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Flower Description Glossary PDF

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665 views5 pages

Flower Description Glossary PDF

Uploaded by

beko
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Description of Flowers

Various technical terms are used for describing the form and arrangement of flowers. These are grouped
below as follows:

1. Terms describing basic flower anatomy


2. Terms describing the inflorescence or flowering body

Terms describing flower anatomy


Classical angiosperm phylogeny is based mainly on flower anatomy, and in particular, the arrangement
and form of the principle parts. The fruiting body is used as well, but its structure is often apparent in the
flowers. More recently, genetic studies have been employed to determine the relationship of various
botanical groups to each other. Many parts of the old classification system have proven more or less
consistent with these studies, but there have also been a large number of changes, even to large and well
studied groups. The changes to the classical system have been far more extensive than in the animal
kingdom, where the classical, anatomy-based phylogeny has held up remarkably well. As a result,
botanical nomenclature has been undergoing a bit of a revolution in the last two decades, and the process
(as of 2009) is still ongoing. A community known as the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group or APG has
provided some centrality to this process, but there are many areas where no consensus has been reached.
Botany has always been prone to what might be termed "vanity species" with some genera (e.g.
hieracium, the hawkweeds) having thousands of specific scientific names. The recent trend has been to
recognize certain species as highly variable; but history dies hard, especially for those who discovered
and described the "species".

A flower is the reproductive unit of an angiosperm plant. There is an enormous variety of flowers, but all
have some characteristics in common. The definitive characteristic of the angiosperms is the enclosed
ovary, which contains and protects the developing seeds. Floral reproduction is bisexual, and flowers
have "male" and "female" parts. The "male" or pollen-bearing part is called the stamen, and is composed
of the filament and the anther. The "female" or seed-bearing part is called the pistil, and is composed of
the ovary, the stigma, and the style. A flower may have exclusively male parts, exclusively female parts,
or commonly, both. When there are separate flower types, both may occur on the same plant; occasionally
a plant may bear only male or female flowers.

Surrounding the reproductive parts is the perianth, a double envelope consisting of an outer portion, the
calyx, which forms the sepals, and an inner portion, the corolla, which forms the familiar petals. There
may also be leafy elements, termed bracts, surrounding a flower. Individual flowers are often organized
into a larger group or cluster, termed an inflorescence. The stalk supporting a single flower is called a
pedicel, that supporting an inflorescence, or an isolated flower, a peduncle.
Anther:
The pollen-bearing body of the stamen, usually relatively compact, and supported at the end of the
narrow filament. Under a lens, anthers exhibit a wide variety of forms and means of attachment.
These characteristics are often important in technical keys for flower identification.

Bract:
A leaf-like element below a flower or on an inflorescence. Bracts are typically shaped differently
than other leaves on the plant. They are usually green, but occasionally are brightly colored and
petal-like.

Calyx:
The outer perianth of a flower. The calyx surrounds the corolla, and is typically divided into lobes
called sepals. These are frequently green, and reduced relative to the petals, but they can also be
large, and brightly colored, resembling petals. In many flowers, the sepals enclose and protect the
flower bud prior to opening.

Corolla:
The inner perianth of a flower. The corolla typically surrounds the reproductive parts of the flower.
It may be continuous as in a petunia, lobed, or divided into distinct petals. In some cases, especially
in cultivated varieties, the corolla may be doubled or even further multiplied, producing multiple
layers of petals. In other cases, it may be lacking entirely.

Filament:
The usually narrow and often threadlike part of the stamen which supports the pollen-bearing
anther.

Involucre:
A circle or cup of bracts that surrounds and supports the multiple florets of the head in the
composite flowers of the family asteraceae. The shape and arrangement of the involucral bracts is
important in describing the members of this family.

Ovary:
The part of the pistil that encloses the unfertilized seeds or ovules, and that typically develops into a
dry or fleshy fruit once pollination takes place. The ovary is generally central to the flower, and
supports the other principle parts. Whether they are attached at the top (ovary inferior) or the
bottom (ovary superior) is an important anatomical characteristic for classification. Not all "fruits"
are mature ovaries; some form from supporting parts of the flower, for example, strawberries
develop from the receptacle - the enlarged top of the flower stalk.

Pedicel:
The footstalk supporting a single flower in an inflorescence.

Peduncle:
The stalk supporting an inflorescence or solitary flower.

Perianth:
The technical term for the envelope that surrounds the reproductive parts of a flower. This
enclosure is composed of two concentric units, the outer perianth, or calyx which may be divided
into sepals, and the inner perianth, or corolla, which may be divided into petals. Either the calyx or
the corolla (or both) may be much reduced or lacking.

Petal:
A division or lobe of the corolla or inner perianth of a flower.

Pistil:
The seed-bearing or "female" reproductive part of a flower. The pistil is composed of the ovary, the
style, and the stigma. The ovary contains the developing seeds, and is connected to the pollen-
receiving stigma by the style. Flowers often contain a single pistil, but may contain several.
Staminate or "male" flowers contain only stamens and lack pistils entirely.

Receptacle:
The generally enlarged top of the footstalk, which supports the other parts of the flower. Some
"fruits" are enlarged receptacles rather than ovaries.

Sepal:
A division or lobe of the calyx or outer perianth of a flower. Sepals are often green, and/or reduced
in size, but they can be colorful and petal-like as well.

Stamen:
The pollen-bearing or "male" reproductive part of a flower. The pollen is borne on a more or less
compact body termed the anther, which is supported by the filament. A flower may have hundreds
of stamens, or only a few. Pistillate or "female" flowers have pistils but no stamens.

Stigma:
The upper part of the pistil which receives the pollen. The stigma is often sticky, or covered with
fine hairs or grooves, or other anatomical features that help the pollen to adhere. It may be cleft into
several parts.

Style:
The usually elongated part of the pistil that connects the ovary to the stigma.

Terms describing the inflorescence


Inflorescence refers to the flowering body of a plant. These occur in an amazing variety of forms, from
solitary flowers to enormously complex clusters, and there is an equally amazing variety of technical
terminology used to describe them. Unfortunately, as with some other aspects of botany, this terminology
is not universally standardized; different authors use different terms for the same structure, and sometimes
the same terms in slightly or significantly different ways, and classify structures using different
paradigms. We only brush the surface here, making use of a few of the most commonly used terms.

A basic and useful but somewhat non-immediately-obvious technical distinction is between determinate
and indeterminate inflorescences. A determinate form has a fixed endpoint, usually a terminal flower that
generally opens first. Lower side branches bear buds that open later. Indeterminate forms are often termed
cymose or cymes. An indeterminate form is a shoot that can, at least theoretically, continue growing from
the tip and producing more flowers indefinitely. The lower flowers open first, while upper buds may still
be tiny and developing. Of course the whole process eventually comes to an end, but the distinction is
frequently obvious. Indeterminate forms are termed racemose or racemes, though the latter term also has
the more specific technical meaning described below. Of course in botany, nothing is ever simple. There
are compound inflorescences that are mixtures of forms in every conceivable combination.

Solitary: show all


Flowers (or heads) borne singly on isolated stems or arising individually from leaf axils. Not part of
a larger group.

Raceme: show all


A simple, indeterminate inflorescence consisting of stalked flowers attached to a central stem and
forming a more or less elongated cluster. The stalk of a flower is termed a pedicle and pedicled
flowers are implied by the term raceme when used alone in the specific sense.

Spike: show all


An indeterminate inflorescence consisting of stalkless flowers attached to a central stem, generally
forming a highly elongated cluster. A raceme of stalkless flowers.

Corymb: show all


An indeterminate inflorescence forming a convex or flat-topped cluster, essentially a contracted
raceme. Typically flowers arise from a central axis on stalks (pedicles) of different lengths that
bring them all to near the same height. The term is also applied to racemes of similar shape with
branching pedicles. The outermost flowers generally open first.

Umbel: show all


An branched inflorescence forming a convex or flat-topped cluster in which all the pedicles are
nearly the same length, and appear to originate near a single point (like the spokes of an umbrella).
Many umbels are actually highly contracted racemes, though the term is frequently used with
determinate forms as well. Umbels can be compound, that is an umbel of umbels. The form is
characteristic of the parsely family (apiaceae), which was formerly known as umbelliferae.

Head: show all


A compact inflorescence, with the flowers so tightly packed as to appear a single unit. The
composite flowers of the sunflower family (asteraceae) are the most familiar examples, but there
are many other instances. The term is applied to both determinate and indeterminate units.

Panicle: show all


An indeterminate inflorescence consisting of a compound raceme; that is, a central axis bearing
racemes as secondary units, or a more general branching structure composed of racemes. The term
is sometimes applied to any sort of a loose, branching cluster.

Cyme: show all


A determinate inflorescence, often one forming a convex or flat-topped cluster, though the term is
applied to other determinate arrangements as well. In all forms, a terminal flower opens first,
followed by flowers on lower branches. Multiple levels of branching are frequently involved.

Copyright © 2009, 2012, Randal C. Nelson

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