A corymb may have a paniculate branching structure, with the lower flowers having longer hawthorns and rowans, produce their flowers in corymbs.
22.
They give rise to a paniculate inflorescence, up to 85 cm long, with many ( 10 to 100 ), delicately scented flowers, 6 cm across.
23.
Flowers are in terminal spikes or panicles ( racemose to paniculate ), cream or pure white in colour, yellow-green on the outside, and sweetly fragrant when opening at night.
24.
Botanists use the term " paniculate " in two ways : " having a true panicle inflorescence " as well as " having an inflorescence with the form but not necessarily the structure of a panicle ".
25.
Vegetatively, resembles " E . andrieuxii, " nut differs by having distinct pellucid lines, a usually paniculate inflorescence and by achenes with beaks that are at most 1 / 3 as long as the body.
26.
It is an herbaceous variety of " S . debile ", but raised to the species level by Tony Bean in 1999 . It differs from " S . debile " by the lack of bracteoles and its paniculate inflorescence.
27.
The majority of species are succulent shade-loving herbs or shrubs, which are easily distinguished from other Urticaceae by the combination of opposite leaves ( with rare exceptions ) with a single ligulate intrapetiolar stipule in each leaf axil and cymose or paniculate inflorescences ( again with rare exceptions ).
28.
The species forming this genus share a unique paniculate in�orescence with the ultimate divisions that are not quite cymose; that is, the lateral �owers of what looks like a cyme are not strictly opposite, but tend to be subopposite, while in most genera of Lauraceae with paniculate in�orescences the lateral �owers in a cyme are strictly opposite.
29.
The species forming this genus share a unique paniculate in�orescence with the ultimate divisions that are not quite cymose; that is, the lateral �owers of what looks like a cyme are not strictly opposite, but tend to be subopposite, while in most genera of Lauraceae with paniculate in�orescences the lateral �owers in a cyme are strictly opposite.
30.
One or two racemes grow from the same point or there is a paniculate arrangement of racemes, normally from young twigs below the leaves or sometimes terminal, bearing 5 30 flowers, the rachis 4 10.5 cm long, sometimes with conspicuous lenticels; the glabrous or puberulous pedicels are 3 5 mm long, subtended by a caducous bract, with two ovate caducous bracteoles 2 2.5 ?2 mm arising from near the base.