The offspring of parents of two different species. larva (plural: larvae)—an early stage, between egg and pupa, in the lives of insects that change their forms as they develop.
A cross between two species.
Cross fertilization between two varieties or, more usually, two species of vines.
A plant that results from a cross between two parent species that are genetically different.
Plant with parents which are genetically distinct. The parent plants may be different cultivars, varieties, species, or genera; the hybrid usually exhibits a mixture of traits of its parents.
This is produced by a cross-fertilization between two species. This happens a lot more often than botanists would like, since a species is presumed to have distinct genetic characteristics and shouldn’t do this hybridizing thing as often as it does. Most of the dozen or so species of Silk Tassel are really genetically the same, and the three hundred species of Aconite worldwide are all capable of hybridizing as well.
A cross between two allied species.
A plant originating by fertilization of one species or subspecies by another.
The offspring of cross-fertilization between two different species.
A plant that is the product of a cross between two (or more) species.
A plant originating from a cross between species in the same genus or, more rarely, between species in different genera. Hybrids ovary are denoted by a multiplication-sign in the plant’s scientific name (eg Crataegus x media).
A plant originating from the crosspollination, either in the wild or as the result of match-making by the gardener, of two different species. If hybrids are crossed, the resulting plants may carry the genes of several species. Hybrids between plants of different genera are rare, though quite common among orchids.
In genetics, the result of a cross between two species or incipient species.
An organism that is a result of a cross between individuals that are not genetically the same as each other.
A plant resulting from natural or human-induced crossbreeding between varieties, species, or genera; the hybrid expresses features of each parent plant.
A plant originating from the cross-pollination, either in the wild or as the result of match¬ making by the gardener, of two different species. If hybrids are crossed, the resulting plants may carry the genes of several species. Hybrids between plants of different genera are rare, though quite common among orchids. In plant breeding the term hybrid is extended to include crosses between cultivated different strains of the one species, for example, of maize or wheat.
Offspring of a cross between two individuals of different species; for example, a mule is a hybrid, the result of mating a male donkey and a female horse. Most hybrids are sterile.
The offspring of a cross between two genetically unlike individuals. A hybrid, whose parents are usually of different species or varieties, is often sterile.
The offspring of parents that are different, such as different species.
A plant resulting from a cross between different species.
A plant produced by the fertilization of one species by another.
The children of parents who exhibit varying characteristics, either singly or in multiple aspects.