Accessory fruit

An accessory fruit is a fruit in which some of the flesh is derived not from the floral ovary but from some adjacent tissue exterior to the carpel.[1]

A selection of accessory fruits (from left to right: pear, fig, and strawberry)

Terminology

Alternative terms for accessory fruit are false fruit, spurious fruit, pseudofruit, or pseudocarp. These are older terms for accessory fruit that have been criticized as "inapt",[1] and are not used by some botanists today.

Examples

The following are examples of accessory fruits listed by the plant organ from which the accessory tissue is derived:[2]

Fruit with fleshy seeds, such as pomegranate or mamoncillo, are not considered to be accessory fruits.

gollark: You should compress my 500MB gollarious neural network.
gollark: Iterate through all possible programs and store the shortest one which produces the output.
gollark: Just store the RNG code and seed, as determined using magic.
gollark: I can do very basic assembly and also write osmarksASMâ„¢ moderately well.
gollark: My random-stuff repository has some mildly cool things intermixed with random trash.

See also

References

  1. Esau, K. 1977. Anatomy of seed plants. John Wiley and Sons, New York.
  2. Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary entries for syconium, accessory fruit, core, and strawberry, Merriam-Webster, Inc., 2006


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