What's the difference between gaster and petiole?

Gaster


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To gast.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When 6-azauracil and 6-azauridine are fed to larvae of the tu(w) rc strain of Drosophila melano-gaster which has the normal wing shape, adults hatch with shortened, obliquely truncated wings.
  • (2) The effects of famotidine (Gaster; CAS 76824-35-6) and cimetidine on cardiovascular and bronchial functions were investigated in anesthetized dogs.
  • (3) Resection of gaster with GEA modification that we have called GEA antecolica sine Braun, is the method of choice.
  • (4) The density of 5-HT immunostaining cells in the digestive tubes were the highest in the pylorus, fundus, cardia of gaster, and moderate in the esophagus and duodenum and the lowest in the large intestine and the small intestine.
  • (5) The method Billroth II modification GEA in resection of gaster that we have chosen, has given very successful results.
  • (6) The venom preparation was considerably more effective in inducing histamine release than a body extract derived from gasters, the posterior abdominal segments.
  • (7) There were decided that only by resection of gaster and seized esophagus i.e.
  • (8) The advance of this modificate method of resection of gaster takes the patient very soon back to his everyday life.
  • (9) A simultaneous manometric examination of gaster and LES was carried out during gradual compression of abdominal wall.
  • (10) This technique is initiated by a special "tandem calling" behavior; the recruiter slants its gaster upward and discharges poison gland secretions from the extruded sting.
  • (11) These pulses are produced by briefly stopping the gaster during a chirp.
  • (12) The epithelium at both ends of the canal, i.e., oral cavity and esophagus, and anal canal is a multilayered (20-50 layers) stratified squamous epithelium, whereas that of the rest of the canal, i.e., gaster, small and large intestine and rectum is a single layer of columnar cells.

Petiole


Definition:

  • (n.) A leafstalk; the footstalk of a leaf, connecting the blade with the stem. See Illust. of Leaf.
  • (n.) A stalk or peduncle.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The results indicate that the anatomical counter-current heat exchanger is reduced or eliminated during heat stress by 'chopping' the blood flow into pulses, and the blood pulses are shunted through the petiole alternately by way of a switch mechanism.
  • (2) Young leaf tissues had much higher levels of glucosyltransferase activity than the petioles and internodes.
  • (3) The transcript is detectable in stem and petiole, but not in leaves.
  • (4) The epiglottic petiole, the false cords, the true cords, and one arytenoid are also excised, along with the paraglottic space.
  • (5) The narrow passage within the petiole between thorax and abdomen is anatomically constructed so that counter-current exchange should retain heat in the thorax despite blood flow to and from the cool abdomen.
  • (6) Linamarase (EC 3.2.1.21) was purified from cassava petiole, stem, and root cortex by ammonium sulfate precipitation, column chromatography on Sepharose 6B, and chromatofocusing.
  • (7) The tissue- and organ-specific overproduction of cytokinins produced a number of morphological and physiological changes, including stunting, loss of apical dominance, reduction in root initiation and growth, either acceleration or prolonged delayed senescence in leaves depending on the growth conditions, adventitious shoot formation from unwounded leaf veins and petioles, altered nutrient distribution, and abnormal tissue development in stems.
  • (8) The major tissue features of basal petioles and the external characteristics of the crude drugs have also been given.
  • (9) The occurrence of dispersal or nondispersal of P-protein bodies can be related to the position of the sieve elements in the stem or petiole.
  • (10) Many characters of leaf (hair, hypodermal cells, palisade layers, intercellular space, distinction between spongy and palisade parenchyma, "palisade ratio", distribution of collenchyma and sclerenchyma, presence or absence of starch grains, calcium oxalate crystals, number, shape and arrangement of bundles of petiole) are useful distinguishing characters.
  • (11) In this paper, the Ainsliaea derivatives are studied to clarify the botanical origins; comparing anatomically with leaves and petioles of thirteen Ainsliaea species growing wildly in Sichuan prov.
  • (12) Glucan synthesis was achieved with an in vitro membrane fraction from the petioles of celery (Apium graveolens).
  • (13) Ethylene was found to have no influence on auxin transport in hypocotyls of Helianthus annuus and Phaseolus vulgaris; coleoptiles of Zea mays; petiole sections of Gossypium hirsutum, Phaseolus vulgaris, and Coleus blumei.
  • (14) GAST1 RNA is detectable in untreated leaves, stems, petioles and flowers, but not in roots.
  • (15) Their expression is also induced in leaf-petiole explants by high concentrations of sucrose.
  • (16) An uneven distribution of the coat protein antigens of beet necrotic yellow vein (BNYVV) and beet soil-borne (BSBV) viruses in tap roots of naturally infected sugarbeets and of BNYVV coat protein antigen in leaves and petioles of mechanically inoculated sugarbeet seedlings was detected by means of tissue print-immunoblotting.
  • (17) Arabidopsis plants stimulated by touch develop shorter petioles and bolts.
  • (18) This HC protein was found in leaf blade and vein tissue but not in the petiole of leaves.
  • (19) Regarding this new technique, the fibula works as a petiolated well vascular bone chip which bridges the joint.
  • (20) Raphides in petioles of Xanthosoma sagittifolium are needlelike crystals about 50 micrometers long.

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