| 41. | Bract / bracteole development ends around 5 weeks into flowering and is followed by a period of bract / bracteole swelling.
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| 42. | Bract / bracteole development ends around 5 weeks into flowering and is followed by a period of bract / bracteole swelling.
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| 43. | Their compound umbels of small flowers are adorned with bracteoles that are sometimes large and may play a role in attracting pollinators.
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| 44. | Female inflorescences with one-or few-flowered glomerules of stigmas, that protrude through the opening in the covering bracteoles.
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| 45. | Enclosed by 2 accrescent or united bracteoles, without perianth, they consist of an ovary with 4-5 filiform stigmas.
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| 46. | Female flowers are sitting within 2 opposite bracteoles, without perianth, consisting just of an ovary with 2 filiform, exserted stigmas.
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| 47. | Bracteoles, located at the base of the pedicels or slightly above, are linear, glabrous and 2 to 15 mm long.
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| 48. | In fruit, the bracteoles enclosing the fruits become accrescent, 3 7 mm long and broad, slightly connate in the lower half.
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| 49. | It has five sepals, the inner three of which are distinctly wider, and the outer two are narrow and sometimes regarded as bracteoles.
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| 50. | The male flowers are arranged in clusters of up to 32, each flower held in a cuplike rachilla bract with a two-keeled bracteole.
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