Abstract

One of the most exciting questions in botany refers to the nature of the angiosperm flower. While most flowering structures are easily identified as flowers, there are few examples lying in-between flowers and inflorescences. Such an example is the staminate unit (‘male flower’) in Ricinus communis (Euphorbiaceae) famous for its branched ‘staminal trees.’ The units were controversially interpreted in the past. Today, they are seen as flowers with multiple branched stamen-fascicles. In the present paper, the recently described floral unit meristem is used to reinterpret the staminate units in Ricinus. This meristem shares almost all characteristics with a flower meristem, but differs from it in the number of fractionation steps resulting in multi-flowered units. Reinvestigation of the development confirms previous studies illustrating up to six fractionation steps before the meristem merges into anther-formation. Fractionation starts early at a naked meristem, covers simultaneously its whole surface, shows an all-side instead of unidirectional splitting pattern and continues repeatedly. Based on the present knowledge, it is plausible to interpret the ‘male flower’ as a floral unit with multiple staminate flowers each reduced to a single anther. This interpretation is in accordance with the many examples of reduced flowers in the Euphorbiaceae.

Highlights

  • One of the most exciting and fundamental questions in botany refers to the nature of the angiosperm flower

  • Conflicts occur when floral organs change position as in the Triuridaceae Lacandonia (Rudall, 2003; Ambrose et al, 2006), when floral organs appear in high numbers as in Centrolepis (Centrolepidaceae, Sokoloff et al, 2009) and Tupidanthus (Araliaceae, Sokoloff et al, 2007) or when flowers are highly reduced and aggregated as in Euphorbia (Prenner and Rudall, 2007)

  • Prenner et al (2008) summarized this history and discussed whether the Ricinus stamen could represent a reduced flower as in several other Euphorbiaceae that possess an obscure flower-inflorescence boundary, but concluded that the staminal trees should be taken as extended stamen fascicles

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most exciting and fundamental questions in botany refers to the nature of the angiosperm flower. Conflicts occur when floral organs change position as in the Triuridaceae Lacandonia (Rudall, 2003; Ambrose et al, 2006), when floral organs appear in high numbers as in Centrolepis (Centrolepidaceae, Sokoloff et al, 2009) and Tupidanthus (Araliaceae, Sokoloff et al, 2007) or when flowers are highly reduced and aggregated as in Euphorbia (Prenner and Rudall, 2007). In these cases, the term pseudanthium reappears indicating that the morphological nature of the angiosperm flowers is still up for debate.

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