The centre of a double yellow tulip flower. The picture shows (left) an imperfectly developed anther (dark purple-brown) fused to the edge of a petal.
The centre of a double yellow tulip flower. The picture shows (left) an imperfectly developed anther (dark purple-brown) fused to the edge of a petal. A second anther (right, pink) has a more normal flowers develop under the control of a succession of genes. In normal development, this gives rise to concentric layers of different tissues; sepals enclose the flower bud, with a ring of petals as the next layer, then anthers, with the female tissue at the centre of the flower. In double flowers, this pathway is disrupted; the cells that would have produced the anthers produce petals. This process is imperfect, with the result seen here on the left - a partial conversion, with anther-like tissue attached to a petal-like blade. Such flowers produce little if any seed; consequently they retain their integrity for longer than do single flowers, a virtue for gardeners
Size: 3468px × 5212px
Photo credit: © DR JEREMY BURGESS/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: abc, anther, development, double, flower, gene, gynoecium, pathway, petal, sepal, tulip