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Tuatara: Volume 30, Issue 1, December 1988

Fig. 5. Male cones of true totara, two shedding pollen in early November. Note position of cones (indicated by arrow) in relation to the glaucous new spring growth. — Fig. 6. Male cones of Hall's totara breaking bud in December. On the right specimen a club-shaped shoot can be seen below the right hand cone. Male cones look like this during the preceding winter. Note the longer cone stalks and rounder shaped cones than in the true totara and the position of the cones in relation to the new spri…

Fig. 5. Male cones of true totara, two shedding pollen in early November. Note position of cones (indicated by arrow) in relation to the glaucous new spring growth.Fig. 6. Male cones of Hall's totara breaking bud in December. On the right specimen a club-shaped shoot can be seen below the right hand cone. Male cones look like this during the preceding winter. Note the longer cone stalks and rounder shaped cones than in the true totara and the position of the cones in relation to the new spring growth.Fig. 7. New ovules of true totara in mid October. Ovules occur on a receptacle set on a short stalk; they are found towards the base of the newly expanded new growth.Fig. 8. New ovule (in mid October), set on a receptacle on a cone stalk and partially surrounded by a free, soft, scale-like carpidium. a. carpidium, b. micropyle just visible, c. ovule, d. receptacle, e. cone stak. Whole 5mm long.

Fig. 5. Male cones of true totara, two shedding pollen in early November. Note position of cones (indicated by arrow) in relation to the glaucous new spring growth.
Fig. 6. Male cones of Hall's totara breaking bud in December. On the right specimen a club-shaped shoot can be seen below the right hand cone. Male cones look like this during the preceding winter. Note the longer cone stalks and rounder shaped cones than in the true totara and the position of the cones in relation to the new spring growth.
Fig. 7. New ovules of true totara in mid October. Ovules occur on a receptacle set on a short stalk; they are found towards the base of the newly expanded new growth.
Fig. 8. New ovule (in mid October), set on a receptacle on a cone stalk and partially surrounded by a free, soft, scale-like carpidium. a. carpidium, b. micropyle just visible, c. ovule, d. receptacle, e. cone stak. Whole 5mm long.