determinate inflorescence
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flower structure
- In inflorescence: Determinate inflorescence.
In determinate (cymose) inflorescences, the youngest flowers are at the bottom of an elongated axis or on the outside of a truncated axis. At the time of flowering, the apical meristem (the terminal point of cell division) produces a flower bud, thus arresting…
Read More - In Asteraceae: Flowers
…(capitulescences) of Asteraceae is typically cymose (determinate). The terminal head on the main axis blooms first, followed by the terminal heads of the main branches. After that the sequence is mixed, with both cymose and racemose components. Only rarely, and then clearly as a derived condition, is the secondary inflorescence…
Read More - In angiosperm: Inflorescences
In the determinate (cymose) inflorescences, the youngest flowers (those that are the last to open) are at the bottom of an elongated axis or on the outside of a truncated axis (e.g., in the cymose umbel of onions, Allium; Alliaceae). These inflorescences are determinate because, at the…
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