Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
These flower clusters bloom for many weeks in the summer.
The flower cluster of a plant and the way it is arranged.
Often 10 or more blossoms crowd together in the flower cluster.
It is possible for a flower cluster to have flowers and fruit at the same time.
Each branch ends in a flower cluster and stops right there.
A number of growers have expressed interest in the potential for a regional cut flower cluster.
They have been reported attacking the flower cluster and shoots of their host plant.
Once the flower clusters form, they should be removed so the plant will continue its vegetative growth.
They feed for seven to ten days and pupate in the flower clusters.
The flower clusters fade to light pink and green, remaining effective in the garden for weeks.
Another typical feature is the small, year-round, pink or white flower clusters.
Its compact flower clusters are solitary at the ends of branches.
Some individuals turn a very light yellow green in the flowering clusters as they mature under exposed conditions.
Country children would suck the very sweet nectar from the flower clusters of some species.
Whole branches with their flowering clusters are useful in cut flower arrangements.
The indeterminate plants have three leaf stems and a flower cluster.
After flowering, narrow seedpods appear just below the flower cluster.
The flower cluster is more rounded than in the related species M. beccarii.
A small flower cluster goes outwards from the edge corners of the cover towards the center.
Infected fruit or flower clusters appear water-soaked and eventually turn black.
It is now available in a wide range of colours, small flowered clusters, and in bush form.
Dense, pale yellow hairs cover the top of the stem and flower cluster.
Pendant white flower clusters appear in the early summer on long slender stalks.
The flower clusters look like Queen Anne’s lace on steroids.
Fruit: Fleshy drupe, one to three from each flower cluster.
The cluster of flowers that may appear to be a single flower, is called a head.
It bears small clusters of flowers which are yellow at first and then become red.
There are usually 1-2 cluster of flowers within the inflorescence.
The top cluster of flowers on each stem are sterile.
The term is most used for a group or cluster of flowers arranged on a stem.
There are narrow leaves and clusters of flowers along the branches.
These have lovely clusters of flowers in May and excellent autumn colours.
"Do they have clusters of flowers and canes rising up right from the base?"
The plant has male and female inflorescences which are small hard clusters of flowers.
The fruit formed from the clusters of flowers is called coriander.
It is a compound umbel with a many clusters of flowers.
White clusters of flowers in spring are followed by fruit in autumn.
The inflorescence is a cluster of flowers up to 2 centimeters long.
It was Y shaped, with a cluster of flowers crowning each arm.
The clusters of flowers atop the inflorescences are bright yellow.
"There's some yellow club, those clusters of flowers on the white spikes.
Clusters of flowers appear on stalks which may be erect or bend to the ground.
Others were more like the cane-plant, but taller, bearing large clusters of flowers.
Clusters of flowers on one stalk, even smell nice.
Grows to about 1m and quickly sets new clusters of flowers providing a near continuous display throughout the season.
In general, an inflorescence which is branched, often with lose clusters of flowers.
The dangling clusters of flowers have long thick stems.
A multiple fruit is one formed from a cluster of flowers (called an inflorescence).
The inflorescence forms a cluster of flowers which are first reddish, and later bright blue.
The inflorescence is a cluster of flowers each with eight pale yellow petals.
The tiny clustered flowers are white to yellow or sometimes pinkish.
The family is almost all tropical plants with clustered flowers, most native to the western hemisphere.
Plants flower in May and June with white/green clustered flowers.
Each stem bears an inflorescence of up to six clustered flowers.
Most roses of this class have clustered flowers and are of vigorous growth.
Plants on the western side of the continent tend to be smaller in size than their eastern counterparts, but have more densely clustered flowers.
The clustered flowers have white, pinkish, or greenish petals.
The mostly naked stem is up to 15 centimeters long and holds an inflorescence of clustered flowers.
It has small pinkish white (sometimes lavender or red) clustered flowers that bloom from June to September.
The stems bear inflorescences of clustered flowers.
The densely clustered flowers have five pink petals, at the rear end of a tube around which are the green sepals.
Each flowering head consists of 20 to 30 small closely clustered flowers surrounded by a ring of small leaves.
The stems may grow erect or drooping to 30 centimeters long and each holds an inflorescence of clustered flowers.
The plant produces green to reddish-green stems up to 30 centimeters long which bear inflorescences of dense clustered flowers.
The bush erects frilly inflorescences of densely clustered flowers on nearly naked peduncles.
The reddish to greenish stems reach 30 to 50 centimeters in height and bear inflorescences of clustered flowers.
The clustered flowers of the acidic varieties are purplish tinted from outside, but the sweet ones are white-yellowish.
The name Agonis derives from the Greek agon, meaning gathering or collection, in reference to the tightly clustered flowers.
The clustered flowers are bright red to yellowish in color, sometimes exceeding 4 centimeters in length with narrow lobed mouths.
The inflorescence holds solitary and clustered flowers, each with toothed bractlets and thick, pointed sepals.
The musky scent comes from the gawky milkweed, whose clustered flowers summon up the poet's perfumes of Araby.
More feathers trimmed simple dresses and skirts before giving way to spectacular 3D embroidery; tops and dresses bloomed with clustered flowers.
Similarly, nemesias (with little two-lipped clustered flowers) and felicias (kingfisher-blue daisies) willingly bloom again in fall's cooler temperatures.
Hemlock can be confused with the wild carrot plant; however, this plant has a hairy stem without purple markings, grows less than three feet tall, and does not have clustered flowers.