cleistogamy
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek κλειστός (kleistós, “closed”) + -gamy.
Noun
cleistogamy (uncountable)
- (botany) The production of flowers which do not open and are self-fertilized in the bud.
- 2001, Richard Dwight Porcher, Douglas Alan Rayner, A Guide to the Wildflowers of South Carolina, University of South Carolina, page 47:
- In a species that produces fruits from self-pollination and from cross-pollination, self-pollinated fruits generally produce many more seeds than fruits produced from cross-pollination. This suggests the likelihood that cleistogamy arose in those species because cross-pollination was not always effective.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
the production of flowers which do not open, and are self-fertilized in the bud
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