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Encyclopedia > Sepals
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Flower of the Primrose Willowherb (Ludwigia octovalvis) showing petals and sepals

A sepal is one member or part of the calyx of a flower. It is the outer part of the perianth, which comprises the sterile parts of a flower, consisting of inner and outer tepals that are usually differentiated into petals and sepals. The term tepal is usually applied when the petals and sepals are not differentiated. However, in a "typical" flower the sepals are green and lie under the more conspicuous petals. When the flower is in bud, they enclose and protect the more delicate parts within.


The number of sepals in a flower is indicative of the plant's classification: dicots having typically four or five sepals and monocots having three, or some multiple of three, sepals.


There exists considerable variation in form of the sepals among the flowering plants. Often the sepals are much reduced, appearing somewhat awn-like, or as scales, teeth, or ridges. Examples of flowers with much reduced perianths are found among the grasses. In some flowers, the sepals are fused towards the base, forming a calyx tube. This floral tube can include the petals and the attachment point of the stamens.


  Results from FactBites:
 
AllRefer.com - sepal (Botany, General) - Encyclopedia (234 words)
Sepals are usually green, but in some flowers (e.g., the lily and the orchid) they are the same color as the petals and may be confused with them.
The small green leaflike structures at the base of the flower head in the aster family are not true sepals but bracts; the sepals are modified into a circle of tiny white hairs on the ovary (the pappus; see aster).
The sepals are sometimes fused into a tube around the base of the petals, as in the mint family.
Sepal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (225 words)
A sepal is a tepal (a segment) of the calyx of a flower.
The calyx is the outer part of the perianth, which comprises the sterile inner and outer tepals that are usually differentiated into petals and sepals.
The number of sepals in a flower (called merosity) is indicative of the plant's classification: eudicots having typically four or five sepals and monocots and palaeodicots having three, or some multiple of three, sepals.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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