Abstract

Five taxa representing the three tribes of the Cactaceae have similar patterns of stamen and carpel initiation but display differences in early receptacle development. The first ring of stamens and the carpels arise simultaneously from subsurface layers. The bases of carpels are congenitally connate. Additional stamens are initiated centrifugally. The shape of the floral meristem within the ring created by the first stamens varies. In Pereskia corrugata it remains broadly convex; in Opuntia engelmannii it forms a depression with a small convex central region; in Epiphyllum strictum it forms a broad shallow depression; in Echinocereus reichenbachii var. albispinus it develops a deep depression; and in Mammillaria compressa it develops a depression prior to stamen and carpel initiation. Changes in receptacle shape result from cessation of apical growth and activation of an intercalary ring meristem. These two processes occur earlier in ontogeny in the more advanced of these five taxa.

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