PLANTS AND PEOPLE - FRUIT LAB
Spring 1999
INTRODUCTION:
The goal of this laboratory is to turn your senses
and intellect on to the phenomenal structures commonly known as fruits.
In flowers we observed that the ovary, style, and stigma compose the pistil,
and that the ovary is a protective vessel in which ovules are nourished
to their mature form--seeds. We learned that the ovary, with time,
evolved through the constant modification of leaf material. This
modification of leaf material provides protection and facilitates dispersal
of the seeds. Protection came about by the initial infolding of the
leaf to form an enclosed vessel. Within this ovarian vessel, the
ovules remain attached to parent tissue along zones of placentation.
We refer to these zones of placentation as carpels. Ovaries can be
composed of one to numerous carpels. The number of ovules associated
with each carpel, and thus the number associated with the ovary, can vary
from one to many. Also, ovaries can be separated into several distinct
chambers or consist of only one chamber. These chambers are called
locules. The number of locules is often (but not always) equal to
the number of carpels.
Dispersal of seeds in nature is accomplished in
many ways. Seeds can be dispersed by animals, wind, water, etc.
Animal dispersers range from insects to birds; mammals to fish. Modifications
in the shape, structure, and often color of the protective ovary directly
correspond to the ways in which seeds are dispersed. Bright red,
fleshy berries are commonly dispersed by fruit-eating birds. Winged
fruits, such as those found on maple trees, have obviously come about through
modifications which facilitate wind dispersal. How might nuts, such
as acorns, be dispersed? What animals have you observed eating and
burying acorns in the autumn?
By the end of this laboratory exercise you should
be able to recognize the various fruit types which are present in nature,
and understand the similarities and differences between these fruit types.
You should become familiar with the terminology used to describe fruits,
such as carpel, ovule, zones of placentation, etc. You should be
able to count the number of carpels present in a given fruit and to recognize
the arrangement of these carpels within the ovary. Lastly, and most
importantly, you should be able to recognize by name (common, scientific,
and/or family name) the fruits displayed. You should leave the laboratory
with a deeper appreciation for the fruits of the flowering plant world
and a stomach full of these incredibly delicious phenomena!
I. Angiosperm gynoecia essential for human survival:
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1. LEGUME: Single carpel, multi-seeded, dehiscent
along two sutures (wild types), seed mostly young sporophyte (high protein):
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Peanut - geocarpic, pericarp, testa, cotyledons (high protein
- endosperm converted to embryo - true of most FABACEAE [Leguminosae].
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Green Bean - single line of ovules (nearly mature)
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Snow Pea - ovules and fruit less mature
2. CARYOPSIS: More than one carpel BUT only a
single seed. Seed, mostly endosperm (high starch), is fused to the pericarp
-
Corn (maize) - FRUIT is a CARYOPSIS but the EAR is a MULTIPLE
fruit [fruits from separate flowers of a single INFLORESCENCE combined
in a single structure. Note inflorescence stalk [RACHIS] or corncob.
II. Other fruits and fruit-like structures:
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3. DRUPE: Single carpel, single-seeded, pericarp
tissue differentiated into THREE layers: EXOCARP, MESOCARP, ENDOCARP:
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Peach - exocarp with fuzz
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Nectarine, plum, and cherry - exocarp without fuzz
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Almond - exocarp/mesocarp removed, just PYRENE [=endocarp
and seed]
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Avocado - endocarp VERY thin
-
Coconut - mesocarp fibrous ,[dispersal], testa thin, endosperm
both solid [meat] and liquid [milk]
-
Raspberry - an AGGREGATE (separate ovaries of one flower
on a common receptacle) of small drupes [drupelets]
4. ACHENE: More than one carpel, but only one
seed due to abortion, pericarp a single layer of tissue and SEPARATED from
the seed. (The caryopsis [fruit of the grass family - POACEAE] is similar
in structure BUT pericarp and seed are united.)
-
Sunflower - so-called "sunflower seed" is whole fruit-- the
seed inside is what is edible
-
Strawberry - FRUIT is a tiny achene (many positioned in 'pits'
that occur in the expanded, red, sweet RECEPTACLE of the 'AGGREGATE FRUIT'
[a 'false' fruit]
5. BERRY: More than one carpel, fleshy [animal
dispersed] and many-seeded.
-
Tomato (Roma and 'cherry') - two carpels/locules - primitive
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Tomato (normal) - extra septa and locules
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Peppers - midway between a CAPSULE [dry, dehiscent] and a
berry
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Eggplant - selected for extra tissue - no locules
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Kiwi fruit - leathery, fuzzy pericarp with many carpels,
seeds attached on a central mass of white tissue
-
Banana - epigynous - 'peel' is a combination of pericarp
and HYPANTHIUM - a sterile polyploid, ovules are aborted
-
Blueberry - epigynous
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Grapes - clustered in panicles
6. PEPO: a 'special' BERRY from an epigynous flower
of the CUCURBITACEAE - leathery or hard 'rind' (Pericarp + hypanthium),
1 locule, and 3 lines of ovules (= 3 carpels).
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Cucurbita - summer' squash vs. 'winter' squash [pumpkin]
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Cucumber - entire fruit is consumed
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Watermelon - 90% water
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Honeydew, cantaloupe, musk melons - all one species
7. HESPERIDIUM: a 'special' berry with numerous
carpels (separable as 'sections'); locules filled by plump cells;pericarp
covered by oil glands. Fruit produced by the genus Citrus.
-
Orange, lemon, lime, grapefruit - distinctive essential oils
8. POME: a 'false fruit' that is formed by fusion
of the HYPANTHIUM [flower epigynous] to the ovary, with the hypanthium
forming the edible portion.
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Apple/Pear - note sepals opposed to the pedicel [epigyny],
internal demarcation between ovary wall and hypanthium, locules of ovary
9. MULTIPLE 'FRUIT': a fruiting inflorescence
with true fruits from separate flowers combined into a single unit
(essentially a fruit-like infructescence). The maize ear is a unit
formed from a pistillate inflorescence.
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Pineapple - each perfect flower forms a berry, but they are
compressed together to form the pineapple. Note the central RACHIS of both
pineapple and maize ear (cob) - hard, fibrous = vascularized shoot
(as opposed to pericarp) tissue.
-
Fig - inflorescence enclosed within receptacle tissue (syconium)
10. NUT : a dry, indehiscent, 1-seeded fruit with
a hard exocarp
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Pecan and walnut - edible portion is embryo and cotyledons
11. CAPSULE : a dry, dehiscent fruit made up of
several carpels. The ripe pericarp splits open along pores or slits.
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Okra - capsule eaten while green
ACTIVITY
Carefully examine the fruit material provided.
On a separate piece of paper, list the fruits on display, paying special
attention to their morphology, structure, family and scientific name, and
geographic origin. During the exercise, answer the following questions
for each fruit observed.
1. What is the fruit type?
2. How many carpels are present?
3. Think about the different fruit types
and how they might be dispersed in nature.
Have another look: Go to the Fruit/Flowers
Table or see the Review
Questions