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Inflorescences Spring 2012

Inflorescences

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Inflorescences. Spring 2012. What is an inflorescence?. Simpson = An aggregate of one or more flowers, the boundaries of which generally occur with the presence of vegetative leaves below - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Inflorescences

Inflorescences

Spring 2012

Page 2: Inflorescences

What is an inflorescence?

• Simpson = An aggregate of one or more flowers, the boundaries of which generally occur with the presence of vegetative leaves below

• Judd et al. 2008 = The shoot system which serves for the formation of flowers and which is modified accordingly

Page 3: Inflorescences

Look for the flowering zone!

(from Judd et al. 2008)

Page 4: Inflorescences

Inflorescence development

Determinate: the apical meristem of the primary inflorescence axis terminates in a flower, which usually matures first with overall maturation from the apex to the base

Indeterminate: the apical meristem of the primary inflorescence axis does not terminate in a flower,with maturation going from the base to the apex

Page 5: Inflorescences

Determinate inflorescencesFig. 9.35

Page 6: Inflorescences

cyme

scorpioid cyme

head helicoid cyme

terminal &solitary

Page 7: Inflorescences

Indeterminate inflorescences

Fig. 9.36

Page 8: Inflorescences

spadixheadpanicle

raceme

spike

Page 9: Inflorescences

Determinate or indeterminate types

Fig. 9.37Also heads can be either.

Page 10: Inflorescences

Secondary or compound inflorescence types

Fig. 9.38

Page 11: Inflorescences

Specialized inflorescence types

Fig. 9.39

Page 12: Inflorescences

Fruits

Spring 2012

Page 13: Inflorescences

Maturation• An inflorescence matures into an

infructescence.

• An ovary (simple or compound) matures into the fruit (but may include additional structures (e.g., hypanthium).

• A fertilized ovule matures into a seed.

Page 14: Inflorescences

Ovary wall becomes the pericarp:

• ENDOCARP – innermost layer • MESOCARP - middle layer • EXOCARP - outermost layer

Each can be modified independently of the others (e.g., the endocarp can be stony, the mesocarp fleshy, and the exocarp leathery)

pericarp

Page 15: Inflorescences

Avocado (Persea, Lauraceae)

seedseed

endocarpendocarpmesocarpmesocarp

exocarpexocarp

Page 16: Inflorescences

Three main fruit types• Simple fruit = a fruit that develops from a

single flower

• Aggregate fruit = develops from multiple separate carpels of a single flower

• Multiple fruit = a fruit derived from the gynoecia of several closely clustered flowers

Page 17: Inflorescences

Simple fruits

• Simple fruits = fruits developing from a single carpel or a compound ovary (2 or more fused carpels) (e.g., apple); can be dry or fleshy

Page 18: Inflorescences

Dry Simple Fruits

• Dry at maturity • Does fruit open (dehisce) or not? (Dehiscent versus indehiscent) • Number of carpels? Number of seeds?

• Are any wings present?

Page 19: Inflorescences

Indehiscent Dry Fruits

Fig. 9.40

Page 20: Inflorescences

Achene: single-seeded, seed coat not fused to pericarp

Page 21: Inflorescences

Utricle – achene with the pericarp much larger than the seed

Page 22: Inflorescences

Caryopsis: “Grains”; singled-seeded, seed coat fused to pericarp; unique to grasses

Wheat (Triticum aestivum)

Maize (Zea mays)

Page 23: Inflorescences

Samara

Ulmus (Ulmaceae)

Page 24: Inflorescences

Dry Indehiscent Fruits: Nuts

hard-shelled,one-seeded

Page 25: Inflorescences

Dehiscent Dry FruitsFig. 9.41

Page 26: Inflorescences

Follicle: one suture opens

Asclepias (Milkweed, Apocynaceae)

Page 27: Inflorescences

Legume: opens along 2 sutures

Bean Family Fabaceae(Leguminosae)

Page 28: Inflorescences

Cruciferous Dry Fruits

Silique SilicleMustard Family (Brassicaceae)2-carpellate, outer rim (replum), persistent partition (false septum)

Page 29: Inflorescences

Capsule: a fruit formed from 2 or more united carpels and dehiscing at maturity to release the seeds

Page 30: Inflorescences

Loculicidal Capsule

Page 31: Inflorescences

Septicidal Capsule

Page 32: Inflorescences

Poricidal Capsule

Papaver (Poppy, Papaveraceae)

Page 33: Inflorescences

Schizocarp of mericarps

samaroid mericarpsAcer (Sapindaceae)

Dill (Apiaceae)

Page 34: Inflorescences

Fleshy Simple Fruits

One or more layers of the pericarpbecome fleshy—which one(s)?

Number of carpels? Number of seeds?

From a superior or inferior ovary?

Page 35: Inflorescences

Fleshy Simple Fruits

• Berry – Entire pericarp fleshy or exocarp may be leathery, one to many seeds• Drupe - Exocarp & mesocarp fleshy,

endocarp hard (single-seeded)• Pome – Fleshy mesocarp; exocarp

fused to hypanthium/receptacle (Rosaceae)

Page 36: Inflorescences

Drupe

Page 37: Inflorescences

Drupe - Coconut

Cocos nucifera (Arecaceae)

Page 38: Inflorescences

Berry

Capsicum (Solanaceae)

Page 39: Inflorescences

Berry (Pepo)

Found in the Cucumber Family (Cucurbitaceae):parietal placentation,leathery exocarp

Page 40: Inflorescences

Berry(hesperidium)

Found in the citrus family (Rutaceae):Leathery exocarp, fleshy modified trichomes (juice sacs)

Page 41: Inflorescences

Pome

Rose family (Rosaceae): inferior ovary, cartilaginous endocarp, fleshy hypanthial tissue

Page 42: Inflorescences

Three main fruit types• Simple fruit = a fruit that develops from a

single flower

• Aggregate fruit = develops from multiple separate carpels of a single flower

• Multiple fruit = a fruit derived from the gynoecia of several closely clustered flowers

Page 43: Inflorescences

Aggregate Fruit

Rubus(Rosaceae)

Page 44: Inflorescences

Aggregate of Achenes

Page 45: Inflorescences

Three main fruit types• Simple fruit = a fruit that develops from a

single flower

• Aggregate fruit = develops from multiple separate carpels of a single flower

• Multiple fruit = a fruit derived from the gynoecia of several closely clustered flowers

Page 46: Inflorescences

Multiple fruit of achenes

A. Laurent

Platanus (sycamore)

Page 47: Inflorescences

Multiple Fruit - Pineapple

Ananas (Bromeliaceae)

Page 48: Inflorescences

Multiple Fruit: Syconium (Fig)

Ficus (Moraceae)