Specimens from Kansas referred here have the stipe pale, rugose, long, about twice the sporangium; habitat bark.
The lamprodermas are distinguished from the comatrichas, to which they are most nearly allied, by the arrangement of the capillitium, its development from the apex only of the columella, the continuation of the stipe within the peridium.
Stipe and rhachis rather stout, brown, covered with narrow chaffy scales and whitish hairs.
Stipe continuous (not articulated) with the rootstock.
In Laminariaceae there is a distinction of stipe and blade.
Thus, I had irregularly split and slit a large stipe in its length, and I found the whole flesh obscure, whilst on the exterior were some luminous places.
Although the stipe is luminous at its surface, it is not always necessarily so in its interior substance, if one bruises it, but this substance frequently becomes phosphorescent after contact with the air.
Among the first Agarics which I examined, I found many, the stipe of which shed here and there a light as brilliant as the hymenium, and led me to think that it was due to the spores which had fallen on the surface of the stipe.
Stipe rather short, tapering upward, bent at the apex, dark purple in color.
Stipe more or less elongated, simple, erect, brownish below, filled with roundish vesicles.
Stipe short, erect, brownish-red in color, standing on a thin hypothallus.
Stipe very short, brown or blackish, sometimes reduced to merely a thickened blackish base to the sporangium.
Stipe not very long, tapering upward, curved at the apex, of the same color as the sporangium or darker below.
Stipe and columella brown or blackish, tapering upward and vanishing near the apex of the sporangium, the stipe much shorter than the columella.
Stipe more or less elongated, tapering upward and entering the sporangium as a columella.
Stipe short, brown or blackish at least below, sometimes pallid or grayish above, longitudinally rugulose.
Stipe and columella black and shining, the stipe very short, the columella reaching nearly or quite to the apex of the sporangium, often flexuous above.
Stipe present or sometimes wanting; the columella mostly conspicuous, sometimes thin or obsolete.
Stipe and columella brown and smooth, tapering gradually upward and reaching nearly to the apex of the sporangium, the stipe shorter than the columella.
Stipe brown or black, smooth and shining, tapering upward, entering the sporangium and prolonged nearly to the apex as a slender columella, the stipe shorter than the columella.
The stipemore or less elongated or often wanting, usually resting on a hypothallus.
Stipe elongated, tapering upward, entering the sporangium as a very short or nearly obsolete columella.
Stipe without an indusium or veil dependent from its apex.
By the elongation of the stem the thin membrane which separates the stipe from the pileus is torn into shreds and the pileus is thus liberated from the stipe except at the apex.
The upper part of the stipeis sometimes beaded with drops of moisture.
An indusium or veil surrounding the stipeand dependent from its apex beneath the pileus.
The long veil usually clings close to the stipe though sometimes swinging free and much expanded.
Receptacle consisting of an elongated stipebearing the gleba on a conical pileus at its apex.
The continuation of the stipe through the blade or leafy portion of the fern.
Has the sterile segment thicker and cuspidate, the stipe slender and the secondary veins forming a fine network within the meshes of the principal ones.
A fern leaf or blade; may include both stipe and blade, or only the latter--called also lamina.
Scales of the stipevery few, seldom persistent, rarely over 3-16 of an inch long.
In the Lowland Lady Fern the rootstock is but slightly concealed by old stipe bases, and so may be distinguished from its sister fern.
When full-grown the stipe is two to three inches long and the cap one half of an inch in diameter.
At the base of the stipe are two or more rows of filaments without anthers, which are called the rays.
The trunk or stipe rises to the height of forty or fifty feet without a branch, and then terminates in a head of noble fronds, which hang down on every side like a plume of feathers.
Flower of a Cleome of the section Gynandropsis, showing broadened receptacle to bear petals, lengthened stipe below the stamens, and another between these and pistil.
Longitudinal section of flower of Silene Pennsylvanica, showingstipe between calyx and corolla.
Stipe= fleshy or fibrous and elastic, pileus confluent with the stipe and of the same texture.
Stipe= on one side of the pileus, or none, rarely with the stipe sub-central.
Pileus= confluent with the stipe and of the same texture, gills attached, in some becoming almost free.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stipe" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: axis; bole; cane; pedicel; reed; spear; spire; stalk; stem; stock; straw; trunk