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Flowers Flowers • Functions • Specialized Shoots Bearing Reproductive Organs • Typically Composed of 4 Whorls of Highly Modified Leaves Called Floral Organs • Determinate Shoots Symmetry • How Many Directions Can You Slice Flowers & Have Them Form Mirror Images? • Actinomorphic —Star Shaped —Radially Symmetrical • Zygomorphic —Not Radially Symmetrical Pollinators • Bees • Hummingbirds • Bats • Wasps • Flies • Moths • Other? MONOCOTS DICOTS Embryo With single cotyledons Pollen With single furrow or pore Flower parts in multiples of three Major leaf veins parallel Stem vascular bundles scattered Roots are adventitious Embryo With two cotyledons Pollen With three furrows or pores Flower parts in multiples of four or five Major leaf veins reticulated Stem vascular bundles in a ring Roots develop From radicle Secondary growth absent Secondary growth Often Flower Parts • Some Flower Parts Are Not Essential –Sepal • Structure Which Usually Forms the Outermost Whorl of the Flower • Collectively, the Calyx – Petals • Dicot Accessory Flower Structures • Usually Whorled Floral Structures Which Collectively Make Up the Corolla • They Protect the Inner Reproductive Structures • Often Attract Insects By Their Color or Nectar • Thus Facilitate Pollination • Perianth – Non-Reproductive Parts of the Flower Essential Flower Structures • Stamen (Male Flower) –Anther (Produces Pollen) –Filament (Stalk to Support the Anther) • Androecium (All Stamens) • Pistil (Female Flower) –Stigma (Receives Pollen) –Style (Connects Stigma to Ovary) –Ovary (Contains the Egg & 1 or More Ovules) –Gynoecium (All Pistils) • Nectaries at Base of Perianth –Produce Sticky, Sugary Substance, Attract Pollinators • Receptacle –The Enlarged Apex of the Pedicel Into Floral Parts Arise –Supports the Flower –Strawberry • The Fleshy Portion –Apple • Ovary Is Recessed Into the Receptacle • Rachis –Main Axis or Shaft • Main Stem of Inflorescence • Stalk of a Compound Leaf • Cluster of Grapes • Head of Wheat • Pedicel –Supports an Individual Flower in an Inflorescence • Peduncle –Floral Axis –Stalk That Connects a Flower to the Stem –Single Flowers or Inflorescences • Bracts –Modified Leaves That Replace the Calyx & Corolla Flower vs. Inflorescence • Flower –Reproductive Structure Found in Angiosperms • Inflorescence –Collection of Individual Flowers on a Main Stem http://www.lib.ksu.edu/wildflower/drawing/inflorescence.jpg Types of Inflorescences • Spike –Flowers Attached Directly to Rachis –Sessile • Flowers Attached Directly to Rachis Without a Pedicel • Raceme –Just Like Spike Except Raceme Has Pedicels –Flowers Are Pedicellate • Panicle –A Branched Raceme –Each Branch Bears a Further Raceme of Flowers –Flowers May Be Sessile or Pedicellate • Corymb –Pedicles of Different Lengths Attach at Different Locations on Axis to Create a Flat-Topped Inflorescence • Umbel –Has No Central Axis –All Pedicles Attach at the Same Point at Base of Inflorescence – • Head –Many Sessile Flowers That Are Tightly Clustered on a Flattened Receptacle –Two Types of Flowers • Ray • Disk • Capitulum –Similar to Head Inflorescence Except the Head Is Rounded –Flowers Can Be Either Sessile or Pedicellate –eg: Red Clover or White Clover • Catkins –Slim, Cylindrical Flower Cluster, Inconspicuous or No Petals –Usually Wind-Pollinated, Sometimes Insects Grass Flower • Spikelet – Individual Flowering Unit of Grasses – Spikelet Contains 1. Glumes 2. Rachilla 3. Florets 4. Lemma 5. Palea 6. Lodicules 7. Pistil 8. Stamens 1. Glumes – 2 Leaflike Bracts at Base of Spikelet & Enclose the Rest of Spikelet 2. Rachilla – The Central Axis of the Spikelet – It Is a StalkLike Structure That Connects All the Florets 3. Florets – 1 or More per Spikelet – Contain Stamens & Pistil With Other Bracts – Uppermost Floret Usually Undeveloped & Sterile 4. Lemma – The First Bract at the Base of the Floret – Its Tip Is Called the Awn 5. Palea – A Bract Located Just Above & Opposite the Lemma – Together the Lemma & Palea Enclose the Stamens & Pistil 6. Lodicules – Very Small Bracts at Base of Pistil – Serve No Known Function Except for Identification 7. Pistil – The Female Organ of the Plant 8. Stamens – The Male Reproductive Organs of the Plant – In Monocots, the Stamens Occur in Multiples of 3 – Most Grasses Have 3 Stamens Plant Sex! • Complete Flower –Contains All 4 Flower Parts • Sepals • Petals • Pistil • Stamens • Incomplete Flower –Missing 1 or More of These Parts • Perfect Flowers –Contain Both the Stamens & Pistil • Imperfect Flowers –Are Missing Either the Stamens or Pistil –Monoecious vs. Dioecious • Pistillate Flower –Has Only Female Flower Parts • Staminate Flower –Has Only Male Flower Parts • Monoecious Plants –“One House” –Pistillate Flowers & Staminate Flowers on the Same Plant –eg: Corn, Begonia • Dioecious Plants –“Two Houses” –Only Staminate or Pistillate Flowers –eg: Buffalograss, Holly • Synoecious Plants –Contain Perfect Flowers • Hypanthodium –Spherical Receptacle With Cavity Inside –Numerous Small Sessile Flowers on Inner Surface –Most Self-Pollinating –Explodes Seeds Everywhere