Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The genus Adenium has been held to contain as many as twelve species. These are considered by other authors to be subspecies or varieties. A late-20th-century classification by Plazier recognizes five species. [5] Species [3] Adenium arabicum Balf.f. = Adenium obesum; Adenium boehmianum Schinz - (Namibia, Angola) Adenium multiflorum Klotzsch.
Regular Home Depot shoppers know all too well just how easy it is to walk inside the home improvement store and spend hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars during a shopping trip. ...
Whether you're in the market for Christmas decorations and lights, home improvement items, tools or even household goods, Home Depot is the first stop on the list for many shoppers. You never know...
Flowers of Adenium obesum in West Bengal, India. Adenium obesum is a popular houseplant and bonsai [9] in temperate regions. It requires a sunny location and a minimum indoor temperature in winter of 10 °C (50 °F). It thrives on a xeric watering regime as required by cacti. A. obesum is typically propagated by seed or stem cuttings. The ...
True dormancy or inherent (or innate) dormancy is caused by conditions within the seed that prevent germination even if the conditions are favorable. [7] Imposed dormancy is caused by the external conditions that remain unsuitable for germination [8] Seed dormancy can be divided into two major categories based on what part of the seed produces dormancy: exogenous and endogenous. [9]
Seeds are not necessarily 'true to type' meaning that a plant with white flowers may produce offspring with different colours. But Adeniums grown from cuttings tend to be a bit scraggly, so propagating from seeds is the best way to get lovely fat trunks. • Grafting: This is the fastest way to get another adult flowering plant.
Norman C. Deno (February 15, 1921 – September 22, 2017) was an American chemist and plant scientist.He was a professor of chemistry at Penn State University and is known as one of the foremost researchers in seed germination theory.
It is uncommon for pathogens to be transmitted from the plant to its seeds (in sexual reproduction or in apomixis), though there are occasions when it occurs. [2] [page needed] Seeds generated by apomixis are a means of asexual reproduction, involving the formation and dispersal of seeds that do not originate from the fertilization of the embryos.