4.6 Article

Towards an ontogenetic understanding of inflorescence diversity

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 112, Issue 8, Pages 1523-1542

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mct009

Keywords

Botryoid; floral unit (FU); flowering sequence; flowering shoot system (FSS); foliage; inflorescence; meristem potential; ontogenetic concept; panicle; position; raceme; thyrse

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Conceptual and terminological conflicts in inflorescence morphology indicate a lack of understanding of the phenotypic diversity of inflorescences. In this study, an ontogeny-based inflorescence concept is presented considering different meristem types and developmental pathways. By going back to the ontogenetic origin, diversity is reduced to a limited number of types and terms. Species from 105 genera in 52 angiosperm families are investigated to identify their specific reproductive meristems and developmental pathways. Based on these studies, long-term experience with inflorescences and literature research, a conceptual framework for the understanding of inflorescences is presented. Ontogeny reveals that reproductive systems traditionally called inflorescences fall into three groups, i.e. flowering shoot systems (FSS), inflorescences sensu stricto and floral units (FUs). Our concept is, first, based on the identification of reproductive meristem position and developmental potential. The FSS, defined as a seasonal growth unit, is used as a reference framework. As the FSS is a leafy shoot system bearing reproductive units, foliage and flowering sequence play an important role. Second, the identification of two different flower-producing meristems is essential. While inflorescence meristems (IMs) share acropetal primordia production with vegetative meristems, floral unit meristems (FUMs) resemble flower meristems in being indeterminate. IMs produce the basic inflorescence types, i.e. compound and simple racemes, panicles and botryoids. FUMs give rise to dense, often flower-like units (e.g. heads). They occur solitarily at the FSS or occupy flower positions in inflorescences, rendering the latter thyrses in the case of cymose branching. The ontogenetic concept differs from all existing inflorescence concepts in being based on meristems and developmental processes. It includes clear terms and allows homology statements. Transitional forms are an explicit part of the concept, illustrating the ontogenetic potential for character transformation in evolution.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available