| 21. | The flower has a syncarpous gynoecium ( fused-carpellate ovary ) with 5 carpels and has parietal placentation.
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| 22. | The typical " Papaver " gynoecium is superior ( the flower is hypogynous ) with a globular ovary.
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| 23. | The filaments are joined to form a tube, the empty anthers flattened, gynoecium ovular, trioculate and scaly.
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| 24. | Other distinct features include a gynoecium with five to 10 joined carpels, and flowers with more than three parts per whorl.
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| 25. | If a gynoecium has multiple carpels " fused " into a single structure, it is "'syncarpous " '.
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| 26. | The staminodes are united in an irregular ring, the gynoecium is triocular, triovulate with short trifid stigmas and laterally attached ovules.
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| 27. | There are three united staminodes forming a small cup, the gynoecium is ovoid and uniovulate; the pendulous stigma has three lobes.
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| 28. | The androecium contains five stamens, while the gynoecium contains two carpels fused into a single pistil with an inferior, glabrous ovary.
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| 29. | In a syncarpous gynoecium, the " fused " ovaries of the constituent carpels may be referred to collectively as a single compound ovary.
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| 30. | There may be up to nine tooth-like staminodes or none at all; gynoecium uniocular and ovoid with broad, pendulous stigmas.
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