Abstract

The phytelephantoid group, considered very highly specialized among the 15 major groups of palms, includes only three dioecious genera which are distinguished by multipartite flowers. Staminate flowers of these genera have from 120 to over 900 stamens, the largest number known in palms. Developmental material shows centrifugal inception of stamens in Palandra and Phytelephas, and the course of the trunk bundles indicates centrifugal initiation of stamens in Ammandra. Stamens of all three genera are supplied by large trunk bundles that develop acropetally following the different centrifugal expansion of the floral apex in each genus. Branches of the trunk bundles form later to supply stamen primordia as they develop. Polyandric androecia occur in ten of the major groups of palms. Other multistaminate genera show expansion and change in shape of the floral apex before stamen initiation. Centrifugal development appears to represent a different method of expansion of the floral apex to accommodate increase in stamen number in this group. Centrifugal inception of stamens in monocotyledons has previously been established only for two genera of Butomaceae.

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