suture.
The tree was described by Nilsson as columnar, having a rounded elongate-ovoid crown, and dense sub-erect branches. The relatively elongated leaves are widest above the middle, quite tapered towards a long tip, and tapering to an unsymmetrical base. The margin is triple-toothed. New shoots are downy.
The petiole appears as channeled above. Pale yellow flowers are seen in small clusters borne on short branchlets on the internodes. Male and female flowers are distinguishable. The fruit is dark purple, ovoid in shape, about 1.0 cm in size with a ring-like cap at the base.
The flowers are across with 5 golden yellow petals, becoming reflexed with age. The ovaries have three parts, forming narrowly ovoid to cylindric capsules. The species typically flowers in early July and it has been noted for its use as a rock garden shrub or as ground cover.
Lilium bulbiferum reaches on average of height, with a maximum of . The bulbs are ovoid, with whitish large and pointed scales and can reach about of diameter. The stem is erect, the leaves are lanceolate, up to 10 centimeters long. The inflorescence has one to five short-haired flowers.
One to ten yellow flowers are borne on terminal and open corymbs, with each flower measuring wide. The leaf- like sepals are oblong and long. The ovoid capsules typically have five carpels and styles, though they can occasionally bear three, four, or six. The capsules are long and thick.
The leaf blade has a lanceolate shape that tapers to a fine point. The blade is typically in length with a width of . The simple axillary inflorescences contain 7 to 11 flowers. The fruits that appear later have an ovoid to globose shape and are about long and wide.
The fruit is a globose to ovoid pome diameter, greenish to russet or brown, patterned with small pale lenticel spots when mature in mid to late autumn.Mitchell, A. F. (1974). A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain and Northern Europe. Collins Blamey, M. & Grey-Wilson, C. (1989).
This species is dioecious, but there are no secondary sex characteristics. The measurements of their body lengths range 218–743 μm. The eggs' color ranges from white to pale yellow and their shape ranges from spherical to slightly ovoid. The full diameter of the eggs range 56.4–70.8 μm.
A skeletal revision of Nepenthes (Nepenthaceae). Blumea 42(1): 1–106. In addition, N. thorelii has wholly ovoid lower pitchers, whereas those of N. bokorensis are only ovate in the basal third, becoming cylindrical above. Nepenthes bokorensis also appears to be closely related to N. kerrii of Thailand.
The large nuclei are about double the size of the small nuclei at about 2-4 µm diameter. Pyriform, spindle shaped or ovoid merozoites with large nuclei differentiate into spheroidal gamonts. The gamonts associate in head to head syzygy with the conoidal complexes juxtaposed. The gametocytes are hemispherical.
The buds are globular-ovoid, resinous, and roughly 5 mm in length. The leaves are somewhat comb-like or nearly pectinate in arrangement. They are unequal and deep green above and waxy in texture underneath. They measure 1.5 to 5.5 cm long by 1.2 to 2 mm wide.
S. nervosum in Hong Kong The leaves of S. nervosum are elliptical, obovate and glaborous, measuring 7–9 cm in length. Flowers cluster as greenish white trichomatous pannicles. The blossoms have 4 petals. The 7–12 cm diameter fruits are ovoid with a concave tip and a wrinkled texture.
The species is slow-growing epiphyte with an ascending growth habit. Its pseudobulbs are ovoid, 1-leafed at the apex, spaced of about 2.5cm on a creeping rhizome. Leaves are oblong, dark green, 4.5~9cm long. Inflorescence is from the base of the pseudobulb and single-flowered, 14cm long.
Tendrils are up to 25 cm long. Rosette and lower pitchers are narrowly ovoid in the lower third to half of the pitcher cup. Above the hip, they are cylindrical and somewhat narrower. Terrestrial pitchers are relatively small, growing to 12 cm in height and 4 cm in width.
Rhinella arborescandens is a small and robust-bodied toad. The type series consists of an adult male (the holotype) measuring and an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The dorsum is reddish brown, and the male had a pale yellow mid-dorsal stripe. The parotoid gland is ovoid.
There may be up to nine tooth-like staminodes or none at all; gynoecium uniocular and ovoid with broad, pendulous stigmas. The fruit is ellipsoidal to subglobose, maturing to black, with a thin endocarp, carrying one seed. The seed is round with homogeneous endosperm and a basal embryo.
Her early Venezuelan works incorporate pre-Columbian- inspired figures, whereas later works rejected ornamentation in favor of featuring process, medium, and concerns of form, texture, and color. After 1972, Seka explored the possibilities of ovoid forms with a completely solid exterior, further bridging the divide between ceramics and sculpture.
The calyx is coated in long, sometimes glandular, hairs and becomes inflated in fruit. There are five white, pink or bicolored, spatulate petals, each with a small appendage at the base. There are ten stamens and three styles. The fruit is a brown, ovoid capsule with six apical teeth.
Spathe is leathery, 10–13 cm long with an ovoid tube which is green. Spadix is around 3.5 cm long, clavate and creamy white with the flowers unisexual and congested, female at base, male at tip, separated by sterile flowers in the middle. Fruits a cluster of berries.
It is a tree growing to 8 m in height. Its leaves are 6–9 cm long, 2.5–3 cm wide. The axillary inflorescence is some 3 cm long, bearing 8–10 pendant white flowers. The fruit is an ovoid drupe, 2 cm long and blue when ripe.
The head bears a pair of stout recurved horns and there is a bifid tail. The pupa is green or bluish green with irregular white spots resembling lichen. It is an ovoid shape with a prominent thoracic bulge. It is suspended by the cremaster from a leaf or twig.
After flowering dark brown seed pods that are linear with a length of and a width of around . The pods are often rough and warty and raised over the seeds. The black, elliptical to ovoid shaped seeds within the pods have a length of around and a width of .
Pair of chestnut-rumped thornbills (Sturt Desert, NSW). Most records of chestnut-rumped thornbills breeding involve pairs, however they appear occasionally to breed co- operatively. Breeding season is June - December, and two broods, possibly three can be raised per season. The ovoid eggs are laid at two-day intervals.
Communal feeding in Chestnut-Rumped Thornbills. Sunbird: Journal of the Queensland Ornithological Society, 12(2/3). The fledging period is around 18–20 days. Both adults are involved with building nests, which are small, neat and domed usually ovoid, with a rounded entrance at side or near top.
In this species, the carapace is reddish brown, ovoid to elongated, with wide, radiating, black lines or large, black specks. The plastron is mostly yellow and may have short, fat lines, specks, or be uniformly colored. The head is speckled, with a yellow throat. The neck is striped.
The spreading inflorescence nods when it becomes heavy with grain though prior to maturity the panicle is erect. The spikelets are on elongated pedicels, with each spikelet bearing five to fifteen flowers. The spikelets are glabrous or scabrous and become lax when mature. The ovoid spikelets measure long.
They have fused lateral sepals (synsepals) which may be quite colorful : yellow, orange or tan with contrasting maroon lengthwise stripes. The long, slender, lateral petals equally end in a thickened club-shaped tip. The long lip is ovoid and widest at its apex. It shows a reddish lengthwise stripe.
Duplex timorensis is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by George Hampson in 1926. It is known from Indonesia, including Java, the Kangean Islands and south-western Timor. The wingspan is 7–8 mm. The forewing is relatively broad, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma.
Haloterrigena turkmenica is a gram-negative organism. Cells are typically found as individuals, but have been seen in the form of pairs and tetrads. Cell shape can be classified as being ovoid to coccoid in shape. The diameter of the cells ranges from 1.5 µm to 2.0 µm.
The cones emerge in November to December, ripening in March to May. The lamina margin is strongly toothed, with an acuminate point. The sarcotesta is yellow to brown. The male cones are solitary, ovoid, 30 cm long and 7.5 cm broad, with an apical spine and rhomboid sporophyll face.
Barringtonia lanceolata grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is brown, grey or reddish brown and has been used as fish poison. The fruits are ovoid or fusiform, up to long. Habitat is forest from sea level to altitude.
The peduncle carrying the spikes is up to 1 cm long. The flowers have a long, variegated, reddish flower tube, which is slightly curved. It has six, 5–6 mm long petals which are green and turned back. The fruit is an ovoid berry, green, with persistent sepals.
There is usually no stem but the inflorescence arises on a stemlike peduncle up to about 15 centimeters tall. The inflorescence is a compound umbel bearing many tiny white flowers with dark anthers. The fruit is an ovoid body a few millimeters long lined with prominent longitudinal ribs.
Broad lanceolate to elliptic in shape with a prominent raised midrib and narrow point. Flowers occur mostly in spring with white or pinkish petals. The berry is orange or yellow in colour, with a small number of seeds. The berry is ovoid in shape, 1 to 1.5 cm long.
On the microscopic level, C. consortionis appears ovoid, with a thin capsule. Sexual reproduction does not occur in this species, but it asexually reproduces through budding at the birth scar site. Very occasionally, the cells have been observed to produce three celled pseudomycelia. C. consortionis does not ferment.
Tsuga mertensiana foliage and cones The pollen cones grow solitary from lateral buds. They are 3–5(–10) mm long, ovoid, globose, or ellipsoid, and yellowish-white to pale purple, and borne on a short peduncle. The pollen itself has a saccate, ring-like structure at its distal pole, and rarely this structure can be more or less doubly saccate. The seed cones are borne on year-old twigs and are small ovoid-globose or oblong-cylindric, ranging from 15–40 mm long, except in T. mertensiana, where they are cylindrical and longer, 35–80 mm in length; they are solitary, terminal or rarely lateral, pendulous, and are sessile or on a short peduncle up to 4 mm long.
Abies recurvata is a small to medium-sized tree mostly with conical crown, occasionally reaching a height of 40 m, and a trunk diameter of . It has rather smooth gray or rusty brown bark, at first shedding in thin plates, becoming grayish-brown and detaching in thick plates. The branchlets are grayish-white or light yellow with long needles horizontally outspreading on shade branches, radially outspreading on fertile branches; often thick and recurved, green to gray above and densely set with stoma-lines, with 2 light grayish-green stomatal bands below. Abies recurvata has long ovoid or cylindrical-ovoid, gray- or purplish blue cones; the bracts are somewhat shorter than the cone-scales, included or with slightly exposed tips.
Megaspores have a layered outer skin with a small trilete mark, are also hollow, round to ovoid and up to 300–400 μm in diameter. The anatomy of the spores in Pleuromeia is comparable to that of Isoetes and substantiates the assumed close relationship between the Pleuromeiaceae and the Isoetaceae.
It is a crater lake of Maar type with a heart-like ovoid shape and a 1km diameter. Average depth is of 6.30m and maximum depth is 18m at the center area. It is the natural drainage of River Cote. Average water temperature is around 21.9°C and 27.9°C.
Pinnate veins are generally indistinct. Tendrils are up to 20 cm long and sometimes have a sub- peltate insertion. Rosette and lower pitchers gradually or abruptly arise from the end of the tendril. The pitcher cup is ovoid in the lower third to two- thirds, becoming cylindrical and somewhat narrower above.
By the 1940s, the ingredients included various purgatives, cholagogues, and carminatives, including aloin (aloe), Podophyllum, cascara, scammony, jalap, colocynth, leptandrin, saponis (soap), cardamom, capsicum, ginger, peppermint oil, and gentian, mixed with liquorice, powdered gum (acacia or tragacanth) and glucose, coated with black charcoal or carbon powder to form ovoid pills.
Later it forms tuberculate ovoid glandular hairy fruit that are long. It regenerates from seed and is closely related and similar to Grevillea pulchella. G. tenuiflora is found in heath, woodland or shrubland from Armadale as far east as Wagin. It grows in gravelly, sand or clay soils over laterite.
The glossy, black or blackish seeds are 0.9 to 1.2mm in length, 0.75 to 1mm in width, 0.6 to 0.75mm thick, and orbicular to ovoid, and only slightly compressed or flattened, in shape, with a short beak. The testa of the seed coat has a smooth to delicately sculptured surface texture.
The corolla is colored white with reddish color at throat, and is about long, glabrous, with acute ovate lobes. Capsule is x , ovoid acute, and glabrous. Fruits are obliquely ovate and pointed. Rauvolfia micrantha is related to the snakeroot plant (Rauvolfia serpentina) which is used as a traditional herbal medicine.
The lower lip typically has two lobes. The stamens are reduced to two short structures with anthers two-celled, the upper cell fertile, and the lower imperfect. The flower styles are two-cleft. The fruits are smooth ovoid or oblong nutlets and in many species they have a mucilaginous coating.
He proved the theorem, famous in finite geometry, that every inversive plane of even order n is isomorphic to the system of points and plane sections of an ovoid in a three-dimensional projective space over GF(n).Inversive Planes of Even Order. In: Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. vol. 69, no.
On the top of each whorl these ribs disappear into the flat sutural zone between the whorls. The aperture is ovoid with the outer lip lacking striae. The columella is strongly inclined abaxially showing two folds, with the rim of the siphonal canal forming the third fold. There is no umbilicus.
The mucron is broadly funnel shaped with papillae around its rim The gamonts are elongate, with longitudinal striations and with many protrusible filaments emerging from beneath the pellicl The gametocysts have numerous many oocysts The gametes dissimilar: the male gametes not flagellated The oocysts ellipsoidal or ovoid and have 8 sporozoites.
The flowers are in diameter, and their buds are ovoid-pyramidal and rounded. The sepals are either unequal or subequal, are broadly imbricate, and are paler than the leaves. They are , and are broadly ovate to lanceolate, and have a rounded base. They are entire, large, pointed, and persistent in fruit.
Iris danfordiae has a narrowly ovoid, bulb,Kelly D. Norris with whitish netted coats. It has 2 leaves (per bulb), tall. They are linear, four-angled in cross section,Donald Wyman and gray-green, or bluish green. The leaves sometimes appear together with the flowers, and sometimes after the flowers.
Katydids in this genus have an elongated head with ovoid eyes. The ovipositor is medium-sized, slightly crenulated, curving upwards, and one fifth of the length of the posterior femur. They are found in the understory rather than in the canopy in contrast with other members of the subfamily Phaneropterinae.
The acorns are small, .4 - 1 inch (1 - 2.5 cm), oblong in shape (ovoid or oblong-ellipsoid), shiny and tan-brown to nearly black, often black at the tips, and borne singly or in clusters. The avenue of live oaks at Boone Hall in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, planted in 1743.
The red eyespot functions as a lens that allows organisms to respond to visual stimulation. While eyespots and plastids are found in both groups, the origin of these structures differ as discussed the tertiary plastid section. The following are some major discerning features of Durinskia. Species in Durinskia are mostly ovoid.
Leaves are typically ovoid to elongate to linear in shape. Leaves are typically shorter than the internodes. Pale or dark glands can be present on or near the leaf margin and on the main leaf surface. Typically there are four or five sepals, though in section Myriandra there are rarely three.
Organisms are asymmetric with a transparent membrane on the outside. The membrane is not ciliated. Cryptomonas cells are fairly large; they average about 40 micrometers in size and often take the shape of an oval or ovoid. There are two flagella present, yet the two flagella are not equally sized.
Decoration is subject to change, but it mostly comes down to zigzags, squares, and circles. The Bwa also make horizontal and heterogenous masks. Heterogenous masks have an ovoid head with round and/or diamond eyes. Sometimes, the artist will choose to add on designs such as crescents or human figures.
The fingers are short, slender, and have no webbing nor fringes, whereas the toes have some webbing and the inner toes have also lateral fringes. The canthal, supraorbital, supratympanic, postorbital, preorbital, pretympanic, and supralabial crests are present. The parietal crest is poorly developed or absent. The parotoid glands are ovoid.
Lithocarpus ewyckii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth or scaly bark is greyish brown to reddish brown. Its coriaceous leaves are yellowish tomentose and measure up to long. The brownish acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
Ponerorchis joo-iokiana is a herbaceous perennial growing from an ovoid tuber. It reaches a height of 10–30 cm. It has one to three leaves, 4–8 cm long, with bases that surround the stem. The inflorescence consists of a few flowers arranged loosely rather than in a dense spike.
The lip region is slightly offset (3-4 µm high) and the nematode has a very short stylet (10 µm). A. agrostis has a three-part esophagus. The procorpus is cylindrical with a swelling near its midsection. The metacorpus is ovoid in shape and the isthmus is long and narrow.
Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in the basal portion, becoming sub- cylindrical above. They reach 20 cm in height and 5 cm in width. A pair of fringed wings (≤6 mm wide) runs down the front of the pitcher. The waxy zone of the inner surface is well developed.
Though composed in different materials, his works are united by a tightly defined set of forms that he consistently recombines. Manipulating sinuous curves, accordion folds, ovoid apertures, and a typically vertical alignment, Atchugarry creates forms that are highly evocative of plants and trees, breaking waves, still lifes, and the human figure.
This snake has a characteristic threat display. When disturbed, it flattens its body to make itself look wider, and its jaws flare outwards posteriorly, giving the normally ovoid head a triangular shape. Sometimes, it vibrates its tail. Ultimately, it will strike, during which it may or may not use its fangs.
Each flower has 30–42 stamens, 3 styles, and 3-parted capsules. The ovoid to pyramidal capsules reach in length and across with amber-colored vesicular glands scattered on the valves. The orange-brown seeds are approximately long. Hypericum sampsonii flowers between May and July and fruits between June and October.
The shell of this genus is 1.5 to 10 mm in length, ovoid, stout, with a small, low spire. The outer lip is thickened but without an external varix. It is usually denticulated inside. The columella has several plaits on a thickened rim, decreasing in size towards the posterior end.
A five-speed became available three years later. The higher end version was called the Conquest Zip which was powered by the 1.6l 4A-FE engine. From October 2000 the car received a light facelift with a more ovoid front end treatment and the name was changed to simply Toyota Tazz.
Blooms are medium-large and have a high-centered bloom form. Flowers are borne mostly solitary or in small clusters of 3—7, with glossy, dark green, leathery foliage. The buds are large, pointed and ovoid. The plant is a vigorous grower and blooms in flushes from spring through autumn.
Old branches are light gray with a finely furrowed bark. Buds are almost hidden by the leaf base, egg-shaped and bright green. The leaves have entire margins and are ovoid or with five triangular lobes. The surface is glossy dark green with light ribs, while the underside is pale green.
In the enigmatic leaf turtle, the carapace is dark brown and slightly reddish, ovoid, and lacks patterns in adults. The plastron is dark brown to black with or without dense, black, radiating patterns. The head is tan to a light reddish-brown in color. The throat and neck are uniformly dark.
A second burial site contains artifacts dating to the fourth and fifth centuries, including glass vials, amphorae, Roman silver coins with the image of the emperor Julia Domna, fibulae, a brooch, a cross bow, and a jug with an ovoid shape adorned with a cross in the early Christian style.
There is a smaller spot obliquely below this, bisected by vein 4. The hindwings have a sinuate termen. The colour is as the forewings, but there is one translucent spot only. It is located towards the base on dorsal side of the cell and is elongate-ovoid and narrower towards base.
The polyps are large and goblet-shaped, with down-turned rims. The reproductive gonothecae are borne on the upper surfaces of the branches, the male structures being ovoid and club-shaped, while the female ones are oblong, with tapering bases and broad flat upper surfaces with apertures in the corners.
The coriaceous or thick leaves have a dull green, concolorous appearance and are supported by narrowly flattened petioles. It forms simple axillary conflorescences with seven to eleven flowered umbellasters on terete angular peduncles. The buds are clavate followed by cylindrical to ovoid fruits with a depressed disc and enclosed valves.
The body of Ossubtus xinguense is ovoid in shape. The profile of the snout is blunt. In young fish, the mouth is terminal (pointing forward); however, as the fish grows, the mouth turns downward and becomes strictly ventral in individuals longer than . This gives the mouth a beak-like appearance.
One of the fertile stamens is longer and yellow; the other two are shorter and grey in colour. The gynoecium (female organ) has three joined carpels. Aerial and subaerial branch flowers have five ovules per ovary; underground branch flowers have three. Seeds are ovoid; 2 mm long and 1.5 mm wide.
The seed of tree nettle is one and half millimeters long and brown color, ovoid shape like.Salmon, J.T. (1998). "Native Trees of New Zealand 2". Auckland, New Zealand: Reed Books When the seed is planted in the environment which has more light and water, it will take one month to germinate.
Aspidistra recondita is a species of flowering plant. A. recondita takes its name from the Latin reconditus, meaning "hidden", referring to its sexual organs being completely hidden inside its ovoid perigone, with a small opening. Given it was described from an A. lurida specimen, neither its distribution nor habitat are known.
Barringtonia sarcostachys grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is brown, reddish brown, grey, greenish brown or blackish. The fruits are ovoid to roundish, up to long. The specific epithet sarcostachys is from the Greek meaning "fleshy spike", referring to the inflorescence.
Lithocarpus hystrix grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The brownish or reddish bark is scaly or lenticellate and contains tannin. Its coriaceous leaves are tomentose and measure up to long. The purplish acorns are ovoid to conical and measure up to across.
Portland, OR: Timber Press. Like other cycads, Zamia integrifolia is dioecious, having male or female plants. The male cones are cylindrical, growing to 5–16 cm long; they are often clustered. The female cones are elongate-ovoid and grow to 5–19 cm long and 4–6 cm in diameter.
The castle stands at a height of 800 meters above sea level. Site floor plan indicates an ovoid plant with a battlements with a perimeter of 660 meters. The walls are reinforced by fifteen turrets. Walls two metres thick surround the historic core of the city, enclosing three hectares of land.
The buds of the flowers have a pointed apex and are ovoid to conoidal. Also, petals that are unopened are twisted. The diameter of the flowers is 5–7 mm and they are 5-parted. Some of the petals are 3–5 mm in long and do not have hair.
Karlodinium antarcticum is a species of unarmored dinoflagellates from the genus Karlodinium. It was first isolated from the Australian region of the Southern Ocean, near the polar front. It is medium-sized and is characterized by its long ovoid cell shape and rather long apical groove. It is considered potentially ichthyotoxic.
Asymptoceras is a genus of aipoceratids (Nautiloidea) similar to Aipoceras but tightly coiled and with only part of the body chamber divergent from the previous whorl. Shell evolute, expanding fairly rapidly; umbilicus open, perforate; whorl section ovoid to subquadrate. Asymptoceras is known from Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) sediments in Europe and North America.
Later it forms ovoid simple hairy fruit that is long. G. pinifolia regenerates from seed only. Found amongst the medium to low trees in shrubland the shrub is able to grow in gravelly, sandy or loamy soils over laterite. Restircted to a small area in the Wheatbelt between Coorow, Carnamah, Dalwallinu and Moora.
The stamens and the style are enclosed within the tepals. The fruit is a narrowly ovoid capsule with black or dark brown seeds. Two-lipped flowers were considered a distinguishing characteristic of the genus Haworthia, before Haworthiopsis and Tulista were split off. More detailed features of the flowers now identify the three genera.
The fascicular arrangement of the tumour can be observed focally. The tumour cells are entrenched in a highly vasculated myxoid background. The vessels are thin arborizing with or without thrombi. The individual tumour cells are spindle to ovoid shaped, with indistinct cell borders, bland nuclear chromatin, inconspicuous nucleoli, and scant eosinophilic cytoplasm.
The pea shaped flowers are arranged in short clusters among the leaf axils. The axillary inflorescences contain one to seven flowers. The seed pods that form later are ovoid to ellipsoid in shape and are in length and wide. The olive brown seeds within have an elliptic shape and in length and wide.
The species in this genus are parasitic in arthropods. These parasite appear to be spread via the orofaecal route and infect the gastrointestinal tract and salivary glands of the insect host. They form ovoid oocysts in the gut wall. There are three sporocysts per oocyte and 4-6 (possibly more) sporozoites per sporocyst.
The ovaries are and are broadly ovoid, the styles are and there are six to eight times as many as the ovaries. The seed capsule is and is shorter than the sepals, and is shaped broadly oval-like to spherical. The seeds are a dark brown color, and are around with shalow testa.
In 1958, Gauthier-Lièvre and Thomas divided the genus into 10 groups depending on difference in shell morphology. These 10 groups are based on a survey conducted of the African species of Difflugia [3] The 10 shell shape classifications are lobed, collared, compressed, urceolate, globose, ovoid-globose, elongate, acute angled, horned and pyriform.
Cucumis anguria is a thinly stemmed, herbaceous vine scrambling up to 3 meters long. Fruits (4–5 cm × 3–4 cm) grow on long stalks, and are ovoid to oblong. The fruits are covered with long hairs over a surface of spines or wart-like bumps. The inner flesh is pallid to green.
The seed cones are ovoid in shape and typically measure in length and in width. The scales are ovate to cuneate in shape and measure in length by in width. The apex is more or less rounded and is often projected outward. Twenty-four diploid chromosomes are present within the trees' DNA.
Its achene has a longitudinal ridge, may have black spots on either side, and are distributed by the wind. They are ovoid; slightly flattened, but curved in shape. A plant may have buds, flowers, and achenes simultaneously. Roots are a thick deep taproots that contain a white latex that is apparent when cut.
The lid or operculum is orbicular and cordate at the base. Multicellular hairs are sometimes present on its upper surface. An unbranched spur (≤2 mm long) is inserted at the base of the lid. Upper pitcher of N. adnata Upper pitchers are ovoid in the lower quarter and cylindrical to infundibular above.
The white or pale yellow flowers bloom nocturnally, exuding a strong, sweet scent; they are 6–20 cm long and 6–7 cm wide. The fruit, 3–4 cm thick, are ovoid and brownish, greenish or yellowish. The interior of the fruit is reminiscent of kiwifruit, with green pulp and small black seeds.
The leaves are attached to the base of the stem. Sepals are light green and range from very hairy to almost bare. The leaves are 0.5 mm wide and less than 15 cm, often just 1–2 cm, long. The ovoid thorns are 4–15 mm long and 2–4 mm wide.
They reach 12 cm in height and 4 cm in width. A pair of fringed wings (≤3 mm long) runs down the front of the pitchers. The glandular region is restricted to the ovoid portion of the inner surface. Digestive glands occur at a density of 150 to 300 per square centimetre.
Magnolia boliviana is a tree of 30 m with a trunk of 50–75 cm in diameter. The smooth ovate-elliptic leaves are 12–29 cm long and 7.5–12 cm wide. The flowers have 6 obovate white petals ca. 6 cm long; the ovoid fruit can be 11–14 cm long.
Under a compound microscope conidia appear ovoid in shape. On certain hosts the teleomorph of this pathogen (G. cingulata) readily produces perithecia full of asci. When cultured on potato dextrose media, this species can appear gray, orange, or pink in color, and will often exhibit concentric rings of growth radiating from the center.
It differs in colouring and length of hair in relation to its habitat, the pelage being shorter and paler in savannah-type habitat, and longer and darker (more yellow) in forest habitat. The guard hairs at the base of the spatula are round, or very slightly ovoid, which is unique among genets.
Eucomis grimshawii is a short summer-growing bulbous plant, up to tall. The bulb is ovoid, about across, with a pale brown outer tunic. The bulb produces four or five leaves, long and wide, with flat or slightly undulate margins. The inflorescence is a dense raceme long, with a variable number of flowers.
The rachis of the inflorescence is long and has 35-135 rachillae (branches) which are long. The flowers can be coloured yellow, greenish-yellow, yellow and violet, or completely violet. The staminate (male) flowers are in length; the pistillate (female) flowers are . The shapes of both the fruit and nut are ovoid.
The type series consists of seven individuals Three adult males and two adult females were measured: the males measure and the females in snout–vent length. The snout is ovoid in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The canthus rostralis is well-defined. The tympanum is distinct in males and indistinct in females.
The plant has a woody, fuzz-covered stem. Its leaves grow in symmetrical pairs and are connected to the stem by a thin petiole. Their shapes range from ovoid to lanceolates of 5 to 15 millimeters in length. The flowers consist of whorled inflorescences, consisting of clusters of 3 to 8 flowers.
A fish palette- (dolphin type). The fish palettes of predynastic Egypt are one of the common types of cosmetic palettes, or more specifically zoomorphic palettes, which are shaped in the form of the animal portrayed. The fish palettes are mostly ovoid in shape. The palettes are made mostly of schist, greywacke, mudstone, etc.
Sloths have an ever-growing adult dentition. They lack deciduous dentition and have a reduction in tooth number. Sloth teeth also lack the enamel and cuspation pattern generally present in other mammals. Their tooth forms are oval, subrectangular, or elongate irregular ovoid with chisel-shaped “caniniform” teeth anteriorly and “molariform” cheek teeth.
The lower nodes on the stem have greatly reduced rudimentary leaves. The calyx tube is obovate in shape and 1 mm long, covered with densely pubescent hairs along with grayish white appressed trichomes. Stamens are very short, being 1 mm long. The anthers are yellowish white in color, narrowly ovoid in shape.
The type series consists of three adult males that measure in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in lateral profile and rounded-ovoid from above. The tympanum is of moderate size and the supratympanic fold is distinct. The fingers have moderate lateral ridges whereas the toes have well-developed lateral fringes.
They form aggregate clusters of small, narrowly ovoid to pear-shaped bulbs. Potato onions differ from shallots in forming larger bulbs with fewer bulbs per cluster, and having a flattened (onion-like) shape. However, intermediate forms exist. I'itoi onion is a prolific multiplier onion cultivated in the Baboquivari Peak Wilderness, Arizona area.
The largest Hemiptera in the world are Lethocerus (L. oculatus shown) Belostomatids have a flattened, obovoid to ovoid-elongate body, and usually the legs are flattened. The hind tarsi have two apical claws and tucked behind the eyes is a short antennae. A short breathing tube can be retracted into its abdomen.
Oikopleura dioica is a bioluminescent species. Like other appendicularians, O. dioica have a discrete body and tail as adults and retain their notochord throughout life. They resemble tadpoles in appearance with a body typically between long and a tail about four times that length. Its body is ovoid and the tail slender.
The clavate to ovoid unangia (the unilocular reproductive structures or sporangia) are 78-100 μm long. The paraphyses are pluricellular (6-14 cells), also clavate, and almost double the length of the unangia. It has polystichous sporophytes. In juveniles, the 'balloons' are solid, but in adults they are hollow and pop when squeezed.
The wingspan is about 14 mm. The forewings are blackish fuscous, with the extreme costal edge whitish, more pronounced in the middle. There is a large somewhat ovoid whitish basal patch, extending from the base to one-third, but not reaching the dorsum. Some faint whitish scales form two obscure parallel curved series.
The fruit of G. undata is classified as a drupe, and a single inflorescence bears many drupes. The fruit size is 5 to 15 mm long and about 12 mm in diameter. The surface of the fruit is bumpy and black when ripe. It has an ovoid shape with a pointed apex.
The pronotum is rounded with six or eight serrations on the front edge. The elytra are convex and grooved and have fine perforations, and there are bristles between the grooves. The adult male is a smaller insect, has an unserrated pronotum and no wings. The eggs are smooth, white and ovoid, about long.
Kirchner described Ulmus rugosa pendula as having small and glossy leaves, roundish ovoid and very rough, with the main branches spreading horizontally or slightly inclined, and very corky, the side branches being thin, short and hanging. Späth described his U. campestris rugosa Kirchner as a corky field elm with branches standing out horizontally.
The small branches have fine hairs. The leaves are oblong in shape, rarely elliptic, and measure 4.2 to 15.5 mm in length by 0.7 to 2.3 mm across. Like many plants in this genus, the leaves have parallel veins. The fruiting capsule is often curved, reverse ovoid in shape with prominent ridges.
The inflorescence is found at the tip of the spike and is composed of narrow-ovoid to narrow-cylindrical spikelets with a length of . It will later form a shiny yellow to brown coloured nut with a plano-convex to biconvex, broad-obovoid shape that is around in length with a diameter of .
They are even thinner and longer than those of similar snapdragon species of the Mohave Desert. Its coloring is yellow and gold with speckles of maroon. The fragile fruit are ovoid to spherical, 3 to 5 millimeters long. Seeds are black, wing-shaped, with 4 to 6 thick ridges, and 1 millimeter long.
The wingspan is 14–17 mm. The forewing is relatively narrow and brown, with a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are indistinct or mostly absent, except for the terminal line, which is marked by tight black interveinal spots. The antemedian and postmedian lines are well marked only near the costa.
They are four-sided and a bit curved, mature trees have blunt needles, while young ones have pointed bluish-green ones. When a needle is rubbed, it smells harsh. The cone has an oblong ovoid or oval form with almost flat base. It is 2–4 centimeters thick and 3,6–8,7 centimeters long.
Egg incubation is temperature dependent and the period from deposition to hatching ranges from 2 to 22 days. Higher temperatures correlate to quicker developmental rates. Eggs are ovoid in shape with a granulated surface. They have a cream to white color when first laid that changes to a reddish color as development progresses.
The connate tepals are reduced to a minute membranous lobe or sometimes absent, especially in fruit. There is only one stamen and an ovary with two stigmas. The vertical seed is ovoid, somewhat flattened, reddish-magenta, with tubercular or papillose surface. The seed contains the terete curved embryo and copious perisperm (feeding tissue).
The shell height can reach up to . Cipangopaludina chinensis has a width to height ratio of 0.74–0.82. The aperture is ovoid with a simple outer lip and inner lip. In juveniles, the last shell whorl displays a distinct carina, and the shell contains grooves with 20 striae/mm between each groove.
Sepals may be any color. The pistils have one ovule. The flowers have nectaries, but petals are missing in the majority of species. The fruits are ovoid to obovoid shaped achenes that are collected together in a tight cluster, ending variously lengthened stalks; though many species have sessile clusters terminating the stems.
After 1938, it was used for the new C-ration, a canned combat ration with several menu precooked or dried food items. Today, though canned and dried combat rations have further evolved into the MRE, these can now be self-heated, and thus only a containment tray is required for most units. The US Army's flat ovoid M-1932 wartime-issue mess kit was made of galvanized steel (stainless steel in the later M-1942), and was a divided pan- and-body system. When opened, the mess kit consisted of two halves: the deeper half forms a shallow, flat-bottom, ovoid "Meat can, body", designed to receive the "meat ration", the meat portion of the pre-war canned Reserve Ration.
The 'Aglandau' is a cultivar of medium-to-weak vigour. Its growth form is spreading with a dense canopy, and the leaves are flat and elliptic-lanceolate, of medium length and width. The olives are of relatively low weight, with a rounded apex and a truncated base. They are slightly asymmetrical, and ovoid in shape.
Accordingly, the wings are greatly reduced or completely lacking in aerial pitchers, for which flying insects constitute the majority of prey items. Nepenthes rajah, like most species in the genus, produces two distinct types of traps. "Lower" or "terrestrial" pitchers are the most common. These are very large, richly coloured, and ovoid in shape.
Today, the castle appears as an ovoid enceinte, comprising a reduit and a lower courtyard. Building studies have identified different phases of construction from the 13th to the 16th century. From the 13th century, ruins include the remains of a residence with a storeroom and, probably, a watch tower. A chapel dates from 1085.
The fertile scale has one seed producing ovule. The single seed of the cone is covered by a modified ovuliferous scale known as the epimatium. The epimatium becomes fleshy and drupe-like at maturity. It varies in shape from elliptic to ovoid or pyriform and may be red, violet or purplish brown in color.
Craniida and Lingulida include living brachiopods, but are inarticulates. The name, Terebratula, may be derived from the Latin "terebra", meaning "hole-borer". The perceived resemblance of terebratulid shells to ancient Roman oil lamps gave the brachiopods their common name "lamp shell". Terebratulids typically have biconvex shells that are usually ovoid to circular in outline.
The tree is said to resemble Ulmus minor 'Umbraculifera' in form, though more globose in outline,Photograph of Koopmanii': with a dense, narrowish oval crown, a height to , and small, ovate leaves < 30 mm in length.Photograph of Koopmanii': When grafted, the tree has an ovoid head but is shrubby and stoloniferous when propagated by cuttings.
The stigma is slightly larger than the style. This plant flowers between April and August. The fruits are capsules, many-seeded, ovoid- cylindric, hairless to glandular-hairy, membranous to firm-walled, 5–15 mm long, opening from the tip into sharp teeth. Dodecatheon pulchellum has gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit.
The flower have a flat to deeply cup-shaped receptacle. The fruit is a drupe of variable shape and size.e The most striking are its fruits, The fruit is an ellipsoid to ovoid drupe or berry, and the seed is a single kernel. Plum-like to olive-like drupe settled on a discoid small dome.
Rosa acicularis is a deciduous shrub growing 1–3 m tall. The leaves are pinnate, 7–14 cm long, with three to seven leaflets. The leaflets are ovate, with serrate (toothed) margins. The flowers are pink (rarely white), 3.5–5 cm diameter; the hips are red, pear-shaped to ovoid, 10–15 mm diameter.
Puccinellia fasciculata is a coarse, annual grass growing high. Its leaf blades are wide and are typically flat, though leaves can curl inwards at their ends. Its ovoid or ellipsoid panicle is long, with ascending, somewhat scabrous floral branches floriferous almost to their base. Its spikelets are long and bear two to five flowers.
D. congolensis is facultative anaerobic actinomycete. It has two morphologic forms: filamentous hyphae and motile zoospores. The hyphae are characterized by branching filaments (1-5 µm in diameter) that ultimately fragment by both transverse and longitudinal separation into packets of coccoid cells. The coccoid cells mature into flagellated ovoid zoospores (0.6-1 µm in diameter).
The flowers are small (±4 mm in diameter) and are carried in axillary or terminal panicles. They are greenish-white (male) or pink to red, and appear in early spring (August to October). The ovary is ovoid and the calyx is saucer-shaped. The floral parts are in fives, but female flowers have three styles.
The waxy yellow colored inner petals are smooth on their upper and lower surfaces. Each inner petal has an ovoid gland at the base of its outer surface. Male flowers have up to 39 stamens that are 0.6-0.7 millimeters long. Female flowers have up to 7 carpels per flower and 3 ovules per carpel.
The forewing has a dark ovoid discal mark. The forewings lack a tonal spot and the hindwings are whitish grey with dark striae, and a small discal spot. It flies at night in June and July and is attracted to light and can be found by day at rest on the trunks of large sallows.
Later it forms rugose ellipsoidal or ovoid glabrous fruit that is long. G. monticola regenerates from seed only. It is found in the Darling Range east of Perth between Pingelly, Beverley and Wandering. It is found in woodland areas with Jarrah and Wandoo and can grow in sandy or loamy soils overlaterite, granite and ironstone.
Spirit of Nature (1988), three black granite ovoid and spheroid forms;See , from Kwok, Channels & Confluences, plate 113. Object C (1992), a pale grey granite object resembling a canoe;See , from Kwok, Channels & Confluences, plate 114. and Seeds (2006), large kernels carved from sandstone excavated from Fort Canning Hill during the National Museum's redevelopment.; .
Although often referred to as dimorphic, C. albicans is, in fact, polyphenic (often also referred to as pleomorphic). When cultured in standard yeast laboratory medium, C. albicans grows as ovoid "yeast" cells. However, mild environmental changes in temperature, CO2, nutrients and pH can result in a morphological shift to filamentous growth. See figure 2.
Peripheral giant-cell granuloma appears microscopically as a large number of multinucleated giant cells, which can have up to dozens of nuclei. Additionally, there are mesenchymal cells that are ovoid and spindle- shaped. Near the borders of the lesion, deposits of hemosiderin and hemorrhage is often found. In 50% of cases, ulcerations are present.
The single inflorescence consist of 12-21 sweetly scented cream-white flowers in a raceme on smooth pedicel. The perianth is cream-white and the pistil long. Fruit are obliquely ovoid long by wide with smooth slightly rough blister like protrusions on the surface ending with an upturned beak. Flowering occurs from July to October.
Both the filaments and anthers are yellow, the anthers being globose and about 0.25 mm wide. The ovoid, yellow pistil is 2 mm long, with indistinct carpels and one locule. The three styles are 0.25 mm long. The conical capsule is red or purplish, measuring 4-6.5 mm long and 2-2.5 mm wide.
Quercus myrsinifolia is an evergreen oak tree that grows up to tall. Leaves are 60–110 × 18–40 mm with serrulate margins; the petiole is 10–25 mm long. The acorns are ovoid to ellipsoid, 14–25 × 10–15 mm, and glabrous with a rounded apex; the flat scar is approx. 6 mm in diameter.
The glandular region of the pitcher's inner surface is confined to the ovoid portion. A pair of "eye spots" is sometimes present on the inner surface, below the lid attachment. The pitcher mouth is ovate and has an oblique insertion. The narrow peristome (≤5 mm wide) is cylindrical or slightly expanded and bears indistinct teeth.
They are ventricose or narrowly ovoid in the lower part and cylindrical above. They grow up to 20 cm high and 5 cm wide. A pair of fringed wings (≤5 mm wide) runs down the front of the pitcher. The fringe elements are up 6 mm long and are spaced 1 to 3 mm apart.
The phyllodes are in length and wide. The simple inflorescences simple resemble golden spikes that are in length. The seed pods that form later are flat with an oblong to narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of . The shiny brown obloid-ellipsoid to ovoid seeds are long and half as wide.
Xerochlamys coriacea grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . Its light green coriaceous leaves are elliptic to ovate in shape and measure up to long. The tree's flowers are solitary or in inflorescences of two or three flowers, with white petals. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
The shape of the fruit is ovoid, as is the nut. The ripe fruit is 2.3–3 cm long, 1-1.5 cm wide and have a juicy, acidic-sweet flesh. The nut contains 1 to 2 seeds. The ripe fruit is generally the colour purple (or 'wine'), although some forms also carry yellow fruit.
Tendrils grow to 15 cm in length. A young rosette plant The pitchers of N. hispida are rarely more than 15 cm high and 8 cm wide. They are ovoid-ellipsoid in the lower parts and sub-cylindrical in the upper parts. Aerial or upper pitchers are more cylindrical than lower or terrestrial pitchers.
Mochizuki T, Sako Y, Prangishvili D (2011) Provirus induction in hyperthermophilic Archaea: Characterization of Aeropyrum pernix spindle-shaped virus 1 and Aeropyrum pernix ovoid virus 1. J Bacteriol 193(19):5412–5419Arnold HP, Ziese U and Zillig W (2000). SNDV, a novel virus of the extremely thermophilic and acidophilic archaeon Sulfolobus. Virology 272:409–16.
Lawrence, Kansas: Allen Press. / The inflorescence is interfoliar, once or twice branched and hairy. The male and female flowers are borne in triads at the base of the rachilla and are solitary or in pairs towards the end. The fruit is slightly ovoid, epicarp smooth, mesocarp fleshy and fibrous, with one similarly shaped seed.
Her later works consisted mainly of ovoid vases, glazed and fired at high temperatures. Merchán is distinguished by her glazes of subtle tonal variations that are laid over surfaces alternately smooth, textured, or incised with simplistic geometric patterns. Her personal collection of works is now housed at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, the Louvre, Paris.
The calls are emitted at a rate of about 8 calls per minute. Tadpoles have an ovoid body when viewed dorsally and globular when viewed laterally. The body is dark brown and has two dark stripes that continue onto the tail. Gosner stage 37 tadpoles measure about in total length; the body is about .
Eucomis montana is a perennial growing from a large ovoid bulb with a diameter of up to . Like other Eucomis species, it has a basal rosette of strap-shaped leaves. These are about long and wide, with smooth margins and purple spots or speckles underneath. The inflorescence, produced in late summer, is a dense raceme.
Small, epiphytic plant that prefers a cool climate, it has an ovoid pseudobulb with 2 to 3 coriaceous, oblong-elliptic, obtuse, articular, basal and broad leaves that blooms in an erect, terminal, cluster-shaped inflorescence that can carry one to nine red-orange flowers. It produces its flowering in the spring and early summer.
Farah of Iran on the coronation in 1967 studded with multiple baroque pearls. Baroque pearls are pearls with an irregular non-spherical shape. Shapes can range from minor aberrations to distinctly ovoid, curved, pinch, or lumpy shapes. Most cultured freshwater pearls are baroque because freshwater pearls are mantle-tissue nucleated instead of bead nucleated.
It is a shrub or small tree, growing to 5 m in height. The lanceolate-elliptic leaves are 5.5–14 cm long and 2–4.5 cm wide. The inflorescences are clustered, 1–2 cm long, bearing 5–20 small flowers. The ovoid-globose capsules, 6–7 mm long, contain small, black seeds in yellow pulp.
It is the microorganism behind the most common type of fermentation. S. cerevisiae cells are round to ovoid, 5–10 μm in diameter. It reproduces by budding. Many proteins important in human biology were first discovered by studying their homologs in yeast; these proteins include cell cycle proteins, signaling proteins, and protein- processing enzymes.
Bothriechis supraciliaris is usually in total length (including tail), but can reach . Its body colour varies. It can be either bluish-green, reddish-brown, or reddish-maroon, but usually it is bright-green or moss-green. The body is circular, ovoid and rhomboid in cross-section, with irregular dorsal blotches, that sometimes form crossbands.
The linear leaves are long and wide with a prominent pale yellow longitudinal mid- vein. The leaves generally curl in an upward spiral. Unlike most species of hakea the fruit are long, narrow-ovoid, long and wide, tapering to a pointed beak. The fruit are rough and warty where they attach to the branches.
Like all Haliplidae the adult form of the Hungerford crawling water beetle is more or less ovoid, with a markedly convex upperside. They have a yellowish- brown color with irregular dark markings. They are extremely small ( long) which may contribute to the difficulty in locating them. Their wing covers are characterized by perforated stripes.
A contractile vacuole, often quite large, is located in the posterior. The Macronuclei can take a variety of forms. Depending on species and phase of life, they may be rod- shaped, ovoid, spherical, or moniliform (like a rosary, or string of beads). Blepharisma americanum swimming in a drop of pond water, with other microorganisms.
The paired fin are plaited to form an adhesive apparatus. Species of this genus have a moderately compressed body. The head is depressed and broad; it appears triangular from the side and with a rounded snout from above. The eyes are small and ovoid, located at the middle of the dorsal surface of the head.
L. nivalis has subequal and acute tepals long and castaneous to blackish brown in colour. The plant has six stamens as well as anthers long, filaments long, three styles long and stigmas long. L. nivalis produces an ovoid-trigonous seed capsule with exceeding tepals; capsule segments are blackish brown and 2.1–2.3 × c. 1.2 mm.
It flowers between July and October producing a solitary flower-spike solitary with bright yellow, globular flower-heads. It will later form dark brown seed pods with a curving and often twisted linear shape. Each pod is around in length with a width of . Pods contain hard, dark brown seeds with an ovoid shape.
Shizhenia grows from a ovoid shaped tuber. It has a single stem leaf, situated near the base of the stem. The inflorescence consists of a single relatively large flower, rose-red to purple in colour, with a three-lobed lip (labellum). The upper sepal and the lateral petals are grouped to form a hood.
The florescences are mostly with 4-5 rays. Bracts are ellipsoidal or ovoid oblong, naked - in length from about 2.7 to 5.3, rarely up to 6.5 cm wide and 1.2 to 2.6 (sometimes up to 3.5 cm). Brakteoles below the male flowers are anctast and integral or in 1-3-parts, yellow to lightgreen, hairy.
After the iris has flowered, between May to June, or May to July. it produces an ovoid, or cylindric seed capsule. Which is 4 cm long and 1.3 cm wide, with an acute point, and 6 prominent veins. It dehisces (splits open) laterally, to reveal pear shaped, dark brown seeds, with a brown aril (appendage).
It has very short pedicels. It has 2.5 cm long stamens and 1.2 cm ovary. It has short style branches, 4 cm long and 8 mm wide, in similar shades as the standards. After the iris has flowered, it produces a reddish-brown ovoid to cylindric seed capsule, long and 2 cm wide between June and September.
Nothoalsomitra suberosa is a species of subtropical vines in the family Cucurbitaceae, the only member of the monotypic genus Nothoalsomitra. Native to Australia, the species is a vigorous climber with pale corky bark and leaves divided into three triangular leaflets. Flowers have a yellow corolla with five petals. Fruits are a green and ovoid with numerous seeds.
Stem leaves are reduced or absent. The yellow, tubular flowers are 13 to 16mm long, with whitish and yellow star shaped hairs outside of the yellow petals. Flowers appear mainly in spring and summer, in the species' native range. Fruits are ovoid to oblong capsules, 5–9 mm long opening to release elliptic brown seeds about 1.5mm long.
Some individuals, however, are known to grow to twice this size. The ovoid carapace (the dorsal shell) is widest just behind the middle portion, with a strongly serrated posterior margin. A prominent central ridge (known as keels) also runs through the middle of the carapace. Two lateral keels are present as well, though they are not always visible.
Karoceras is a genus of oncocerid nautiloids that lived during the Silurian and possibly Early Devonian, type genus for the Karoceratidae. The shell is a compressed, exogastric cyrtocone, section sub ovoid. The siphuncle is ventral, near the outer, externally convex curvature. Septal necks flair outwardly, segments are inflated ventrally and are straight dorsally, a character of the family.
Robson 1975, pp. 66-67 The dress sword for Heavy Cavalry officers was a much smaller and lighter weapon, having a knucklebow, ovoid pommel and boat-shell guard in gilt brass or gunmetal. The blade was much shorter and narrower than the service sword's, and usually double edged with a short narrow central fuller each side.Robson 1975, pp.
Short spur shoots, which are present in many gymnosperms, are weakly to moderately developed. The young twigs, as well as the distal portions of stem, are flexible and often pendent. The stems are rough due to pulvini that persist after the leaves fall. The winter buds are ovoid or globose, usually rounded at the apex and not resinous.
These inflorescences can grow to a length of 50 cm (e.g. in the Hay-scented Orchid, D. glumaceum). The stems are ovoid to cylindrical, striped, sharply reduced pseudobulbs, about 4–10 cm long, with green to brown bracts at their base. Each carries one or two tough, erect and lanceolate leaves, usually about 20 cm long, with narrow petioles.
Nepenthes macfarlanei (; after John Muirhead Macfarlane, botanist) is a carnivorous pitcher plant species endemic to Peninsular Malaysia. It produces attractive red-speckled pitchers. Lower pitchers are ovoid or infundibular in the lower half and globose or cylindrical above and up to 25 cm high. Upper (aerial) pitchers are of a lighter colour with wings reduced to rubs.
Petrorhagia nanteuilii is a species of flowering plant in the family Caryophyllaceae. Common names include childing pink, productive carnation, proliferous pink and wild carnation It is an annual that grows to 50 cm tall. Leaves are linear, opposite and stem clasping. Small pink flowers are produced in small ovoid heads, with usually only one flower visible at a time.
'Rueppellii' was a pyramidal tree with a single stem and numerous ascending branches forming a globose or ovoid crown, much like 'Umbraculifera'. The branches are slightly corky, and the branchlets pubescent, bearing small leaves similar to those of the Cornish Elm, measuring long by wide, the surface likened to that of the wych elm U. glabra.
Rachis are , including petiole . Leaflet blades are elliptic-oblong to lanceolate-oblong, base cuneate to rounded, apex acute. Legume dark brown, oblong or when 1-seeded ovoid, inflated, densely covered with pale yellow warts. Pseudora cemes with two to six branches beneath new stems, , brown tomentose; rachis nodes with two to five flowers clustered on a spur.
Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole. It is characterised by a peltate tendril attachment and conspicuous indumentum. The species typically produces ovoid pitchers with a prominent basal crest and large nectar glands on the lower surface of the lid. The specific epithet peltata is Latin for "peltate" and refers to the distinctive tendril insertion of this species.
After the iris has flowered, between June and July, or up to August, it produces an ovoid, or fusiform (spindle shaped), seed capsule. That is between long, and 1.5–2 cm in diameter. It has a beak like top, attached to the remains of the perianth tube. Inside the capsule are roundish, or pear shaped (pyriform), seeds.
Gratiola peruviana, commonly known as austral brooklime, is a small perennial herb in the family Plantaginaceae. The species is native to South America and Australasia. It grows to between 10 and 30 centimetres high and has pink or white tubular flowers with red-purple stripes inside. These are followed by ovoid capsules that are up to 7mm long.
Cherry kebab is a stew-like preparation. The specific of this dish is that the true version of cherry kebab requires the use of St. Lucie cherries. St. Lucie cherry (Prunus cerasus) is a small (8–10mm long), ovoid, bitter, crimson-colored cherry, smaller than its sweet counterpart. It comes in several varieties, including Aleppo, Montmorency, and Morello.
25–30 Further north, in the Zagros, the site of Godin Tepe in the Kangavar valley is particularly important. Level V of this site belongs to the Uruk period. Remains have been uncovered of an ovoid wall, enclosing several buildings organised around a central court, with a large structure to the north which might be a public building.
A. biniflora is a pendulous mistletoe, with flat leaves up 15 cm long and 1 cm wide. Its inflorescence is an umbel of two or dyads (flowering in groups of two). The corolla is smooth and slender and green at maturity. The fruit is ovoid and the flower bract does not enlarge as the fruit matures.
Cheloniellon range about 20 centimeters in body length (excluding appendages). The flattened, ovoid body compose of 11 tergites (dorsal exoskeleton), all but the posteriormost are laterally expanded and covered the appendages underneath each of them. The boundaries between tergites have a radiated appearance. Dorsal surface of the first tergite have a pair of kidney-shaped eyes.
Leaves are dull grey-green, alternate and covered in soft grey hairs. Flowers are white with a dense central cluster of yellow anthers and resembling a small white rose. The fruit is an ovoid woody capsule about long and distinctly ridged. Yellow when ripe, it partly splits into 5 sections revealing black seeds with a bright red aril.
The hyphae sport septate dark conidiophores that are simple or sparsely branched. Each of the conidiophores are born singly or as sparse clusters and are upright or almost upright. The 8–10 μm long conidia on the conidiophores are oriented in short chains or singally on the ends of conidiophores. The condia are generally simple and ovoid.
Boltenia echinata is a solitary sea squirt with a globose or ovoid body up to in diameter. The two small siphons are four-lobed and are near the top of the animal. The base is attached to the substrate over a large area. The test is tough and rubbery and bears radially-branching spines, which resemble hairs.
Their staircases were incorporated within the walls and the doorway was usually some distance above ground level. This ovoid tower had three gun placements on the roof. The usual garrison of these towers was about ten men who would have lived in a nearby barracks. The remains of such a barracks lie north-east of the tower.
Lithocarpus luteus grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to and buttresses measuring up to high. The reddish brown bark is fissured to scaly and lenticellate. Its coriaceous leaves measure up to long. The brown acorns are ovoid to roundish, covered in golden yellow hairs, and measure up to across.
Eucomis vandermerwei is a short summer-growing bulbous plant, reaching at most tall. It bulb is ovoid, across. Three to six leaves emerge from a bulb and are up to long and wide, heavily spotted and marked with purple, with hard undulate margins. The flowers are arranged in a raceme on a purple-spotted stem (peduncule) tall.
There are three to six small, triangular staminodes and the gynoecium is ovoid and covered in brown scales. The three stigmas are apical and reflexed; the ovule is pendulous. The red epicarp of the small round fruit breaks away in age exposing the brown, warty mesocarp. The single seed is spherical with homogeneous endosperm and a subbasal embryo.
Sparganocosma is a genus of moths in the family Tortricidae. It contains only one species, Sparganocosma docsturnerorum, which is found in north-western Costa Rica. The length of the forewings is 8.8–11 mm for males and 10.5–13 mm for females. The forewings have two large ovoid patches of pale buff in the costal region.
Mecynorhina polyphemus is a large scarab beetle of the subfamily Cetoniinae found in dense tropical African forests, sometimes called the Polyphemus beetle. It is a frequent feeder on fruits and sap flows from tree wounds. The larvae develop in decomposing log compost. The third instar constructs an ovoid cocoon for metamorphosis and attaches it to a solid surface.
The cones are erect, ovoid, 1–2 cm (rarely 2.5 cm) long, with 15–25 moderately reflexed seed scales; they are green (rarely purple) when immature, turning brown and opening to release the seeds when mature, 3–5 months after pollination. The old cones commonly remain on the tree for many years, turning dull grey-black.
There were spoilers on the inner panels at about mid- chord. Its fuselage was ovoid in cross-section and plywood skinned, tapering markedly towards the tail. The long, multi-framed canopy glazing extended forward to form the nose profile and provide a clear view forward. The horizontal tail, like the wing was straight tapered and round tipped.
Rhodoblastus acidophilus, formerly known as Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, is a gram-negative purple non-sulfur bacteria. The cells are rod-shaped or ovoid, 1.0 to 1.3 μm wide and 2 to 5 μm long. They are motile by means of polar flagella, and they multiply by budding. The photopigments consist of bacteriochlorophyll a and carotenoids of the spirilloxanthin series.
It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 0.3–1 m tall. The leaves are lanceolate to ovoid-acute, 20–75 mm long and 10–35 mm wide. The flowers are two-lobed, the long axis up to 50 mm long; they are magenta to reddish-violet.Taiwan Forestry Flora of Taiwan 4: 183: in Chinese; google translation.
Flowers are white with purple. It is found on the coast and ranges, often in moist shady places in forest, or on the edge of rainforests. Leaves are lanceolate to ovate in shape, 7 to 18 mm long and 2 to 8 mm wide. The fruit is a small ovoid shaped capsule containing a small number of seeds.
Legumes ovoid–globular. Grows in lower mountain belt, at the altitudes of 800–1000 meters above sea level, in sandy places, in the desert and semi–desert. Flowering from April to May, fruiting from May to June. One of the populations is situated in the area "Sands of Goravan" reservation included into "Khosrov Forest" State Reserve.
The dense, racemes are 250 mm long and 200 mm wide. They consist of approximately 50 to 60 individual flowers. The ovoid-pointed bracts have a length of 15 mm and are 7 mm wide. The club-shaped, green flowers are tinged with lemon yellow around the center and are held on 20 mm long pedicels.
The crown is broadly conic, while the brownish bark is scaly and deeply fissured, especially with age. The twigs are a yellow-brown in color with darker red- brown pulvini, and are densely pubescent. The buds are ovoid in shape and are very small, measuring only in length. These are usually not resinous, but may be slightly so.
Incilius holdridgei tadpoles are small in size with ovoid-shaped bodies that are dark brown in color and feature a lighter venter surface. The tail and caudal fins are rounded. The mouth is directed ventrally and the oral disc has beaks and 2 to 3 rows of denticles which are bordered by a row of large papillae.
The register above represents two monkeys holding the end of a chain. This chain is fixed around a loop belt under which is inscribed "Je le feray". At the other extreme of the chain, an ovoid object embellished by a leaf decoration is suspended through a hoop. A little monkey is crouching down the hoop's left side.
Pinnate veins are distinct on the upper surface of the lamina and indistinct on its underside. Tendrils are up to 32.1 cm long and may or may not have a loop. Rosette and lower pitchers are broadly ovoid throughout, narrowing somewhat towards the orifice. They grow up to 15 cm in height by 6.4 cm in width.
Tendrils grow to 30 cm in length. Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in the lower portion and cylindrical above. They are up to 20 cm high by 4 cm wide. A pair of wings runs down the pitcher's ventral surface, often bearing fringe elements either throughout the whole length or only in the upper part.
Phytophthora pluvialis is homothallic; it forms oogonia in culture. Its oogonia are terminal, smooth and globose, being approximately 30 µm in diameter, and possess amphigynous antheridia. Its oospores are globose and aplerotic, being about 28 µm in diameter. Sporangia formed in water are ovoid and slightly irregular, semi-papillate, terminal or subterminal, and partially caducous with medium-sized pedicels.
The ends of these wings are rounded such that they almost touch. Two to four longitudinal veins are present on either side of the midrib. Pinnate veins are numerous and curve towards the apex of the lamina. Rosette and lower pitchers are ovoid in shape and measure up to 11.5 cm in height by 4.5 cm in width.
The fertile part of the stroma is the head. The head is granular because of the ostioles of the embedded perithecia. The perithecia are ordinally arranged and ovoid. The asci are cylindrical or slightly tapering at both ends, and may be straight or curved, with a capitate and hemispheroid apex, and may be two to four spored.
They are obligate anaerobes capable of producing endospores. The normal, reproducing cells of Clostridioides, called the vegetative form, are rod-shaped, which gives them their name, from the Greek κλωστήρ or spindle. Clostridioides endospores, like Clostridium endospores, have a distinct bowling pin or bottle shape, distinguishing them from other bacterial endospores, which are usually ovoid in shape.
The pistillate (female) flowers are 5–8mm in length. The shape of the 1.6-2cm x 1.5-1.7cm fruit is an elongated ellipsoid, yellowish-green to purplish-green in colour at maturity, and with yellow flesh which tastes sweet and sour. The 1-1.2cm x 0.9-1.1cm nut has an ovoid shape containing 1-3 seeds.
The holotype, an adult female, measures , whereas the paratype male—of unknown maturity status—measures in snout–vent length. The snout is long and acuminate. In the female, tympanic annulus is present but the tympanic membrane is poorly differentiated; in the male, no tympanic annulus is present. The parotoid glands are ovoid but depressed and not very conspicuous.
They are petiolate or subsessile and spreading. The lamina are around 7 by 5 mm in size and are ovate to oblong and rather thick. The species has 3-12 flowers from 2 (rarely 3) nodes, sometimes with flowering branches from 1-2 nodes below. The flowers are around 8 mm in diameter with ovoid buds that are rounded.
Starting with infected mites which the host lizard ingests the veriform sporozoites are released from the sporocysts. These newly liberated sporozoites bore into the intestinal wall and enter the lymphatic vessels and the blood stream. On reaching the viscera and in particular the liver the sporozoites penetrate the endothelial cells. There they form ovoid schizonts within a membranous capsule.
Very few rufous-capped antthrush nests have been found. Those found are composed of a crude arrangement of roots and leaves placed into a cavity. The clutch size of Formicarius typically consists two white, ovoid eggs that become stained and blotched soon after laying. Two eggs from one clutch were measured to be 28.6-32.3 x 21.8-24 mm.
Approximately 90% of fibroadenomas are less than 3 cm in diameter. However, these tumors have the potential to grow reaching a remarkable size, particularly in young individuals. The tumor is round or ovoid, elastic, and nodular, and has a smooth surface. The cut surface usually appears homogenous and firm, and is grey-white or tan in colour.
It is a dioecious species, with green ovoid male cones, 35–50 cm long and 10 cm broad. The female cones, of the same shape, are 30–45 cm long and have a diameter of 18–25 cm. Up to three cones can grow on each plant at a time. Macrosporophylls have a typically warty surface.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short, ovoid to subacuminate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct, with raised annulus, although it is partly obscured by the supra-tympanic fold. Skin of the dorsum is smooth but has numerous low warts and short, low ridges.
Immature flowers Fruit The drupes are green, globose in shape, turning bright red at maturity in late summer; each fruit is 5 mm in diameter and contains typically one or two ellipsoid-ovoid shaped stones. The fruits, coming into season in late summer, are edible but not appetizing. The large seeds within are somewhat hard and crunchy.
The player drives a Battlesphere, an ovoid mobile weapon armed with a laser cannon and a protective shield. Battlespheres ensure the stability of the spaceways between the moons of the planet Armageddon by removing destructive debris. The magnetic side panels which keep the vehicles on the spaceways are malfunctioning and can not only delay but completely destroy a Battlesphere.
Development is rapid, and metamorphosis occurs about four weeks after hatching. Tadpoles attain a maximum total length of about 3.3 in (83 mm). The body is ovoid with a rounded snout with large eyes directed dorsolaterally. The oral disc is nearly terminal and bears finely serrate jaw sheaths and two anterior and three posterior rows of labial teeth.
In the liver it grows into an ovoid schizont of 30–70 μm in diameter. Each schizont produces merozoites, each of which is roughly 1.5 μm in length and 1 μm in diameter. In the erythrocyte the merozoite form a ring-like structure, becoming a trophozoite. A trophozoites feed on the haemoglobin and forms a granular pigment called haemozoin.
Pima pineapples in Pima County, Arizona. Coryphantha robustispina grows mostly solitarily with an ovoid shape. It has a clean greyish-greenish color and reaches 5–9 cm tall and 5–15 cm in diameter although larger plants are frequently found. The areolas are oval or cylindrical in shape with a deep furrow and one or two nectar glads.
The mushroom lacks any distinctive taste or odor. The spores are ovoid (egg- shaped), smooth, hyaline (translucent), thin-walled, and contain one oil droplet; they measure 6.5–8 by 5–6.5 μm. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, four-spored with sterigma that are 2.5–5 μm long, and measure 27–36 by 8–10 μm.
The classic legionary scutum, a convex rectangular shield, also disappeared during the 3rd century. All troops except archers adopted large, wide, usually dished, ovoid (or sometimes round) shields. These shields were still called Scuta or Clipei, despite the difference in shape.Elton (1996) 115The Strategikon book 1, sections 2 and 8, book 3, section 1, book 12B, section 5.
This tree once provided the timber for the spars of canoes. The ovoid fruit which this tree bears have been used for medicinal purposes (Truk Is.), or as a glue and varnish in food bowl manufacture (Solomon Is.). Its seeds are a major source of alpha-Parinaric acid, a conjugated polyunsaturated fatty acid with various uses.
True to its common name, studded sea balloons are pale green to olive, ovoid sacs in diameter with small brown bumps on the surface. The bumpy 'studs' are the sori, which produce the zoosporangia. The sori are darker and measure 1 mm in diameter. There are groupings of multicellular hyaline 'hairs' in the center of the sori.
It is a species similar in form to Iris humilis. It has a short (about long), thick (about 1.3 cm) and ovoid (in shape) rhizome. The rhizome produces 2-3 buds or short branches, but after the plant has flowered, the main rhizome dies. So the plant does not like other rhizomatous irises form creeping plants.
Cercopis sanguinolenta can reach a length of .Soortenbank The male is larger than the female. These froghopper are shining black with bright red marks on the elytra, one spot at the base, one spot in the middle and a stripe at the apex.The Edinburgh Encyclopædia; Conducted by David Brewster, Volume 9 Bodies in dorsal view are elongated and ovoid.
This view quickly became established. They are large, densely hairy, fast-flying bees, which make simple burrows in the ground and firm, ovoid provision masses in cells lined with a waterproof secretion. The nests of some species can reach a depth of more than three metres. BioStor BHL ResearchGate Publication 267823176 The larvae do not spin cocoons.
The air-cooled engines were discontinued, but the engine code remained LC10W - with the "W" denoting water-cooling. The radiator is mounted up front. The bumpers were very small, no more than trim pieces. A strange and sour-looking front gave way to an ovoid rear end, culminating in an engine cover perforated by at least 50 vent openings.
Each flower has a 5–15 mm long, bluish bract at the base. The seeds are ovoid and black. The diploid number of chromosomes is 20 or 22. The plant occurs from Portugal north through Spain, France, Great Britain (particularly the west coast) and Ireland (mainly along the east coast), reaching as far as the Faroe Islands and Norway.
Plants grow from an ovoid bulb and have tepals which are narrowed at their bases to form a "claw". Toxicoscordion venenosum, the meadow deathcamas, is one of the more widely distributed species. Its flowers are white to cream in colour and grow in pointed clusters. in ;Veratrum Veratrum is found throughout temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
The petioles of principle leaves are 0.4-1.5 cm long. The axillary spike has 1-5 pistillate flowers near the base that are interrupted and continued with a spike of staminate flowers. The pistillate bracts are often stipitate- glandular, teeth triangular, 5-13. The seeds are reddish to black in color and are ovoid, 1.2-1.8mm long.
It is long, weighing . The plate is a long ovoid of a meandering but symmetrical outline with densely interwoven and interpenetrating ribbon animals rendered in chip-carving on the front. The gold surfaces are punched to receive niello detail. The plate is hollow and has a hinged back, forming a secret chamber, possibly for a relic.
Blooms open from large, ovoid buds, are high-centered, borne mostly solitary, and have a cupped bloom form. The plant is very prickly and has large, leathery, and dark green leaves that do poorly in dry climates. 'Miss All-American Beauty' blooms in flushes from spring through autumn. The plant does best in USDA] zone 7 and warmer.
Its branches are distinctively arranged in tiers. The leaves are large, long and broad, ovoid, glossy dark green, and leathery. They are dry-season deciduous; before falling, they turn pinkish-reddish or yellow-brown, due to pigments such as violaxanthin, lutein, and zeaxanthin. The trees are monoecious, with distinct male and female flowers on the same tree.
Merismopedia (from the Greek merismos [division] and the Greek pedion [plain]) is a genus of cyanobacteria found in fresh and salt water. It is ovoid or spherical in shape and arranged in rows and flats, forming rectangular colonies held together by a mucilaginous matrix. Species in this genus divide in only two directions, creating a characteristic grid-like pattern.
Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania1991. p. 33-34. Chordifex hookeri has a raceme inflorescence, where the flower has been reduced to a solitary spikelet or panicle. These are ovoid to subspherical. The male spikelet is 7.58 mm long with several flowers while the female spikelet is 6-7 mm long with a few flowers.
The first human case was seen in 1879 in Taiwan. An autopsy was done and adult trematodes were found in the lungs. The adult flukes have a reddish-brown in color with an ovoid shape. They have two muscular suckers, the first an oral sucker located anteriorly and the second a ventral sucker located mid-body.
A. subrubescens mushrooms are mildly toxic: consumption causes a gastrointestinal illness that usually subsides one to four hours after ingestion. In deposit, the spores are white. The spores are 3.4–4.7 by 2.2–3.4 µm, ellipsoid to ovoid in shape, and amyloid (absorbing iodine when stained with Melzer's reagent). Most have a single large oil drop.
Crispiloba is a monotypic genus of flowering plants containing the single species Crispiloba disperma, native to Queensland in Australia. Crispiloba disperma is a shrub species that grows to 4 metres tall. It produces fragrant white flowers followed by purplish ovoid fruits. It occurs in rainforest in North-east Queensland at altitudes ranging from 100 to 1250 metres.
'Wedding Bells' is a medium, upright, bushy shrub, 3 to 4 ft (90—121 cm) in height with a 3 ft (91 cm) spread. Blooms are large, 4—5 in (10—12 cm) in diameter, with over 40 petals. Buds are long, pointed, and ovoid. Flowers have a very full, high-centered bloom form, with over 40 petals.
Coeliopsidinae is an orchid subtribe in the tribe Cymbidieae. The three members of this subtribe have traditionally been lumped in with Stanhopeinae, but obvious morphological traits and new molecular analysis by Whitten et al. in 2000 confirmed the group reclassified by Szlachetko (1995). These genera have smooth, unribbed, ovoid pseudobulbs with 3-4 large and thin plicate leaves.
Viewed from the front, the sporangia were ovoid or pear-shaped, narrowing towards the stalk. They opened (dehisced) along a narrow rim at the edge opposite the stalk (the distal edge), producing two equal valves. Only poorly preserved spores were found, 48–77 µm in diameter. Nothing is known about the internal anatomy of the axes.
Origanum cordifolium is a subshrub with suberect, cylindrical, hairless, often purplish shoots, 40–60 cm high. Leaves opposite, simple, entire or irregularly dentate, stalkless, ovoid to cordate, 1–2 x 0.8–2 cm, leathery, hairless, acute. Flowers on pendulous spikes, zygomorphic, corolla bifid, whitish or pinkish, 1–4, subtended by purplish-green, large bracts. Flowers June–August.
April–June 2004. It differed from other Hawaiian species of Amaranthus with its spineless leaf axils, linear leaves, and indehiscent fruits (fruit which does not open to release seeds when ripe). The fruits were ovoid and between 0.8–1 mm long and 0.6–0.8 mm wide. The plant is thought to have been anemophilous (pollinated by wind).
Haematoxylin & Eosin staining of sections of human gonads at E16.5. GO/G1 quiescent oogonia are indicated by arrowheads. Normal oogonia in human ovaries are spherical or ovoid in shape and are found amongst neighboring somatic cells and oocytes at different phases of development. Oogonia can be distinguished from neighboring somatic cells, under an electron microscope, by observing their nuclei.
Farjon 2010, p.259 The seed scales are thin, broad, and coriaceous, measuring long and wide. The seeds are ovoid, long and wide, attached to a light brown wedge-shaped wing that is long and wide. C. libani grows rapidly until the age of 45 to 50 years; growth becomes extremely slow after the age of 70.
The building replaced the Old Shirehall in Market Square. The new facility, which was designed by Ralph Crowe, the County Architect, was completed in 1966. It includes an unusual ovoid-shaped council chamber. Originally established as the headquarters of Shropshire County Council, it became the offices of the new unitary authority, Shropshire Council in April 2009.
The forewing is relatively narrow and long and the median and terminal area are dark brown, while the basal and postmedian area is light brown, the latter gradually darker outwards. There is a bright, ovoid, yellow reniform stigma. The crosslines are all present and are well marked and waved. The terminal line is marked by tight black interveinal spots.
Psammophiliella muralis is an annual,Flora of North America Editorial Committee (editors) with erect glabrous (non hairy) stems. It grows up to tall, with linear shaped leaves. It blooms between summer and fall, with pink or very occasionally white flowers, which are across. Later it has fruit capsules, which are ovoid or ellipsoid, inside are snail-shaped seeds.
Lu-Kthu (Birth-womb of the Great Old Ones or Lew-Kthew) is a titanic, planet-sized mass of entrails and internal organs. On closer examination it appears a wet, warty globe, covered with countless ovoid pustules and spider-webbed with a network of long, narrow tunnels. Each pustule bears the larva of a Great Old One.
The giant thicket rat is a slender arboreal rat with large, ovoid ears with a rather long and fine coat. It is very similar to Grammomys ibeanus but has larger teeth, longer rear feet and a larger head. The head-body length is , tail length , the rear foot has a length of , the ear is long and skull .
In culture, B. bassiana grows as a white mould. On most common cultural media, it produces many dry, powdery conidia in distinctive white spore balls. Each spore ball is composed of a cluster of conidiogenous cells. The conidiogenous cells of B. bassiana are short and ovoid, and terminate in a narrow apical extension called a rachis.
Detail of a fruiting Annona cherimola, with cherimoya at center This list of cherimoya cultivars includes cultivars and varieties of cherimoya, the fruit of Annona cherimola. ;Andrews ;Amarilla ;Asca ;Baste: thick-skinned. ;Bayott: (Bays x ott) Small to medium, smooth ovoid. ;Bays: Tree broad, to fruits round, medium size, light green, skin shows fingerprint like marks.
The cones are ovoid, berry-like, long and diameter, blue-black, and contain a single seed; they are mature in about 18 months. The male cones are long, and shed their pollen in spring. It is usually monoecious (male and female cones on the same plant), but occasionally dioecious (male and female cones on separate plants).
The buds are usually 3–7 millimeters long, nearly 5 millimeters wide and have a conical or ovoid form. The color of buds is reddish brown and they are slightly covered with resin. Their scales are triangle- or trigonal-shaped with a long awl-like tip. The tree's needles are about 10 millimeters long and 2,5 millimeters wide.
The flowers bloom in Summer. They are lemon-yellow to golden yellow, with a diameter of about 4.5 to 6.5 cm. The fruits are spherical to ovoid, covered with dense wool and bristles and have diameters up to 1.5 centimeters. They contains reddish-brown to almost black seeds, which are nearly smooth and 1 to 1.2 millimeters long.
Ophioninae is a worldwide subfamily of Ichneumonidae with 32 genera, and very rich in tropical regions. They are koinobiont endoparasitoids of larval Lepidoptera, though at least one species parasitizes Scarabaeidae (Coleoptera). They are among the only Parasitica whose ovipositors can be used to sting vertebrates. The pupae are ovoid with a central clear band characteristic for this subfamily.
The flowers are axillary glomerules, few to many flowered. Ripe seed capsule is orange-yellow, turning dark reddish-brown or blackish-brown when dry. Several seeds that dry to a pale yellowish-brown, ovoid in shape and around 4mm in size. The tree flowers in March and April in Zhōngguó/China, fruiting in September and November.
The taste is variable, generally sweet and sour, but may be more of one or the other depending on the tree. The fruits are highly aromatic. It has a hard nut which is usually round in shape, sometimes more ovoid, 1.3-2.2 cm by 1.3–2 cm in size, and containing 1 to 3 seeds and a homogeneous endosperm.
Cymes of (two to) three flowers are sitting in the axils of shield-like, opposite bracts. The mostly bisexual flowers are somewhat immersed in the inflorescence axis. The perianth consists of three subequal, membranous tepals that are loosely connate at base. There is one stamen exserting the flower and an ovoid ovary with a thick style and two stigmas.
Loganoceras and Romingoceras from the Middle Ordovician of North America have strongly curved shells. Loganoceras, named by Foerste in 1921, (K284) has a circular cross section and an empty siphuncle ventral of the center. The genotype, L. regulare, comes from Ontario. Romingoceras, also named by Foerste in 1932, differs in having a depressed, ovoid, cross section.
When plated the colonies have a slightly mucosoid appearance, with a white to cream coloration. C. antarcticus is able to assimilate nitrogen and glucoronate, and some strains can turn a dirty yellow when assimilating the previously mentioned compounds. When being cultured in liquid media, constant agitation is required. On a microscopic level this yeast is ovoid in shape.
Takayama tuberculata is a species of unarmored dinoflagellates from the genus Takayama, being closely related to T. tasmanica. It was first isolated from the Australian region of the Southern Ocean, just north of the polar front. It is medium-sized and is characterized by its long ovoid cell shape and rather long apical groove. It is considered potentially ichthyotoxic.
A study by Hammer et al. (2019) determined that specimens previously identified as P. macrocephalus are morphologically and ecologically distinct species, the now named Ptilotus xerophilus T.Hammer & R.W.Davis (arid central and western Australia) and Ptilotus psilorhachis T.Hammer & R.W.Davis (eastern Queensland). P. macrocephalus has cream-green coloured ovoid flower heads. As with other green-flowered Ptilotus species (e.g.
Fruit is follicle with three yellow-green ovaries, 2.5–3 mm long. The side bare and the ridge-row have papillary cross in which the projection comprises an elongated tufts are extended at the bottom and generally accreted. The fruits are greenish or purplish splashed. The seeds are oblong- round or ovoid, 2-2.5 mm long, smooth.
Characteristics of this necropolis are the biconical or biconical ovoid cinerary urns with decoration made of a false string and pairs of small handles on the maximum expansion and the ovoid urns with decoration in metopal squares with geometric or figured motifs. The latter, rare in the Golasecchian culture which prefers geometric decoration, are stylized quadrupedal figures, generally interpreted as equine. The "ponies" of Ameno, chronologically limited to the ninth century BC, are perhaps to be related to the coeval spread of horse riding in northern Italy and the consequent decline of the oldest tradition of chariot fighting. It does not seem accidental that this figurative motif is widespread mainly in the area between Ameno and Castelletto Ticino, a territory which still today offers ideal characteristics for the breeding of horses.
The structure is significant at the National level as an early, unique and innovative use of reinforced concrete. The structure which has remarkable aesthetic and technical qualities is dramatically situated in the landscape of the Barwon River floodplain near Breakwater, Geelong. The site is included on the Victorian Heritage Register (VHR Number: H0895) Victorian Heritage Register, VHR Number: H0895 "Ovoid Sewer Aqueduct over Barwon River" and the Register of National Estate (RNE 16061) See also the non-statutory National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Register (B5779)National Trust Register: B5779 "Ovoid Sewer Aqueduct" (Preceeding text based on the entry in the Australian Heritage Places inventory) In 2004, the Aqueduct was nominated to the National Heritage List. Following assessment by the Australian Heritage Council the nomination was not adopted by the Minister.
Ovaries are ovoid to globose (roughly spherical) and possess a yellow capitate (shaped like a pinhead) stigma and white to greenish style about . The pollen is psilate (relatively smooth), spheroidal, and in diameter. The surface of the pollen includes three colporate apertures, meaning the apertures have a combined colpus (or furrow) and pore. The pollen grains are monad, and do not cluster.
It is a cultivar of middle strength, with a spreading growth form, and medium size, and a crown of an open shape. The leaves are elliptic-lanceolate, of a medium length and width. The olives are of medium weight (3-5 g), ovoid shape and slightly asymmetrical. The stone is pointed at both ends, with a smooth surface and a mucro.
It is a cultivar of good strength and large size, with an erect growth form, and elliptic-lanceolate leaves of medium length and width. The olives are of low weight, ovoid shape and symmetrical. The stone has a rounded apex and base, with a rugose surface and a mucro. For use in oil production the olive is harvested in mid-November.
It is a cultivar of middle strength, with a spreading growth form and leaves of lanceolate shape and medium length and width. The olives are of high weight, ovoid shape and slightly asymmetrical. The stone has a rounded apex and a pointed base, with a rough surface and a mucro. The Grossane an intermediate cultivar in terms of flowering and ripening.
It is a cultivar of good strength, with a spreading growth form and elliptic leaves that are short and of medium width. The olives are of medium weight, ovoid shape and asymmetrical. The stone has a rounded apex and pointed base, with a smooth surface and the presence of a mucro. It is an early cultivar, and harvesting starts in early November.
The prickly shrub typically grows to a height of and has non- glaucous branchlets. It has simple, dissected, subpinnatisect leaves with a blade that is . It blooms from May to September and produces a terminal raceme irregular inflorescence with green or yellow flowers and orange styles. Later it forms red-brown simple hairy oblong to ovoid fruit that is long.
The top of the cone carries microsporophylls, the lower part megasporophylls, and both types may intercallated midlength. Sporophylls are disposed from the bottom up. Both types are obovate, with a round to ovoid sporangium and a tongue-like extension nearer to the tip on the upper/inner side. The trilete microspores are hollow, round and 30–40 μm in diameter.
It has a slender 3–4 mm long pedicel, long Stamens and a cylindric long and 2 mm wide, ovary. After the iris has flowered, between late July and early August (in Russia), or between August and September (in China). It produces an ovoid or sub-globose, long and wide, seed capsule. It has short beak-like appendage on the top.
The bronze hu vessel has not been found prior to the Shang period. During this period, there are mainly two types of hu vessels. One has a small mouth and long neck; the other has wide mouth and flat ovoid cross-section. The décor on the hu in the Shang period was dominated by taotie motif and leiwen thunder pattern.
A prosthetic testicle is an artificial replacement for a testicle lost through surgery or injury. Consisting of a plastic ovoid manufactured from silicone rubber filled with a salt solution and implanted in the scrotum, a prosthetic testicle provides the appearance and feel of a testis and prevents scrotum shrinkage. It is commonly used in female-to-male sex reassignment surgery.
The globose to ovoid heads are in diameter (excluding the stamens). On close examination, it is seen that the floret petals are red in their upper part and the filaments are pink to lavender. Pollens are circular with approximately 8 microns diameter. Pollens The fruit consists of clusters of two to eight pods from long each, these being prickly on the margins.
The upper surface of the leaf is hairy, especially when young, with many oil-dots. The black tea-tree flowers profusely. Flowers are loosely arranged in clusters to form cylindrical or ovoid spikes, long by about across, coloured cream or white. Each flower usually has a leaf at its base and the petals are shed soon after the flower opens.
Often it's a combination of all four at once. Schwa artwork is black and white, with very precise stick-figures and ovoid alien faces and ships. The aliens themselves are rarely seen by the human stick figures, their presence is more often felt by their distant ships. The people are almost always either very frightened, or very complacent with their lot in life.
Its berries are woody, round, tomentose, about in diameter, and start off black when young but become brown when they mature. They have numerous seeds. Trees of the species that yield Chaulmoogra oil grow to a height of and in India trees bear fruits in August and September. The fruits are ovoid some in diameter with a thick woody rind.
The Ōban (大判) was the largest denomination, valued at 10 Ryōs. Here, a Keichō Ōban, minted from 1601. Maneki Neko, with Ōban attached to collar An Ōban (大判) was a monetary ovoid gold plate, and the largest denomination of Tokugawa coinage. Tokugawa coinage worked according to a triple monetary standard, using gold, silver and bronze coins, each with their own denominations.
The tree starts bearing fruit at about eight years old. The fruits are slightly flattened, irregularly ovoid, rounded or oblong, and flanged at one end. Produced singly or in clusters, they weigh 50–110 g and are 46–130 mm long, 34–120 mm wide, and 40 mm thick. The smooth skin covers a fibrous shell which holds the kernel.
The fruit is small, typically less than a pound in weight, with an oblong-ovoid shape and lacking any beak. The fruit ripens to yellow from green, and lacks any red blush. It has dark yellow and juicy flesh, which is fiberless and has a rich and aromatic flavor and contains a monoembryonic seed. It usually ripens from June to July in Florida.
The plant is with its tuber being subglobose and wide. Its petiole is either green or purplish in colour, is unmarked, and is long. The species' spathe is only while the spate tube is yellowish green, is ovoid, and is long by wide. The throat is dark purple and have oblong-ovate limb, which is also either yellow or green coloured.
The west gallery was restored to house the 1852 organ, together with a kitchen and toilet facility, and the north transept was converted into a vestry with a room above it. Underfloor heating was built below a new marble floor and the chancel step replaced by an ovoid raised marble dais. Meanwhile, Scott's pews were removed altogether and replaced by wooden chairs.
With ovoid grains of 3 – 4 mm length pearl millet has the largest kernels of all varieties of millet (not including sorghum) which can be nearly white, pale yellow, brown, grey, slate blue or purple. The 1000-seed weight can be anything from 2.5 to 14 g with a mean of 8 g. The height of the plant ranges from 0.5 – 4 m.
A tree some 6-15m tall, with tortuous twigs, the bark is grayish and smooth, exfoliating. Branches are glabrous and stout. Leaves are deciduous, petiolate, oblong to obovate-oblong, glabrous, 30-5cm long, flowers appear before the leaves, 2–7 in number, yellow coloured petals, flowering starts in April-May. Fruit is globose, 0.5cm in diameter, black ovoid seed, exarillate.
Like the femur, there is no medullary canal present, and the spongey internal bone is asymmetrically dense. Few other features can be identified, among those the dimensions and cross-section of the bone. The tibia is ovoid in cross-section, with the anterior diameter long, and wide. The fibula, at in length, corresponds well with the size of the femur and tibia.
Most had round wooden, walrus ivory or bone heads, ovoid-shaped eyes, and mouths, short necks, solid torsos, and arms that formed but not separated from the body. The faces of female dolls were frequently chin tattooed. Other decorations, including hairdressings, nose piercing earrings, was represented by hair and beads placed in the correct positions. Some even had bracelets and bead necklaces.
With shape rounded or ovoid, brown to black, rarely green, purple, reddish, orange to pale yellow. The fruits are a very important food source for birds and other wildlife. The seed dispersion is the result of scattering by columbiform birds mostly but also bats and endemics birds like kagu, parrots or rallidaes. Most seeds pass through the bird's digestive system intact.
Isabelia have unifoliated ovoid to fusiform pseudobulbs, linear or acicular leaves, and erect apical inflorescence bearing one of few flowers. The flowers have petals, sepals and labellum of the same color, which can be white, pale pink or magenta. Their sepals are widely elliptical to ovate; the petals can be narrower and oblong or wider elliptic. The labellum is entire and oblong.
Leaves and fruit of Tutcheria virgata Tutcheria virgata is a shrub or medium-sized tree reaching a height of approximately . Leaves are dark green, leathery, elliptic, obovate or oblong-lanceolate, margin serrate, about long. Flowers are axillary, solitary, with five white petals, about in diameter. Fuits are ovoid or globose capsules about long, with three chestnut brown seeds per locule.
Like garden snails, Mertensia is hermaphroditic, reproducing sexually and occasionally asexually. Eggs and sperm are ejected into the water and from the fertilized eggs ovoid larvae develop. The planktonic larvae of this species are long while adults grow up to . The genus Mertensia commemorates the German naturalist Karl Heinrich Mertens aka Andrei Karlovich Mertens (17 May 1796 – 18 September 1830).
There were eight mace-heads were found at R12 within a total of seven graves. They were made from granite and pumice. The mace-heads made of pumice are the first ever found in Sudan. Six of the maces had a biconical shape, one had an ovoid shape, and one was disk-shaped with rising edges around the central hole.
The primitive ventricle acts as initial pacemaker. But this pacemaker activity is actually made by a group of cells that derive from the sinoatrial right venous sinus. These cells form an ovoid sinoatrial node (SAN), on the left venous valve. After the development of the SAN, the superior endocardial cushions begin to form a pacemaker as known as the atrioventricular node.
The forewings are white, with fuscous markings and with a moderate somewhat-ovoid spot above the dorsum on the fold, in the middle. There is an erect, moderately thick, fascia-like streak, from the dorsum before the tornus, reaching three-quarters across the wing, the upper half divided into two roundish spots. The hindwings are grey whitish.McMillan, Ian (28 September 2010).
It is distinctly domed and has a diameter of up to 3.5 cm. On the underside of the lid, the basal keel is 7–8 mm long and 3 mm high. A branched spur 2–3 mm long is inserted near the base of the lid. Upper pitchers are ovoid in the basal third and cylindrical above, expanding rapidly just below the peristome.
Buildings could be built around the inside of the shell, producing a small inner courtyard. Restormel Castle is a classic example of this development with a perfectly circular wall and a square entrance tower while the later Launceston Castle, although more ovoid than circular, is another good example of the design and one of the most formidable castles of the period.Brown (1962), p.
The inflorescence comprises a single, terminal, male (staminate) spike, and 2–4 lateral female (pistillate) spikes. The spikes are clustered together, and the whole inflorescence is long. The female spikes are long, ovoid or approaching spherical, and contains 5–15 flowers. The female spikes are attached directly to the stem, and each is subtended by a bract which does not form a sheath.
85 It was noted by the Spanish that the macuahuitl was so cleverly constructed that the blades could be neither pulled out nor broken. The macuahuitl was made with either a one-handed or two-handed grip, as well as in rectangular, ovoid, or pointed forms. Two-handed macuahuitl have been described as being "as tall as a man".Hassig, 1988 p. 83.
It has toothed lobes (at the tips), that are irregular. After the iris has flowered, between June and August, it produces an ellipsoid or obovoid (oblong-ovoid), light green, seed capsule. It is long and 2–2.5 cm wide, and has 6 ribs. When it ripens, (and goes brown,) it splits in three, along 2 or more seams, starting from the top.
Climacostomum virens The body is somewhat flexible but non-contractile, roughly ovoid or harp- shaped, and flattened from back to front. It has a large posterior contractile vacuole, and a characteristic posterior indentation (more pronounced in underfed individuals). The posterior vacuole surrounds the cytoproct (anus), through which food waste is eliminated. The macronucleus of Climacostomum virens is normally long and wormlike (vermiform).
The seeds are compressed, broadly ovoid, with a tufted micropylar coma of long silky hair. Pollination is performed by bees (entomophily) by the following mechanism: The stigmas and androecia are fused to form a gynostegium. The pollen are enclosed in pollinia (a coherent mass of pollen grains). The pollinia are attached to an adhesive glandular disc at the stigmatic angle.
Histologically, there are two types of stones: (1) stones with regular calcifications (2) stones with irregular calcifications. For regular calcification, the pulp stones are smooth, round or ovoid with concentric laminations. It is commonly found in the coronal pulp. As for irregular calcifications without laminations, pulp stones may have the shape of rods or leaves and the surface is rough.
Cressa cretica is a densely branching subshrub growing to a height of about . The leaves are small, stubby, obtuse and clad in silky hairs. The flowers grow in groups in the axils of the upper leaves and are white; the back of the reflexed corolla lobes are hairy near the tip. The fruits are ovoid, pointed capsules, usually containing a single seed.
The morphology of a single cell of Labyrinthula is not unique and varies a lot between the different species. The cells can be spindle-shaped like L. macrocystis, spherical or ovoid to name only a few examples. The spindle shape is due to the microtubules of the cytoskeleton. There is no mean size of one cell, because of the diversity between the species.
Clove stalks are slender stems of the inflorescence axis that show opposite decussate branching. Externally, they are brownish, rough, and irregularly wrinkled longitudinally with short fracture and dry, woody texture. Mother cloves (anthophylli) are the ripe fruits of cloves that are ovoid, brown berries, unilocular and one-seeded. This can be detected by the presence of much starch in the seeds.
The body is ovoid to elongate, and uniformly ciliated, with a single macronucleus and a partial hypostomial frange (synhymenium) running from the left side of the cell to the oral aperture. When food is scarce, members of the genus have the ability to become dormant by forming a microbial cyst. Excystment can be induced by exposure to a medium inoculated with wild bacteria.
Of the 11 Google Earth images, the one with the best definition is from 24.12.2011. The white patches especially on the southern and south- eastern perimeter of wall 3 visible in the satellite image are rooms often of the casemate fortification. Walls are preserved maximally to 2 m. Although the rooms appear to be ovoid, in fact, they are rectangular.
Two femora come from an adult, with a single additional bone known from the juvenile. The adult femora are proportionately different from the juvenile, being mostly straighter and more ovoid in cross-section. The femoral head is well preserved, although lacking the greater trochanter. The distal end is rather symmetrical when viewed from behind, with two similarly sized condylar surfaces.
At the end cell, the lamella cross section is larger, ovoid and papillose. In the upper leaf, cells are square to rectangular, while lower down they become more elongated and have a hyaline (glassy) appearance. The moss is dioecious and bears fruit fairly often, with spores maturing in summer. Spores are 14 to 20 µm in size and have fine hairs.
Fusoid cystidioles present in the hymenium, thin- walled, not encrusted, 9–12 by 3–4 µm, with a basal clamp. The basidia are ovoid to clavate, four-sterigmate, 9–12 by 4–5 µm, with a basal clamp. Spores are oblong-ellipsoid, slightly curved, hyaline, smooth, do not stain with Melzer's reagent, and measure 3–4 by 1.5–2 µm.
The flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 35 to 45 densely packed lemon yellow to golden yellow coloured flowers. The straight to slightly curved pale brown coloured seed pods that form after flowering have a length of up to and a width of and contain black, oblong to ovoid shaped seeds with a length of around and a width of .
Finally, a new shelter with 120 places in its dormitories, at 200 m distance from the old hut, is conceived from 2010 and opens in June 2013. It benefits from many architectural and environmental innovations. It's somewhat futuristic shape is ovoid (threedimensional oval), is distinguished by its stainless steel coating and has four levels. A reservation is required to stay at night.
Lecythis minor is a small to medium- sized tree that ranges from in height and has a diameter at breast height. Its bark is grey, and is smooth when the tree is young but develops deep vertical fissures as the tree ages. It has ovoid leaves that are about long and wide. The leaves are glabrous and coriaceous, with serrated margins.
The leaves are oval to round and range in size to 24 mm long. One to three yellow flowers are borne at the ends of the stems. Differs from Portulaca oleracea in having grey bark on old sections & large flowers with petals 12 mm long, and an ovoid fruit opening by a cap that splits off to release the many tiny black seeds.
The species has a moderate body size, reaching up to a length of . Its scales are circular or slightly ovoid, and are present on the entire postcranial portion of its body. Its gape size is considered large, sometimes extending beyond its posterior nares. Its mouth's position is superior, the lower jaw being longer than the upper jaw, while its chin is fleshy.
The flowers are white to cream in color and range from 10 millimeters (0.4 inch) to 30 millimeters (1.2 inches) in length. The fruits produced are bright red and ovoid, often with one end thicker than the other and are edible and tastes like a cross between a strawberry and a kiwi. The seeds are small (0.6 to 0.8 millimeters), black, and pitted.
Spores are brown and ovoid, with a diameter of 4.5–6 µm. They are thick-walled, and nearly smooth, with a central oil droplet, and a long, warted pedicel.A plain and easy account of the British fungi, with descriptions of the esculent and poisonous species, details of the principles of scientific classification, and a tabular arrangement of orders and genera. London, Hardwicke, 1871.
Acrantophis madagascariensis, like others in the family, dispatch their prey by constriction. The color pattern consists of a pale reddish-brown ground color mixed with gray, overlaid with a pattern dorsal rhombs outlined with black or brown. Sometimes this creates a vague zigzag impression. The sides are patterned a series of black ovoid markings with reddish blotches, often bordered or centered with white.
S. roeselii is found in still or slow-moving bodies of water, where it feeds on bacteria, flagellates, algae, and other ciliates. When feeding, the cell is fixed in place (sessile), attached by a posterior "holdfast" organelle to a firm surface such as plant stem or submerged detritus. Attached specimens are trumpet-shaped, and very contractile. When swimming freely, cells are compactly ovoid.
The lower pitchers resemble those of N. talangensis, but differ in having more pronounced peristome teeth. Upper pitchers are infundibular in the lower parts, ovoid in the middle, and cylindrical in the upper parts. This hybrid can be distinguished from N. aristolochioides on the basis of its narrow, cylindrical peristome and oblique mouth, as opposed to almost vertical in the latter.
In all the specimens the well developed hemelytra project past the tip of the abdomen and the bodies have an overall ovoid shape. The heads have a long rostrum, laying along the head and ending almost at the abdomen. The eyes are round and project from out from the sides of the head. There are three raised carinae which run along the pronotum.
The flowers are bell-shaped, pale yellow and somewhat waxy and fleshy. Staminate flowers are arranged in groups of one to ten, each long; carpellate flowers are in smaller groups, one to three, and somewhat longer, up to long. Carpellate trees produce smooth yellow ovoid or pear-shaped fruits, long with a diameter of . The fruit has a fleshy husk.
Acanthopagrus schlegelii, commonly known as the blackhead seabream, Japanese black porgy or sea bream, is a fish often farmed for food in Japan. It is one of the most popular fishes for game fishing in Japan. The body is ovoid and compressed, and its streamlined body makes it a fast swimmer. The mouth is small, terminal and with many incisor-like canines.
A pair of fringed wings (≤4 mm wide) runs down the front of the pitcher. The glandular region covers the ovoid portion of the pitcher's inner surface; the waxy zone above is well developed. The mouth is round and flat at the front, becoming oblique towards the lid. The peristome is cylindrical in cross section and up to 4 mm wide.
The aperture is closed by an oligogyrous operculum. The operculum is ovoid and paucispiral, with the apex anterior, a thread-like arcuate ridge on the proximal side, the inner margin notched in harmony with the plaits of the pillar when prominent. The species are characterized by the lack of jaw or radula, because they are ectoparasites (mostly on polychaetes or other molluscs).
Sangusaurus and other stahleckeriids have distinctive femora due to the medially offset discrete femoral head. In all stahleckeriids for which femoral material has been recovered, including Sangusaurus, the head is distinctly separate from the dorsal edge of the greater trochanter. The head of the femur is larger and nearly spherical compared to the more ovoid, reduced size in other kannemeyeriiforms.
Buds are ovoid, acutish, with many imbricate, dark brown scales. They diverge at a 45 degree angle from the stem. The staminate flowers are shortly pedicellate and approximately 3mm in diameter, clustered in the axils of the lower leaves. The pistillate flowers are solitary or few in axils of the upper leaves, sessile and usually about 1.5 mm in diameter.
Sporangiospores (4-11 µm diam) are produced in the sporangium and are unicellular, ovoid and brown. Sporangiospores serve as the primary inoculum and are passively released when the outer layer of the sporangium breaks down. Other R. stolonifer structures include stolons and rhizoids. Stolons arch over the surface and rhizoids grow into the substrate at each point of contact between stolon and substrate.
The flavour is generally much sweeter than that of the rambutan. The seed is ovoid, oblong or ellipsoid, light brown, somewhat flattened on one side, and 2 to 3.5 cm long. While very similar to rambutan, the fruit lacks the hairy spines. The flesh is very sweet and juicy, and separates easily from the seed, much more easily than the rambutan.
Idalina is a genus of foraminifera included in the Hauerinidae, (Miliolida), that lived during the latter part of the Late Cretaceous. The adult test is ovoid to fusiform . Ontogeny goes through an early quinqueloculine stage immediately following the proloculus, followed in sequence by triloculine and biloculine stages and finally to an adult stage with completely enveloping chambers. Wall, calcareous, imperforate, porcelaneous.
Like other irises, it has 2 pairs of petals, 3 large sepals (outer petals), known as the 'falls' and 3 inner, smaller petals (or tepals), known as the 'standards'. The falls are ovate and elongated, and 2–3 cm wide. In the centre of the petal, white beards with orange tops. The standards are elongated an ovoid, and 3 cm wide.
Egg, Collection Muséum de Toulouse Females lay a single egg per year, usually from late April to May. The egg is an ovoid-pyramidal shape, cream color with has dark brown blotches. Incubation starts generally 48 hours after laying the egg. Females and males take turns incubating the egg several times daily for a total of approximately 35 days before hatching occurs.
Round Hill is an unincorporated community in Madison County, Kentucky, United States. It lies 10 miles southwest of Richmond on County Road 595. A burial mound attributed by the National Register of Historic Places to the Adena Culture is the central feature of the village. The ovoid earthwork has a base of roughly 150 by 90 feet and a height of 25 feet.
Gastrotheca andaquiensis is a large member of its genus with a snout–vent length of . The head has a rounded snout, a slightly projecting upper lip, a large pit below each nostril, and bluntly-pointed horn-like appendages above the eyes. The tympani are ovoid and prominent. The body is robust, with a granular skin and a mixture of larger and smaller granules.
Acanthophractida is an order of marine radiolarians in the subclass Acantharia; skeleton includes a latticework shell and skeletal rods. They have a latticework shell, which can be spherical or ovoid and fused with the skeletal rods. The shell is concentric with the central capsule. "The body is usually covered with a single or double gelatinous sheath through which the skeletal rods emerge".
The flowering "cones" with paleae 9–15 mm long, with the ends red to orange-tipped, usually straight, and prickly-pointed. Ray flower corollas are purple or rarely pink or white. Discs or cones are ovoid to conic and 25–35 wide and 20–40 mm tall. Disc corollas 4.5–5.5 mm long with lobes greenish to pink or purple.
Male flowers are numerous, with long-styled female flowers in a cupula. The fruit is a light brown, ovoid capsule, or acorn, with a leathery pericarp, 20–25 mm in diameter and 50–70 mm long, resting on a scaly cupule. Only one fruit per cupule is developed, and the inside of the acorn shell is woolly.Bonpland, Aimé Jacques Alexandre 1809.
Marie, Michigan. A concretion is a hard, compact mass of matter formed by the precipitation of mineral cement within the spaces between particles, and is found in sedimentary rock or soil. Concretions are often ovoid or spherical in shape, although irregular shapes also occur. The word 'concretion' is derived from the Latin con meaning 'together' and crescere meaning 'to grow'.
Onobrychis venosa, veined sainfoin is a perennial, spreading or suberect herb 10–25 cm high, with a short stem. Leaves alternate, compound, imparipinnate, leaflets ovoid to suborbicular 10-40 x 5–30 mm with characteristic bronze venation (hence venosa), hairy only along margins. Zygomorphic flowers with yellow petals with conspicuous dark-red nerves in axillary racemes. Flowers from February to May.
Cystoids are distinguished from other echinoderms by triangular pore openings. Superficially, cystoids resembled crinoids, but they had an ovoid, rather than cup-shaped, body. The mouth was at the upper pole of the body, with the opposite end attached to the substratum, often by a stalk, although some stalkless species did exist. The anus lay on the side of the body.
The shape of fruit is often described as oblate, ovoid, obovoid, oval or quince. On average the fruit diameter ranges from 1 to 4 cm and the height ranges from 2 to 5 cm. Fruit of Pyrus pashia is best to eat when it is slightly decaying. It is set apart from the cultivated pears by having a grittier texture.
The ovaries are developed as large, ball-shaped reservoirs. In Heteroptera, the number of ovarioles per ovary ranges from 2 to 17. No spermathecae were observed, a phenomenon already reported for other Thaumastocoridae. Eggs black, ovoid, with rough chorion and a round operculum, with a deep and obvious depression dorsally; 0.50–0.61 mm long and 0.20–0.24 mm wide. Nymphs.
Outboard the taper was much stronger, with a taper ratio of 0.45. Here the leading edge was slightly swept but there was no dihedral. Ailerons occupied the whole of the outer panels' trailing edges. The Senior had a completely ply covered fuselage with a narrow ovoid cross section which was deep in the cockpit area but tapered progressively to the tail.
Most species are epiphytes, but some are terrestrials with glossy, strap-like, plicate leaves, which are apical, oblong or elliptic- lanceolate, acute or acuminate. These orchids have a robust growth form. Their ovoid-conical pseudobulbs are deciduous. They produce an erect, 60-centimeter- long, few-flowered to several-flowered, racemose inflorescence that grows laterally and is longer than the leaves.
Conophytum species are dwarf cushion-forming or single-bodied succulents. Members of the genus are tiny plants with succulent leaves ranging from 1/4" to 2" in length. These leaves are partially or entirely fused along their centers. Each leaf pair (together referred to as a body) ranges in shape from "bilobed" to spherical to ovoid to tubular to conical.
Scilla verna, commonly known as spring squill, is a flowering plant native to Western Europe. It belongs to the squill genus Scilla. Its star-like blue flowers are produced during the spring. It is a small plant, usually reaching 5-15 centimetres in height. It is perennial and grows from a bulb which is 10-15 millimetres across and ovoid in shape.
At the mouth the sepals spread into lobes that are shorter than the tube. There are no petals, but the lobes of the sepals are quite colourfully petal-like in many species. The ovary is ovoid with a single loculus containing a solitary ovule. The style is lateral, bearing a mop-like stigma that fills the mouth of the calyx-tube.
In vertical section, hysterothecia are globose to inversely ovoid (obovoid), with a thick three- layered peridium, composed of small pseudoparenchymatous cells, the outer layer heavily encrusted with pigment and often longitudinally striated in age, the middle layer lighter in pigmentation and the inner layer distinctly thin- walled, pallid and compressed.Barr ME. (1987). Prodromus to class Loculoascomycetes. Hamilton I. Newell, Inc.
The cell is roughly oval or kidney-shaped in profile, with a distinct concavity on the anterior of the oral side. Cilia are arranged in 50-63 longitudinal rows. At the center of the cell is a large, ovoid macronucleus and a small spherical micronucleus. A single contractile vacuole is located slightly posterior to the middle of the body, near the right side.
Fusarium circinatum infects the twigs and branches of pine trees, causing a bark canker. Most infection is by macroconidia or microconidia. The macroconidia are 3-septate, with slightly curved walls and the microconidia are single- celled, ovoid, and borne in false heads on aerial polyphialides. The aerial mycelium is white or pale violet colour and slightly twisted below the proliferation of microconidiophores.
A.chamissonis Frigid arnica in the Alaskan Interior Arnica plants have a deep-rooted, erect stem that is usually unbranched. Their downy opposite leaves are borne towards the apex of the stem. The ovoid, leathery basal leaves are arranged in a rosette.Flora of North America, Arnica Linnaeus They show large yellow or orange flowers, wide with long ray florets and numerous disc florets.
Atelurinae is a subfamily of primitive insects belonging to the order Zygentoma. Once considered an independent family, it is now treated as a subfamily within the Nicoletiidae. They are generally found in association with ants or termites, living as inquilines in the hosts' nests. They are typically small, tear-drop or sub-ovoid in body shape, light yellow in color and lacking eyes.
Podospora appendiculata produces perithecia, necked fruiting bodies laden with sexual spores. Unlike perithecia obtained from other ascomycota, however, perithecia from P. appendiculata lack very prominent necks. Its perithecia are ovoid, appear blackish to purplish, have hyaline (uncolored) tips, and are covered evenly with short, stiff hairs. These hairs are wide and brown at the base, and, like the perithecia, have hyaline, uncoloured tips.
The underside of the lid of N. naga, showing a prominent hook-shaped basal crest and the forked sub-apical appendage for which it is named Upper pitchers are infundibular in the lowermost part, becoming ovoid and then cylindrical above. They may be up to 24.3 cm high by 4.5 cm wide. A pair of ribs is present instead of wings.
'Crescendo' is a tall, upright shrub, 5 to 6 ft (152—182 cm) in height with a 3 to 4 ft (90—121 cm) spread. Blooms are large, 4—5 in (10—12 cm) in diameter, with 26 to 40 petals. Buds are pointed and ovoid. Flowers have a very full, high-centered bloom form, and are borne mostly solitary.

No results under this filter, show 1000 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.