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mature ovary in flowering plants, together with all inseparably
connected parts of the Structure of Fruit. As the ovary matures, its wall develops to form the pericarp, divided into three layers. The outermost, exocarp, is usually a single epidermal layer. The extent of the middle layer, mesocarp, and the inner layer, endocarp, varies widely, but in any single type of fruit one of the layers may be thick, the others thin. In fleshy fruits the pulpy layer is usually the mesocarp, as in peaches or grapes. The seed or seeds, which lie immediately within the pericarp, in some cases constitute the entire edible portion of the fruit. For example, the hard outer husk of a coconut is the complete pericarp, and the edible part inside, including the “milk,” is the seed. In typical cases, the fruit is confined to the ripened ovary, as in the pea pod; but in apples it includes ovary plus receptacle (other fused floral parts), in strawberries it is an aggregation of small individual fruits on a fleshy receptacle, called achenes, and in pineapples it is a development of an entire inflorescence, or cluster of flowers. Types of Fruit. Fruit is classified by several characteristics, the most significant being the number of ovaries included. A simple fruit is a single ovary, developed from the pistil of a single flower, which may be single or compound; an aggregate fruit is composed of many ovaries attached to a single receptacle; a multiple, or collective, fruit is formed from the coalesced ovaries of an entire inflorescence. Simple fruits are further subdivided into two categories, dry or fleshy. Ovary walls that develop into simple fruits are succulent when young, but as they mature, those of dry fruits lose most of their moisture, whereas those of fleshy fruits increase in size and moisture capacity. Dry fruits that dehisce, or split, when ripe are called dry dehiscent fruits; those that do not are known as indehiscent fruits. Among the dry dehiscent fruits, a pod, or legume, characterizes most of the legumes. The shell of the pod is the pericarp, and the beans or peas inside it are the seeds. Dehiscence occurs along the sutures of the two edges, the seeds being attached to the ventral suture. A few leguminous plants have pods that do not dehisce but break at maturity; a pod of this type is termed a loment. A follicle, found in the peony and in milkweed, has two sutures like the pod but opens only along one of them. A capsule, unlike a follicle, contains more than one seed chamber, or fused carpels. When capsules split down the middle of each chamber, as in lilies, their dehiscence is termed loculicidal. When the dehiscence occurs at the lines of fusion of the chambers, as in the azalea, it is called septicidal. Poppy capsules open by pores, the dehiscence known as poricidal. Capsules of plantain split along a circular horizontal line, so that a “lid” comes off the top; this type of dehiscence is termed circumscissile. A silique, characteristic of the mustards, is a two-chambered dry fruit that dehisces along two sutures, leaving the exposed seeds clinging to a thin, membranous partition. Most siliques are at least as long as they are broad; when broader than long, as in delphinium, they are usually called silicles. Most indehiscent fruits develop a single seed for each ovary.
The pericarp of these fruits is so closely invested around the seed
that the entire fruit assumes the appearance of a seed. The true
grain, or caryopsis, characteristic of grasses, is little more than
a seed with a thin, membranous pericarp inseparable from it. The achene,
such as the “grain” of buckwheat, is sometimes
called a naked seed because of its thin, separable pericarp. The
samara, or key fruit, typified by the fruits of elms, maples, and
ashes, has a winglike outgrowth of the ovary wall that aids in dispersal
by wind. The typical fruit of the Apiaceae, the schizocarp, has
more than one seed, unlike other dry indehiscent fruits, but the
fruit splits into single-seeded portions at maturity. The All fleshy fruits are indehiscent, the pulpy parts remaining attached to the seeds during dispersal. The true berry, typified by the tomato, blueberry, and gooseberry, possesses seeds dispersed throughout the fleshy mesocarp and endocarp. The exocarp is thin and skinlike. Many fruits, such as strawberries and raspberries, are commonly, but incorrectly, called berries. Two specialized types of berry, the hesperidium and the pepo, include valuable commercial fruits. All citrus fruits, including oranges, lemons, and grapefruits, are hesperidia, having leathery rinds composed of exocarp and mesocarp, and juicy sections of endocarp. The pepo is the characteristic fruit of the cucumber family, Cucurbitaceae, including cucumbers, pumpkins, melons, and gourds. The outer layer of the pepo is receptacle tissue covering the exocarp; the pulpy portion of the fruit is mostly endocarp and mesocarp. The remaining type of fleshy fruit, the pome, has a pericarp limited to the so-called core and the inner fleshy portion of the fruit, as in apples, pears, and quinces. The other portion of the fleshy part of a pome is tissue developed from the fusion of the other floral parts and the ovary. The drupe is the stone fruit of such plants as plum, cherry, olive, peach, and almond. (The familiar, edible, almond, incorrectly called a nut, is the dried stone of a large drupe.) The single seed is surrounded by a stony endocarp; the fleshy portion is mesocarp. A small drupe occurring as part of a larger cluster is usually called a drupelet. The constituent fruitlets of most aggregate and multiple fruits can be recognized as belonging to the same classification as simple fruits. The aggregate fruitlets of blackberries, raspberries, and dewberries, for example, are drupelets, and those of strawberries are achenes. It is not the fruit, that is, achenes, of strawberries that are eaten, but the fleshy receptacle. In the pineapple, on the other hand, the separate fruitlets cannot be classified as types of simple fruit; the multiple fruit is a mass of fused ovaries growing from the central axis of the pineapple. Food Value. Fruits are eaten raw or cooked, dried, canned, or preserved.
Carbohydrates, including starches and sugars, constitute the principal
nutritional material. Citrus fruits, tomatoes, and strawberries
are primary sources of vitamin C, and most fruits contain considerable
quantities of vitamin A and vitamin B. Vitamin content is sharply
reduced in storage and shipping of fresh fruits, but is maintained efficiently
in frozen fruit (see
See also
For further information on this topic, see the Bibliography, sections
An article from Funk & Wagnalls® New Encyclopedia. © 2006 World Almanac Education Group. A WRC Media Company. All rights reserved. Except as otherwise permitted by
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FRUIT,
Commonly the term fruit is often restricted to succulent, edible fruits of woody plants, to melons, and to such small fruits as strawberries and blueberries. Ovary walls that develop into simple fruits are succulent . . .
What Were They Thinking gives us Professor I.M. Nuts a regular newsreel about inventions every week. In this clip we see Nuts' new invention, the shade hat. When eating grapes you may squirt juice in your eyes, not with the new shade.
In this Holiday Foods video clip we learn about fruitcakes and their association with Christmas. Famous Fat Dave shows us how to make a fruitcake using dried fruit that has been soaked in rum.


