Fruit (original) (raw)

Last Updated : 19 May, 2026

Fruits are an important part of plants and play a vital role in reproduction. They develop from the ovary of a flower after fertilisation and contain seeds. Fruits not only help in the protection and dispersal of seeds but also serve as a major source of nutrition for humans and animals.

A fruit is the mature ovary of a flowering plant that usually contains seeds. It forms after fertilisation and may also include other parts of the flower, such as the thalamus.

classification_of_fruits1

Fruit is basically a nutritious, fleshy, seed-bearing structure of the plant, which can be sour and sweet. In some cases, fruit forms from another part of the flower as well, instead of the ovaries. Fruit is normally the product of sexual reproduction, but it can also form without fertilisation, such fruit known as parthenocarpic fruits.

**Classification of Fruit

Based on the number of flowers and ovaries involved, fruit is classified into:

**1. Simple Fruit

Simple fruits develop from the ovary of a single flower. The monocarpellary or multicarpellary syncarpous ovary produces these fruits.

simple_fruit1

The pericarp is further divided into one or more seeded segments in some fruits. In schizocarpic fruits, the pericarp splits into one-seeded segments at maturity.

**2. Aggregate Fruit

Aggregate fruits develop from a multicarpellary apocarpous ovary. Because each carpel is separated from the others in the apocarpous ovary, it develops into a fruitlet. These fruits produce a cluster of fruitlets known as etaerio.

aggregate_fruit

**3. Composite Fruit

Composite or multiple fruits develop from the entire inflorescence. In general, many ovaries and other floral parts combine to form the fruit in these fruits. There are two kinds of these:

composite_fruit1

Structure of Fruit

There are two main components of the Fruit i.e., the pericarp and the seed.

1

1. Pericarp

The fruit wall formed from the ovary wall is called the pericarp.Mostly, the edible part of the fruit is the pericarp. The pericarp is composed of 3 layers known as:

  1. **Epicarp: The outermost skin of the fruit is known as the epicarp, also known as the exocarp.
  2. **Mesocarp: The fleshy part of the fruit. It is present between the epicarp and endocarp.
  3. **Endocarp: Endocarp is the innermost layer of the pericarp that surrounds the seed.

2. Seed

The seed develops from the fertilised ovule and is enclosed by the endocarp. A seed is formed from the ripened ovule of a flower after fertilisation. Seeds are characteristic reproductive structures of both angiosperms and gymnosperms.

Uses of Fruits

Fruits are the edible sour or sweet structure of the plant, which are the result of the sexual reproduction of the plant.