Describing a structure or pattern that divides dichotomously (into two) and then trichotomously (into three), creating a branching pattern with multiple divisions.
From di- (two) plus trichotomous (from Greek trichotmos, dividing into three). The term combines two division patterns to describe complex biological or mathematical structures that split in multiple ways.
Ditrichotomous branching appears in everything from river deltas to lung bronchioles to botanical structures—nature loves elegant division strategies because they maximize surface area and distribution. It's fractal-like mathematical beauty hiding in plain biological sight!
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