Milkweed Flower Morphology

Plants in the subfamily Asclepiadoideae all have a very interesting morphology. One particularly interesting modification is that the staminate and pistillate parts are fused together into a structure called a gynostegium. The stamens have been modified so that the pollen sticks together to form pollinia. Members of the Genus Asclepias (and some other genera) have a very specialized corona that forms structures called hoods and horns. This morphology is explained in the below longitudinal section.

Close-up of a pollinium:

This is what it looks like normally.

Julkaistu marraskuu 29, 2018 01:28 AP. käyttäjältä nathantaylor nathantaylor

Kommentit

Such valuable journal entries. Thanks for putting these informative things together, Nathan! It reminds me of reading @gcwarbler’s blogs — when he worked at Balcones, he put together such great blog entries (and now does it with iNat). https://www.friendsofbalcones.org/chucks-STUFF

Keep it up, Nathan — I really enjoy these entries.

Lähettänyt sambiology yli 5 vuotta sitten

Ditto what @sambiology said. Your contributions are certainly educational and helpful.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge.

Lähettänyt connlindajo yli 5 vuotta sitten

Glad you two are enjoying it!

Lähettänyt nathantaylor yli 5 vuotta sitten

Wonderful, Nathan.

Lähettänyt sonnia yli 5 vuotta sitten

This is so-o-o-o beneficial! Thanks, Nathan.

Lähettänyt suz yli 5 vuotta sitten

great labeling of photos
thanks for sharing!

Lähettänyt louisdemarchi melkein 3 vuotta sitten

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