Difference between revisions of "ft:development"

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{{Concept collection
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{{Concept
|description=Mode or sequential pattern of growth or differentiation, e.g. centrifugal, centripetal, well-developed, differentiated.
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|label=development
|notes=Categories were abstracted from 9228 botanical terms used in Flora of North America and Flora of China. <ref name="OTO">[http://www.tdwg.org/fileadmin/2012conference/slides/TDWG2012-Cui.pdf Semantic Annotation, Ontology Building, and Interactive Key Generation from Morphological Descriptions].</ref>  
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|example=Example sentences from FNA : [1] Tuber dark brown outside, pink inside, depressed globose, 7–8 cm high, ca. 16 cm in diam., root scars not swollen, without offset development.  [2] disk cup-shaped or conical, surrounding basal ovary, sometimes as long as ovary, tearing into lobes during fruit development, rarely absent;
|concept scheme=FloraTerms
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|definition=Mode or pattern of growth and differentiation.<ref name='hunt'>Categorical Glossary for the Flora of North America Project, by Robert W. Kiger and Duncan M. Porter. 2001. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation.</ref>
 
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== References ==
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{{Concept scheme relation
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|scheme=FloraTerms
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{{Concept relation
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|relation=skos: collection
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|internal page=ft:character
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==References==
 
<references />
 
<references />

Revision as of 20:06, 8 December 2014

Scheme: FloraTerms Pencil.png
development
The import namespace "ft" is unknown. Please ensure that OWL import details are available via MediaWiki:Smw import ft
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development: Mode or pattern of growth and differentiation.[1]
The given value was not understood.
The given value was not understood.

Example(s): Example sentences from FNA : [1] Tuber dark brown outside, pink inside, depressed globose, 7–8 cm high, ca. 16 cm in diam., root scars not swollen, without offset development. [2] disk cup-shaped or conical, surrounding basal ovary, sometimes as long as ovary, tearing into lobes during fruit development, rarely absent;

References

  1. Categorical Glossary for the Flora of North America Project, by Robert W. Kiger and Duncan M. Porter. 2001. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation.