Be Ready to Identify Flower Parts!

Ten Plant Parts that will Get You Started

Not to sound too cliché, but anything that seems difficult usually boils down to concentrating on the absolute first steps toward a goal. In the case iof learning to identify plants, these first few steps involve simply learning the basic parts of a flower. You might be surprised to find that memorizing just ten parts will get you ready for using most any plant guide. The really good news is that all flowers—yes, all flowers—share most, if not all, of these ten parts.

Flowering plants (Angiosperms) are divided into two main groups: Composites (Asteraceae), and Everything else. The Aster group (some 25,000 species world-wide) is a group that usually gets set aside as a difficult group to identify, and while that may be somewhat true if you are working to species, the group is really quite easy to identify to family, and that is what we care about today. Bottom line: even the Aster family flowers are made up of the same ten parts with certain modifications.

Here are the Ten Parts You'll Want to Know:

Roll the mouse over the part names to see the part on the drawing and read the details:

Getting to know these parts will help you follow along any key in any guide. These parts are common to all flowers from the alpine reaches to Death Valley, and most every flower identification key is going to start by asking how many petals, how many sepals, stamens, and pistils, and then go into the arrangement of stamens. You must be clear on what parts are what parts! Buttercups have zero petals but their colorful sepals make them look like they do. Dogwoods big white blooms are not petals either; those white parts are bracts (more modified leaves), and the flowers are in the "center", almost like a sunflower.