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Whorl (botany)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hondo77 (talk | contribs) at 23:21, 14 September 2022 (Adding local short description: "Arrangement of plant parts around the stem", overriding Wikidata description "arrangement of leaves, sepals, stamens etc. that radiate from a point and surround the stem or stalk"). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Leaf whorls on a herbaceous Lilium michiganense
Leaf whorls on a woody tree, Brabejum stellatifolium

In botany, a whorl or verticil is an arrangement of leaves, sepals, petals, stamens, or carpels that radiate from a single point and surround or wrap around the stem or stalk.[1][2] A leaf whorl consists of at least three elements; a pair of opposite leaves is not called a whorl.

For leaves to grow in whorls is fairly rare except in plant species with very short internodes and some other genera (Galium, Nerium, Elodea etc.). Leaf whorls occur in some trees such as Brabejum stellatifolium and other species in the family Proteaceae (e.g., in the genus Banksia). In plants such as these, crowded internodes within the leaf whorls alternate with long internodes between the whorls.

The morphology of most flowers (called cyclic flowers) is based on four types of whorls:

  1. The calyx: zero or more whorls of sepals at the base
  2. The corolla: zero or more whorls of petals above the calyx
  3. The androecium: zero or more whorls of stamens, each comprising a filament and an anther
  4. The gynoecium: zero or more whorls of carpels, each consisting of an ovary, a style, and a stigma

A flower lacking any of these floral structures is said to be incomplete or imperfect.[3] Not all flowers consist of whorls since the parts may instead be spirally arranged, as in the family Magnoliaceae.

See also

References

  1. ^ "whorl". thedictionary. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
  2. ^ Lindley, John. A Glossary of Technical Terms Used in Botany, p.100, Bradbury and Evans, London, 1848.
  3. ^ Beentje, H.; Williamson, J. (2010). The Kew Plant Glossary: an Illustrated Dictionary of Plant Terms. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: Kew Publishing.