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Syncarpous

Syncarpous is a botanical term used to describe a gynoecium in which two or more carpels are fused (connate) to form a single ovary. The word comes from Greek roots meaning “together” and “fruit.” In a syncarpous gynoecium, the carpels may be completely united along their margins, creating one ovary, or only partially fused in ways that still yield a single ovary with multiple locules. As a result, the ovary may be unilocular or multilocular, depending on the pattern of fusion. The arrangement of the style and stigma is associated with the united structure, but specifics vary among species.

Syncarpy is contrasted with apocarpy, where the carpels remain separate and function as multiple, discrete pistils

within
the
same
flower.
The
presence
or
absence
of
carpel
fusion
has
implications
for
fruit
development,
seed
arrangement,
and
reproductive
strategies,
and
it
is
a
characteristic
feature
used
in
floral
morphology,
taxonomy,
and
evolutionary
studies.
In
practice,
researchers
examine
the
fusion
of
carpels,
the
number
and
arrangement
of
locules,
and
the
resulting
fruit
type
to
characterize
a
plant’s
syncarpous
gynoecium.