| 41. | Carpels are usually 2-5.
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| 42. | After flowering, the fruit forms a globular head of carpels held above the creeping plant.
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| 43. | It can be a challenge to determine how many carpels fused to form a syncarpous gynoecium.
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| 44. | The gynoecium consists of 2 carpels.
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| 45. | One ovary is formed by two carpels, with a thick pistil, and two stigmas.
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| 46. | The gynoecium is receptive to pollen extends downward along the fissures where the carpels are joined.
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| 47. | Usually a single stigma with 2 to 5 united carpels, sometimes ovaries separate but styles combined.
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| 48. | In some capsules, the split occurs between carpels, and in others each carpel splits open.
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| 49. | In some capsules, the split occurs between carpels, and in others each carpel splits open.
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| 50. | The female flowers have five separate carpels that can each form a woody fruit containing several seeds.
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