dioecious
(adjective)
having the male and female reproductive organs on separate parts (of the same species)
Examples of dioecious in the following topics:
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Class Scyphozoa
- Scyphozoans are free-swimming, polymorphic, dioecious, and carnivorous cnidarians with a prominent medusa morphology.
- Scyphozoans are dioecious animals, having separate sexes.
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Phylum Rotifera
- Rotifers are dioecious organisms (having either male or female genitalia) and exhibit sexual dimorphism (males and females have different forms).
- In many dioecious species, males are short-lived and smaller, with no digestive system and a single testis.
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Sexual Reproduction in Angiosperms
- ., C. papaya or Cannabis)are termed dioecious, or "two homes."
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Classification and Identification of Helminths
- The sex of nematodes is dioecious (distinct male and female organisms).
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Phylum Mollusca
- Most mollusks are dioecious animals where fertilization occurs externally, although this is not the case in terrestrial mollusks, such as snails and slugs, or in cephalopods.
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Phylum Annelida
- Annelids may be either monoecious, with permanent gonads (as in earthworms and leeches), or dioecious, with temporary or seasonal gonads that develop (as in polychaetes).
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Phylum Nematoda
- Nematodes employ a variety of reproductive strategies that range from monoecious to dioecious to parthenogenic, depending upon the species under consideration.
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Phylum Cnidaria
- When the reproductive buds mature, they break off and become free-swimming medusa, which are either male or female (dioecious).
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Pollination and Fertilization
- In other species, the male and female flowers are borne on different plants, making them dioecious.
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The Life Cycle of an Angiosperm
- Some species of angiosperms are hermaphroditic (stamens and pistils are contained on a single flower), some species are monoecious (stamens and pistils occur on separate flowers, but the same plant), and some are dioecious (staminate and pistillate flowers occur on separate plants).