free central placentation
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - A botanical structure: "free central placentation" is a specific arrangement of ovules within the ovary of a flowering plant. In this type, the ovules are attached to a central, free-standing column or axis that arises from the base of the ovary. This central column is not connected by partitions (septa) to the ovary wall, or the septa are present only at the very base.
Usage
This is a technical botanical term used to describe plant morphology and classification. - The characteristic free central placentation of the Caryophyllaceae family helps in its identification. - In a primrose flower, you can observe free central placentation in its ovary.
Advanced Usage
- Descriptive Use: The term is used to detail the internal anatomy of a gynoecium (the female reproductive part of a flower).
- The shift from axile to free central placentation is an evolutionary trait observed in some plant families.
Variants and Related Words
- Placentation (n): The general term for the arrangement of ovules within the ovary. Other types include axile, parietal, basal, and marginal placentation.
- Axile placentation (n): Ovules are attached to the central axis in chambers separated by septa (e.g., tomato, lily).
- Parietal placentation (n): Ovules are attached to the inner wall of the ovary (e.g., violet, cucumber).
Synonyms
- Central placentation: A less specific synonym that may sometimes be used interchangeably, though "free central" is the precise term.
Related Terms (Conceptual)
- Ovule (n): The structure that develops into a seed after fertilization.
- Ovary (n): The part of the pistil that contains the ovules.
- Septa (n): The partitions that can divide an ovary into chambers (locules). Their absence is key to free central placentation.
Noun
- where ovules develop on a central column in a compound ovary lacking septa or with septa at base only