53 Other Flower Characteristics and Terminology

Symmetry

When a flower can be cut into equal halves along more than one line, then the flower has radial symmetry and is called regular.

 

Flower with radial lines of symmetry shown
If a flower has only one line of symmetry then it has bilateral symmetry and is considered irregular.
flower with one line of symmetry shown

Solitary

When there is only one flower in a terminal position or in the axil between the leaf and the stem on a plant, it is a solitary flower plant.

Example of a solitary flower in a plant      drawing of a tulip plant

Inflorescence and related terminology

If a flowering branch carries more than one flower, it is called an inflorescence, or cluster.

Peduncle-The branch bearing the flower or inflorescence.

Pedicel-The stalk of an individual flower in an inflorescence.

diagrams of the common inflorescences, including corymb, umbel, compound umbel, panicle, spike, raceme, spadix and capitulum

 

More definitions:
Indeterminate inflorescences – first flowers to open are at the base; the youngest flower is at the top of the stalk
Determinant inflorescences – first flowers to open are at the top; the oldest flower is at the top of the stalk
Spike – an elongate, unbranched, indeterminate inflorescence with sessile flowers.
Spikelet – a small spike, characteristic of grasses and sedges.
Raceme – an elongate, unbranched, indeterminate inflorescence with pedicelled flowers.
Panicle – a branched raceme.
Corymb – a flat-topped raceme with elongate pedicels reaching the same level.
Compound Corymb – a branched corymb.
Umbel – a flat-topped or rounded inflorescence with the pedicels originating from a common point. Umbels can be determinate or indeterminate.
Compound Umbel – a branched umbel, with primary rays arising from a common point, and    secondary umbels arising from the tip of the primary rays.
Capitulum (or head) – a dense vertically compressed inflorescence with sessile flowers on a receptacle and subtended by an involucre of phyllaries, characteristic of the Asteraceae. Heads can be determinate or indeterminate.
Thyrse – a many-flowered inflorescence with an indeterminate central axis and many opposite, lateral dichasia; a mixed inflorescence, with determinate and indeterminate shoots.

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