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- Gynoecium: Meaning, Structure, Parts Types Explained - Vedantu
Apocarpous gynoecium has carpels free and separate from each other (example: rose, lotus) These types are important to understand floral structure variations
- American Journal of Botany - Botanical Society of America
In multiple-carpel flowering plants, the gynoecium is described as apocarpous when every carpel is separated and as syncarpous when the carpels are fused The gynoecium structure plays a vital role in the sexual reproduction of angiosperms
- Structure of Gynoecium - Detailed Explanation with Diagrams . . .
A comprehensive guide to understanding the structure of Gynoecium, the female reproductive structure in flowers Learn about its parts, types of placentation, and different types of flowers based on the position of the ovary
- Gynoecium - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
An apocarpous gynoecium is generally thought to be the ancestral condition in the angiosperms In contrast, a syncarpous gynoecial fusion is one in which carpels are connate (the pistil compound ) and is the most common type in flowering plants
- Gynoecium of a Flower (With Diagrams) - Biology Discussion
In such a gynoecium, the different carpels may remain completely free from one another when it is termed apocarpous (apocarpous multiple, as opposed to simple, as there are multiple carpels) or the carpels may unite with each other, wholly or partially, forming syncarpous gynoeciums
- Essential Parts of Flower: Gynoecium - Shaalaa. com
Gynoecium (carpel) arises as a small papillate outgrowth of meristematic tissue from the growing tip of the floral primordium It grows actively and soon gets differentiated into ovary, style and stigma
- Gynoecium of a flower may be apocarpous or syncarpous . . .
If a gynoecium has multiple, distinct (free, unfused) carpels, it is apocarpous The example includes strawberry, buttercup etc If a gynoecium has multiple carpels fused into a single structure, it is syncarpous
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