Fruit and seeds

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Also known as: Compositae, aster family, composite family, daisy family
Also called:
Compositae
Related Topics:
daisy
sunflower
dahlia
Mutisieae
Lactuceae

Various genera and individual species are known to reproduce by apomixis (the setting of seed without fertilization), either completely or in addition to normal sexual means. The genus Antennaria (pussytoes), well known in the Northern Hemisphere, is dioecious, and some of the species are represented in large parts of their range only by pistillate plants. In this genus normal sexual reproduction yields equal numbers of staminate and pistillate plants, but apomictic reproduction yields only pistillate plants. Apomixis is often associated with polyploidy (the presence of three or more complete sets of chromosomes in every cell) in Asteraceae, as well as with a past history of hybridization.

The members of Asteraceae produce a type of fruit called an achene, which is dry and single-seeded and does not open at maturity. The apparent seeds of the sunflower, for example, are actually achenes. The hull is the achenial wall, and the actual seed coat surrounding the embryo is a thin, papery layer. The seed has virtually no endosperm; its reserve food is stored largely in the two cotyledons (seed leaves) of the embryo. In Asteraceae seed dispersal it is really the achenes (each containing a seed) that are dispersed.

The seeds of many Asteraceae species are distributed in a variety of ways, often aided by modifications of the floral pappus. When the pappus consists of numerous capillary bristles, as in Taraxacum officinale (dandelion), it facilitates distribution of the achenes by the wind by providing buoyancy. In some other genera, such as Bidens (beggar-tick), the pappus awns are barbed, which permits them to stick in fur or clothing, and some achenes are thus transported by animals. Similarly, some species have barbed structures or are provided with hooks or spines, as in Xanthium strumarium (cocklebur) or Arctium (burdock), engaging humans or animals as means of transport. In cocklebur and burdock, the protective bracts surrounding the developing head (involucre) are provided with hooks, and the whole head is distributed intact. The hooked heads of burdock are said to have inspired the invention of Velcro, a modern fabric fastener utilizing many tiny hooks that attach to a base containing numerous small loops. In Coreopsis (tickseed) the achene is thin and flat, and the surface area is increased by the presence of an even thinner expanded margin (wing).

Other means of seed dispersal are less common. The achenes of species that grow in wet places may be carried in mud on the feet of migrating waterfowl. Those of some streamside species are buoyant, achieving dispersal by floating until they become waterlogged. In Centaurea and some related genera, the achenes are attractive to ants, which carry them about and feed on special parts of the wall. The achenes of some field weeds have been widely distributed by becoming mixed with the seeds of cultivated crops. Many other members of the order have no obvious means of seed dispersal.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.