Compare aggregate fruits with multiple fruits and give suitable examples
Answers
Answered by
0
An aggregate fruit or etaerio (/ɛˈtɪərioʊ/) is a fruit that develops from the merger of several ovaries that were separate in a single flower. In contrast, a simple fruit develops from one ovary. ... Dewberry and blackberry, also an accessory fruit, with a fleshy receptacle.
Answered by
0
Multiple fruits are formed by a group or cluster of flowers.
In the process of formation of fruits, every flower of the cluster produces a fruit, but all of them get matured into a single figure to form a composite fruits.
In simple words we can define composite fruit as the single fruit formed by closely packed individual flowers.
For example, pineapple, jack fruit, guava.
Aggregate fruits are considered as special fruits because they are formed from the multiple ovaries of same flower.
As a result the tiny fruit-lets get fused together around receptacle and the entire fruit is formed.
The examples of aggregate fruits are raspberries, blackberries and strawberries, etc.
In the process of formation of fruits, every flower of the cluster produces a fruit, but all of them get matured into a single figure to form a composite fruits.
In simple words we can define composite fruit as the single fruit formed by closely packed individual flowers.
For example, pineapple, jack fruit, guava.
Aggregate fruits are considered as special fruits because they are formed from the multiple ovaries of same flower.
As a result the tiny fruit-lets get fused together around receptacle and the entire fruit is formed.
The examples of aggregate fruits are raspberries, blackberries and strawberries, etc.
Similar questions