Raceme
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This inflorescence of the terrestrial orchid Spathoglottis plicata is a typical raceme. |
A
raceme is a type of
inflorescence that is unbranched and
indeterminate and bears
pedicellate flowers — flowers having short floral stalks called
pedicels — along the axis. In
botany,
axis means a shoot, in this case one bearing the flowers. In a
raceme, the oldest flowers are borne towards the base and new flowers are produced as the shoot grows. A plants that flowers on a showy raceme may telegraph the fact in its scientific name, e.g.
Cimicifuga racemosa.
A
spike is a type of
raceme in which individual flowers are
sessile (that is, lack pedicels). The term
spikelet can refer to a small
spike, although is also used to refer to the ultimate flower cluster unit in the grasses (
Family Poaceae) and sedges (
Family Cyperaceae), in which case the stalk supporting the cluster becomes the
pedicel. A spikelet is comprised of one or more florets enclosed by two
glumes (bracts).
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Each of the units radiating outward in this inflorescence of a Cyperus (sedge) inflorescence is a spikelet composed of small flowers (florets) arranged in two ranks |
A
spadix is a form of spike in which the florets are densely crowded along the axis.