ostiolated
Ostiolated is an adjective used primarily in botanical contexts to describe plants, flowers, or fruits that possess a small aperture or pore called an ostiole. An ostiole functions as an entryway or exit for pollinators, seeds, or nectar. The term derives from the Latin *ostiolum*, a diminutive of *ostium* meaning “small door” or “entrance,” and is related to the English word “ostial.” In floristics, an ostiolate fruit is one that opens via a small hole or slit, facilitating seed dispersal or spore release. A classic example is the fig fruit (family Moraceae), which is ostiolate and provides a specialized door for the symbiotic fig wasp, which explores the enclosed inflorescence.
Botanists employ the term to describe particular floral and fruit morphologies. For instance, certain species of
Beyond plant morphology, the adjective appears in descriptive contexts for marine organisms that develop a small