| 31. | It is perforated by a large number of fine breathing pores called lenticels, through which oxygen diffuses.
|
| 32. | The grey-coloured bark is smooth and fairly thin with lenticels; however it can thicken significantly with age.
|
| 33. | The grey to dark brown bark, in common with many of this family, is liberally covered in lenticels.
|
| 34. | Fruit is ribbed and conical shaped, has a light green background with a faint pink blush and green lenticels.
|
| 35. | The thin, papery bark is very shiny, reddish brown, reddish white, or white, with horizontal lenticels.
|
| 36. | Root nodules can be classified as being either indeterminate, cylindrical and often branched, and determinate, spherical with prominent lenticels.
|
| 37. | The bark is grayish white to grayish brown and either smooth with lenticels or exfoliating in patches to reveal orange inner bark.
|
| 38. | The tree's bark is grey-brown, with conspicuous lenticels on young stems, and shallowly fissured on old trunks.
|
| 39. | Look for the small, tell-tale orange stripes on the beautiful smooth gray bark called lenticels, which allow it to breathe.
|
| 40. | The trunk is slender with smooth grey to purple-grey bark marked with horizontal brown lenticels, with a strong smell when cut.
|