floral cup
Noun: 1. A Botanical Structure: The floral cup is the part of a flower that forms a cup-like, ring-like, or tubular base. It is the structure from which the sepals, petals, and stamens appear to grow. It is a characteristic feature found in certain plant families, most notably the Rosaceae (rose family).
The term "floral cup" is a specific botanical term used to describe the morphology (shape and structure) of a flower. It is used when identifying, classifying, or scientifically describing plants. - The deep floral cup of the rose is one of its defining features. - Botanists noted the presence of a prominent floral cup in the specimen, helping to place it in the correct family.
- Hypanthium: In botanical science, "floral cup" is often synonymous with the term hypanthium. This is a more technical term for the same structure.
- The hypanthium, or floral cup, can be fused to the ovary wall in some species.
- Hypanthium (noun): The technical botanical term for a floral cup.
- Calyx Tube: In some contexts, the floral cup can refer specifically to the fused part of the sepals (calyx) forming a tube. However, a true floral cup (hypanthium) typically bears both the calyx the corolla (petals).
- Hypanthium
- Flower cup (less technical)
The term "floral cup" has a very specific meaning in botany. In everyday language, the separate words "floral" and "cup" could describe a decorative cup with flower patterns, but as a combined term, it almost exclusively refers to the botanical structure.
- the cuplike or ringlike or tubular structure of a flower which bears the sepals and stamens and calyx (as in Rosaceae)