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The female cones are larger, green when young and have 90-150 scales.
The name comes from the prickles on the female cones.
The female cones have one to 20 ovules on each scale.
They can only develop and become effective if they happen to land on a female cone.
Pollen is released and carried by the wind to female cones.
On maturity, the female cones detach and fall to the ground.
As with flowers, seeds form within the female cone after pollination.
The main differences between the two are in the number, size and form of the male and female cones.
There is only one scale in the female cone, with a single poisonous ovule.
At maturity the female cones are 3-60 cm long.
(Male and female cones can be found on the same plant)
Female cones can be found on long, elongate leaves.
They do not bear fruit, but form their seed tucked into the scales of female cones.
The female cones are a similar colour and up to fifty centimetres long.
The female cones are open, with sporophylls 28-32 cm long.
It is dioecious, with the male and female cones on different trees.
The cones mature in their second year, this is a juvenile female cone:
The foliage in the fossils is thinner and the female cones are smaller than the modern examples.
Although many refer to the tree as "she," giant redwoods produce both male and female cones.
Each tree produces both male and female cones.
Female cones are stalked or sessile, erect, and have short hairs.
It is Plant sexuality, with male and female cones on separate plants, which are wind pollinated.
The familiar woody cone is the female cone, which produces seeds.
The male and female cones are borne separately on the same tree; pollination is in early spring.
Seeing the difference between male and female cones is not difficult with D. purpusii.