*MAJOR FRUIT TYPES:*

I. Simple Fruits: A single ripened ovary from a single flower.  A. Fleshy
Fruits: All of most of the ovary wall (pericarp) is soft or fleshy at
maturity.  1. Berry: Entire pericarp is fleshy, although skin is sometimes
tough; may be one or many seeded. E.g. grape, tomato, papaya, pomegranate,
sapote, persimmon, guava, banana and avocado. The latter two fruits are
often termed baccate (berry-like). [The banana fruit is a seedless,
parthenocarpic berry developing without pollination and fertilization. In
the pomegranate, the edible part is the fleshy layer (aril) around each
seed.] For photos of many of these berries, look them up by common name in
the Wayne's Word Index <http://waynesword.palomar.edu/indxwayn.htm>.

2. Pepo: Berry with a hard, thick rind; typical fruit of the gourd family
(Cucurbitaceae). E.g. watermelon, cucumber, squash, cantelope and pumpkin.

 3. Hesperidium: Berry with a leathery rind and parchment-like partitions
between sections; typical fruit of the citrus family (Rutaceae). E.g.
orange, lemon, grapefruit, tangelo and kumquat.


4. Drupe: Fleshy fruit with hard inner layer (endocarp or stone) surrounding
the seed. E.g. peach, plum, nectarine, apricot, cherry, olive, mango and
almond. Some botanists also include the fruits of walnuts, pecans, date
palms, macadamia nuts, pistachio nuts, tung oil and kukui nuts as drupes
because of their outer, green, fleshy husk and stony, seed-bearing endocarp.
These latter fruits are also called drupaceous nuts. The coconut is
considered a dry drupe with a green, waterproof outer layer (exocarp), a
thick, buoyant, fibrous husk (mesocarp) and a hard, woody, inner layer
(endocarp) surrounding the large seed. The actual seed embryo is embedded in
the coconut meat (endosperm). Nutrient-rich coconut milk is liquid endosperm
that has not formed firm tissue with cell walls. [There is considerable
disagreement among authorities about the classification of some of these
fruits. For example, the California Macadamia Society considers the
macadamia nut to be a follicle. See section B-1 below under dry, dehiscent
fruits.]

Note: A number of so-called nuts are probably better placed in the drupe
category. This is especially true of the walnut family (Juglandaceae),
although some older references still consider these fruits to be nuts. In
hickory & pecan (*Carya*) the outer husk or shuck splits into four valves,
exposing the hard, indehiscent nut . According to many botanists, the outer
husk is part of the pericarp, and the hard, inner layer surrounding the seed
is the endocarp; therefore, these fruits are technically drupes or
drupaceous nuts. Walnut & butternut (*Juglans*), two additional members of
the walnut family (Juglandaceae), have similar drupe-like fruits. The outer
green husk resembles the outer pericarp (exocarp and mesocarp) of a drupe.
For this reason, walnuts are sometimes referred to as dry drupes, and the
hard shell surrounding the seed is considered to be the endocarp layer as in
coconuts. In true nuts, the hard, indehiscent layer surrounding the seed is
the entire ovary wall or pericarp, and the outer husk is composed of
involucral tissue that is not part of the ovary wall or pericarp. According
to most botanical references, the outer green layer (husk) of the walnut is
part of the pericarp and the hard shell surrounding the seed is really the
endocarp. Therefore, walnuts and pecans probably fit the dry drupe category
rather than a true nut. Some authors elegantly avoid this dilemma by calling
these fruits drupe-like or "drupaceous nuts."

 5. Pome: Ovary or core surrounded by edible, fleshy receptacle tissue
(hypanthium or fleshy floral tube) that is really not part of the pericarp.
The actual ovary or core is usually not eaten, at least by most humans. This
is typical fruit of certain members of the rose family (Rosaceae), including
apple, pear, quince and loquat.


  B. Dry Fruits: Pericarp dry at maturity.  1. Dehiscent Dry
Fruits:Pericarp splits open along definite seams.  a.
Legume: An elongate "bean pod" splitting along two seams; typical fruit of
the third largest plant family, the legume family (Leguminosae or Fabaceae).
The pod represents one folded modified leaf or carpel that is fused along
the edges. E.g. black locust, redbud, acacia, coral tree, orchid tree,
wisteria and many more genera. Note: Some legume fruits are indehiscent,
including the carob tree, mesquite and honey locust. In addition, some
legume fruits are oblong, rounded, kidney-shaped (reniform), or coiled
(spiral-shaped), such as sweet clover (*Melilotus alba* and *M. officinalis*),
black medic (*Medicago lupulina*), bur clover (*M. polymorpha*) and alfalfa
(*M. sativa*). Some specialized legume fruits (called loments) break apart
into indehiscent one-seeded joints. A good example of a loment is the very
effective hitchhiker called stick-tights or beggar's-ticks (*Desmodium
cuspidatum*).


b. Silique: A slender, dry, dehiscent fruit that superficially resemble a
legume, except the mustard silique is composed of two carpels with a
partition or septum down the center (i.e. between the two carpels or
valves). [The legume fruit is composed of a single carpel and does not have
the central partition or septum.] This is the typical fruit of the mustard
family (Cruciferae or Brassicaceae). E.g. field mustard, turnip and cabbage
(*Brassica* species), stock (*Mathiola*), wallflower (*Erysimum*) and London
rocket (*Sisymbrium*). The silicle is a shortened (less elongate) version of
a silique, including sweet alyssum (*Lobularia*), peppergrass (*Lepidium*)
and shepherd's purse (*Capsella*). [Note: As with legumes there are a few
exceptions to the typical form of siliques and silicles. In wild radish (*
Raphanus*) the silique does not split lengthwise, but instead it breaks
transversely into several seed-bearing joints. In lace pod (*Thysanocarpus*)
the silicles are indehiscent.]


c. Capsule: Seed pod splits open is various ways and usually along several
definite seams. Capsules typically split open into well-defined sections or
carpels which represent modified leaves. This is a very common dry fruit
found in many different plant families. E.g. *Catalpa*, *Jacaranda*, *
Pittosporum*, *Aesculus*, *Agave*, *Yucca*, *Eucalyptus*, devil's claw (*
Proboscidea*), floss silk tree (*Chorisia*), kapok tree (*Ceiba*) and castor
bean (*Ricinus communis*). Capsules may split open along the locules
(loculicidal), along the septa (septicidal), through pores (poricidal), or
the entire top of the capsule separates as a single lid-like section
(circumscissile). A common landscaping tree in southern California called
the golden-rain tree (*Koelreuteria*) produces bladder-like capsules that
are loculicidally dehiscent into three valves. The opium poppy (*Papaver
somniferum*) produces a classic poricidal capsule in which the tiny seeds
fall out of the pore-like windows as the capsule shakes in the wind. The
edible weed called purslane (*Portulaca*) has a many-seeded circumscissile
capsule. The Mexican jumping bean (*Sebastiana pavoniana*) produces a
3-carpellate capsule, each carpel bearing a seed. Sometimes the carpel is
occupied by a special moth larva that eats the seed and moves its one-room
carpel container by contorting and hurling its body. In the liquidambar tree
(*Liquidambar styraciflua*) the globose fruiting heads are composed of
numerous tiny capsules, each bearing one or two winged seeds and a number of
aborted ovules (immature seeds). It should be noted here that some capsules
are indehiscent. Their carpels do not separate and release the seeds. Two
examples of plants with indehiscent capsules are the South African baobab
tree (*Adansonia digitata*) and two species of South African gardenias
(*Gardenia
thunbergii* and *G. volkensii*). The seed pods of South African gardenias
are chewed opened by large herbivores, and the seeds are dispersed in their
feces.


d. Follicle: A single ripened ovary (representing a single modified leaf or
carpel) that splits open along one seam. The follicle may occur singly (as
in milkweed) or in clusters: two in oleander, 2-5 in peony, 3 in larkspur, 5
in columbine and 4-5 in bottle tree (*Sterculia or Brachychiton*). The
cone-like fruit of the magnolia tree is an aggregate of many small
follicles, each containing a single bright red seed. The term apocarpous
refers to flowers with separate and distinct carpels, such as delphiniums
and columbines of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae). Although it also
belongs to the buttercup family, the fused (syncarpous) carpels of
*Nigella*<http://waynesword.palomar.edu/fruitid3.htm#nigella>form a
many-seeded capsule.


  2. Indehiscent Dry Fruits: Pericarp does not split open. These fruits
usually contain only one seed.  a. Achene: Very small, one-seeded fruit,
usually produced in clusters. At maturity the pericarp is dry and free from
the internal seed, except at the placental attachment. This is the typical
fruit of the largest plant family, the sunflower family (Compositae or
Asteraceae). Examples of this type of fruit include the sunflower (*
Helianthus*), buttercup (*Ranunculus*) and sycamore (*Platanus*). In the
sycamore, the globose fruiting heads are composed of tiny, one-seeded
achenes interspersed with hairs (some authors refer to these individual
fruits as nutlets). [The globose heads of the liquidambar tree are actually
composed of numerous tiny capsules.]


b. Anthocarp: In the four o'clock family (Nyctaginaceae), individual
apetalous flowers have a tubular, petaloid calyx that resembles a
sympetalous corolla. The lower portion of the calyx tightly enwraps the
one-seeded achene and is persistent around the fruit as an anthocarp. The
calyx base plus the enclosed seed-bearing achene is the unit of dispersal.
In some members of the Nyctaginaceae, the persistent calyx base bears sticky
glandular projections that aid in dispersal by adhering to the bodies of
animals. This is especially true in pisonia trees (*Pisonia umbellifera*) in
which the numerous glutinous anthocarps stick to the feathers of seabirds.
This is an effective method of dispersal to distant atolls and islands of
the South Pacific region. Sometimes a hapless seabird is completely covered
by clusters of the sticky anthocarps, to the point where flight is difficult
or impossible. Unable to remove the water-resistant, glue-like anthocarps
from its feathers, the seabird drowns in the surf and is consumed by
ravenous beach crabs.


c. Grain or Caryopsis: A very small, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruit in
which the actual seed coat is completely fused to the ovary wall or
pericarp. The outer pericarp layer or husk is referred to as the bran, while
the inner, seed layer is called the germ. This is the characteristic fruit
of the large grass family (Gramineae or Poaceae). The grain is truly a fruit
(not a seed) because it came from a separate ripened ovary within the grass
inflorescence. This is the number one source of food for people on the
earth. E.g. Corn (maize), wheat, rice, rye, barley, oats, Johnson grass,
Bermuda grass and many more species. In corn grains, the main white material
that explodes when the grains are heated is endosperm tissue within the
seed. Pressure (water vapor) builds up within the grains until they
literally explode.


d. Schizocarp: A small dry fruit composed of two or more sections that break
apart; however, each section or carpel (also called a mericarp) remains
indehiscent and contains a single seed. Because the seed-bearing sections or
carpels (called mericarps) do not split open, this type of fruit is usually
placed under indehiscent dry fruits. This is the characteristic fruit of the
carrot family (Umbelliferae or Apiaceae). E.g. Carrot (*Daucus*), celery (*
Apium*) and sweet fennel (*Foeniculum vulgare*). Other examples of
schizocarps include filaree or stork's bill (*Erodium*) and cheeseweed (*
Malva*), two common weeds in southern California. In these weeds, the
seed-bearing carpels (mericarps) separate from each other, but remain
indehiscent. Gynoecium is a collective term for the carpels of a flower.
Biologists commonly refer to this floral unit as a pistil. Monocarpous
flowers are composed of one carpel (a simple pistil). The terms apocarpous
and syncarpous refer to compound pistils composed of more than one carpel.
Apocarpous flowers contain two or more distinct carpels. In syncarpous
flowers, two or more carpels are fused together. In cheeseweed, the carpels
are attached to a central, conical connection stalk, but separate from this
stalk at maturity. Some authors consider the fruit of the maple (*Acer*) to
be a schizocarp because it splits into two indehiscent, seed-bearing
carpels; however, because of the wing on each seed-bearing carpel, other
botanists refer to maple fruits as double samaras (see the samara fruit).

One of the most painful schizocarps is the puncture vine (*Tribulus
terrestris*). When dry, the spiny fruit splits into indehiscent,
seed-bearing sections (carpels). The spines of each section are arranged so
that one is always facing upward, like the medieval weapon called a caltrop.
The spiny, seed-bearing burs readily penetrate bare feet, shoes and rubber
tires.


e. Samara: Small, winged, one-seeded fruit, usually produced in clusters on
trees. E.g. Maple (*Acer*): a double samara, ash (*Fraxinus*), elm (*Ulmus*)
and tree of heaven (*Ailanthus*). Samaras resemble the winged seeds of a
pine, but they are truly one-seeded fruits with a pericarp layer surrounding
the seed. The leguminous tipu tree (*Tipuana tipu*) has a winged fruit that
certainly resembles a samara even though it belongs to the legume family
(Leguminosae or Fabaceae). Like auto-rotation of helicopters, the samaras
spin as they sail through the air, an effective method of dispersal.


f. Nut: Larger, one-seeded fruit with very hard pericarp, usually enclosed
in a husk or cup-like involucre.
 (1) Acorn of oak (*Quercus*): The actual nut sits in a cup-shaped involucre
of imbricate (overlapping) scales.

(2) Chestnut (*Castanea*), beech (*Fagus*) & chinquapin (*Castanopsis*): One
or more nuts sit in a spiny, cup-shaped involucre.

(3) Hazelnut or filbert (*Corylus*): Nut sits in a leafy (*C. americana*) or
tubular (*C. cornuta*) involucre.

(4) Walnut (Juglans) and pecan (*Carya*) are placed in the drupe category
(section A-4) above, although some botanists maintain that they are true
nuts. In true nuts, the hard, indehiscent layer surrounding the seed is the
entire ovary wall or pericarp, and the outer husk is composed of involucral
tissue that is not part of the ovary wall or pericarp. According to most
botanical references, the outer green layer (husk) of the walnut is part of
the pericarp and the hard shell surrounding the seed is really the endocarp.
Therefore, walnuts and pecans probably fit the dry drupe category rather
than a true nut. Other authorities claim that the walnut husk is composed of
involucral tissue, perianth and an outer layer of pericarp, but is not
totally derived from the pericarp. Because the "shell" is the inner pericarp
wall, the walnut should be classified as a true nut. However, since the
walnut husk contains pericarp tissue (at least in part), and is not entirely
derived from involucral (non-pericarp) tissue, Wayne's Word considers the
walnut to be drupaceous rather than a true, undisputed nut. Remember that
scientific knowledge is constantly being scrutinized and changed, and the
exact classification of dubious, borderline fruits such as the walnut are
open for review and modification.

  According to "The Morphology of the Flowers of the Juglandaceae" by W.E.
Manning (1940), *American Journal of Botany* 27 (10): 839-852, the fruits of
*Juglans* and *Carya* are drupe-like but not a true drupe or dry drupe. The
fruit is sometimes called a "*tryma*" but can be described as a nut. *Webster's
Third New International Dictionary* describes a *tryma* as a nutlike drupe
(as the fruit of the walnut or hickory) in which the epicarp (exocarp) and
mesocarp separate as a somewhat fleshy or leathery rind from the hard
2-valved endocarp.

Note: Brazil nuts are seeds produced in a large, woody capsule. Cashews are
nuts with a hard shell that is removed before shipment to food stores. The
cashew "nut" (drupaceous nut) is produced at the summit of a fleshy
receptacle called the "cashew apple." Pine nuts are actually gymnosperm
seeds produced in a woody, ovuliferous seed cone. The peanut (*Arachis
hypogea*) is actually a seed with a papery seed coat, typically two seeds
enclosed in a dehiscent pod called a legume. After fertilization, the flower
stalk of the peanut curves downward, and the developing fruit (legume) is
forced into the ground by the proliferation and elongation of cells under
the ovary. The peanut pod subsequently develops underground. For more fruits
called "nuts" refer to the above section A-4 about drupes and drupaceous
nuts.


  g. Utricle: Small, bladderlike, thin-walled, one-seeded, indehiscent
fruit. Although it is seldom seen by casual observers, this is the
characteristic fruit of the duckweed family (Lemnaceae). The dehiscent
one-seeded fruits of *Amaranthus* (Amaranthaceae) are often called
circumscissile utricles because the top half of the fruit separates,
exposing a shiny black seed.


Note: Wayne's Word contains a lot of additional information about the
remarkable duckweed family (Lemnaceae), the undisputed world's smallest
flowering plants. Just click on the green Lemnaceae tab for a complete index
to articles and photos.
     II. Aggregate Fruits: A cluster or aggregation of many ripened ovaries
(fruits) produced from a single flower. In blackberries and raspberries (*
Rubus*), the individual fruits are tiny, one-seeded drupes or drupelets.
Since all the seed-bearing ovaries (carpels) form a fused cluster, the fruit
is also called a syncarp. In strawberries (*Fragaria*), the individual
fruits are tiny, one-seeded achenes imbedded in a sweet, fleshy receptacle.
Another term for an aggregate cluster of ovaries all derived from a single
flower is the "etaerio." In fact, a rose hip (*Rosa*) eaten as an entire
fruit could be considered an etaerio of achenes enclosed by a fleshy
receptacle. Fruits of the genus *Annona* (Annonaceae), including the sugar
apple (*A. squamosa*), cherimoya (*A. cherimola*), custard apple (*A.
reticulata*) and soursop (*A. muricata*) resemble large fleshy berries with
scales or projections on the outer surface. They are actually composed of
many ovaries fused together and are technically aggregate fruits called
syncarps. They are not multiple fruits because they develop from a single
flower bearing many pistils (carpels).


III. Multiple Fruits: A cluster of many ripened ovaries (fruits) produced by
the coalescence of many flowers crowded together in the same inflorescence,
typically surrounding a fleshy stem axis. E.g. mulberry, osage orange,
pineapple, breadfruit and jackfruit. In the mulberry (*Morus*), the
individual fruits are tiny drupes called drupelets. In the pineapple (*
Ananas*), the individual fruits are berries imbedded in a fleshy, edible
stem, each berry subtended by a jagged-edged bract where the original flower
was attached. The fleshy spadix of *Monstera deliciosa* is also a multiple
fruit because it is derived from numerous, tightly-packed female flowers.
Another term for multiple fruits composed of a fleshy spike or raceme of
tightly packed ovaries is the *sorosis*.

 Note: Fig trees (*Ficus*) produce an edible multiple fruit called a
syconium. It is a fleshy, flask-shaped structure (inflorescence) lined on
the inside with numerous female flowers, each forming a tiny, one-seeded
drupelet. Seed formation requires a symbiotic wasp that enters the syconium
and pollinates the female flowers. Smyrna and California-grown Calimyrna
figs require wasp pollination. Other fig varieties will produce edible,
seedless, parthenocarpic syconia without pollination. This is a very complex
and fascinating story that is discussed in several Wayne's Word articles.
Look up "fig" under the blue index tab for more information.


*Miscellaneous Notes On Fruit Types:* Some trees produce seeds and pollen in
separate inflorescences called catkins or aments. This includes monoecious
species with both male and female catkins on the same tree; and dioecious
species with separate male and female trees. In birch (*Betula*) and alder (
*Alnus*), the seeds (nutlets) are produced in a woody, cone-like catkin. In
other trees, such as oak (*Quercus*), only pollen is produced in the
catkins.

In true cone-bearing trees, the immature seeds (ovules) are borne at the
surface of ovuliferous scales instead of enclosed within an a ovary as in
flowering plants. Because the ovules are exposed to the wind-blown pollen
during the pollination period, these trees are referred to as gymnosperms
(which means naked seeds). The ovuliferous scales collectively form a woody
seed cone sealed with sticky resin. At maturity (in one or two years
depending on the species), the scales dry and separate from each other, thus
releasing the winged seeds. In junipers (*Juniperus*) the scales are fleshy
and fused together, and the seed cones superficially resemble berries. In
the maidenhair tree (*Ginkgo biloba*), fern pine (*Podocarpus*), and the
California nutmeg (*Torreya californica*), the large seed with a fleshy
outer coat is borne naked on the branchlets. In the yew tree (*Taxus*) the
naked seed is borne in a fleshy, cup-like structure called an aril.


-- 
K.Saravanan
M.Sc (forestry),P.G Hostel
Forest College and Research Institute,
Mettupalayam - 641301
Coimbatore District,
Tamilnadu
mobile: 9787454854

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