Fertile flowers 2 or 3 at each scale of the catkin.
Fertile flowers in catkins, consisting of numerous open spirally imbricated carpels in the form of scales, each scale in the axil of a thin persistent bract; in fruit forming a strobile or cone.
It is apparently Abietineous, having two seeds to each scale, but they are placed on the dilated upper portion of the scale.
It has a single seed to each scale of the cone, and two kinds of leaves, the one short and imbricated, the other long and spreading.
Colour pale brown or reddish, with a brown edging to each scale forming a reticulate pattern; a yellow cross-band on the occiput; belly uniformly white.
Colour dark brown, with a light longitudinal line on each scale; a yellowish cross-band on the occiput, connected with another yellow band which encircles the snout.
The inner surface of each scaleis triangular, with the basal margin protuberant.
The male and female catkins are on the same plant; the female one containing two seeds at the base of each scale.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "each scale" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.