Quercus petraea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Sessile Oak (Quercus petraea, or Quercus sessiliflora [1]), also known as Durmast Oak, is a species of oak native to most of Europe, and into Anatolia.
Sessility (zoology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Many sessile animals, including sponges, corals, and hydra, are capable of asexual reproduction in situ by a process of budding. Clumping is a behavior in an animal, usually sessile ...
Trillium sessile page
Trillium sessile L. - Wake Robin. Family - Liliaceae. Stems - Aerial stems to +20cm tall, from short rhizomes, herbaceous, erect, purplish (at least at base), glabrous.
sessile - Simple English Wiktionary
(zoology) If an animal is sessile it is attached to something (such as a rock or the ground). It cannot leave what it is attached too. A coral is sessile, it cannot leave its reef.
Quercus petraea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Sessile Oak (Quercus petraea, or Quercus sessiliflora [1]), also known as Durmast Oak, is a species of oak native to most of Europe, and into Anatolia.
sessile polyp - definition of sessile polyp by the Free Online ...
Thesaurus Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms. Noun: 1. sessile polyp - a relatively flat polyp. polyp, polypus - a small vascular growth on the surface of a mucous membrane
Definitions of sessile - OneLook Dictionary Search
Quick definitions (sessile) ▸ adjective: attached directly by the base; not having an intervening stalk ("Sessile flowers") ▸ adjective: permanently attached to a substrate ...
Sessile Barnacles - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Sessile ...
barnacle. Marine crustacean of the subclass Cirripedia. The larval form is free-swimming, but when mature, it fixes itself by the head to rock or floating wood.
sessile lesion: Definition from Answers.com
sessile lesion (ses′il) n A raised, wide-based lesion. ... Your grandson had a staph infection when he was 2 a ct was done and it showed a lesion on the brain It is seven years ...
sessile - Definition of sessile at YourDictionary.com
adjective. Biol. attached directly by its base; permanently fixed; immobile; Bot. having no pedicel or peduncle; attached directly to the main stem, as the flower and leaves of a ...