Botanically speaking, a fruit is the mature ovary of a flowering plant, and the seeds within are the mature, fertilized ovules. The way seeds are structured and protected varies wildly depending on the evolutionary strategy the plant uses to disperse them.
To understand these structures, we must first look at the pericarp (the fruit tissue itself), which typically has three layers:
Exocarp: The outermost skin or rind.
Mesocarp: The middle layer, often the fleshy, edible part.
Endocarp: The innermost layer that directly surrounds the seed(s).
Fruits are broadly classified into three categories based on whether they derive from a simple ovary (a single flower) or a complex ovary (multiple ovaries within one flower or multiple flowers).
1. SIMPLE FLESHY FRUITS
These fruits develop from a single ovary, and at least part of the pericarp is fleshy and juicy. The structure of the endocarp dictates how the seeds are housed.
Drupes (Stone Fruits): Contains a single central seed enclosed in a very hard, stony, or woody endocarp (the "pit" or "stone"). The hard pit protects the seed as it passes through the digestive tract of animals.
Examples: Peaches, cherries, olives, coconuts, almonds.
True Berries: The endocarp and mesocarp are entirely fleshy. These fruits usually contain multiple seeds scattered directly throughout the flesh, with no hard protective pit. The seeds themselves typically possess a tough outer seed coat instead.
Examples: Grapes, tomatoes, blueberries, eggplants.
Pomes: The fleshy, edible part is actually swollen stem tissue (the receptacle). The true fruit is the "core" in the center, and the seeds are housed in a papery or leathery, multi-chambered endocarp.
Examples: Apples, pears.
Pepos & Hesperidia (Specialized Berries):
Pepos: Have a hard, thick outer rind (exocarp) with flat seeds embedded tightly in the fleshy center. (Examples: Watermelons, pumpkins, cucumbers).
Hesperidia: Have a leathery, oily rind and an interior divided into distinct segments filled with juice sacs, with seeds embedded in the center of these segments. (Examples: Oranges, lemons, grapefruits).
2. SIMPLE DRY FRUITS
In these fruits, the pericarp dries out completely as the fruit matures. Their structure is determined by whether the fruit splits open to release the seeds (Dehiscent) or stays closed (Indehiscent).
Dehiscent (Splits open to release seeds):
Legumes: The fruit is a pod that splits along two seams, with the seeds attached to one side of the pod. (Examples: Peas, beans, peanuts).
Follicles: Similar to a legume, but splits along only one seam to release the seeds. (Example: Milkweed).
Capsules: A dry structure that splits in multiple ways (pores, slits, or a lid) to release numerous small seeds. (Examples: Poppies, cotton).
Indehiscent (Does not split; the fruit and seed are functionally one unit):
Achenes: A small, dry fruit containing a single seed. The seed coat is attached to the fruit wall at only one point, meaning the seed is loose inside. (Example: Sunflower "seeds" are achenes; the shell is the fruit, and the kernel is the seed).
Caryopsis (Grains): Similar to an achene, but the seed coat is entirely fused to the fruit wall. The seed cannot be separated from the fruit. (Examples: Wheat, corn, rice).
Nuts: A single seed encased in a hard, thick, woody, or bony pericarp. (Examples: Acorns, hazelnuts, chestnuts).
3. COMPLEX FRUITS
These fruits form from multiple ovaries, creating unique structural arrangements for their seeds.
Aggregate Fruits: Develop from a single flower that has many separate ovaries.
Raspberries & Blackberries: Each little "bump" is a tiny drupe (a drupelet) with its own miniature seed and fleshy mesocarp.
Strawberries: The red, fleshy part is swollen stem tissue. The actual fruits are the tiny, dry, seed-like specks on the outside, which are individual achenes.
Multiple Fruits: Develop from a cluster of entirely separate flowers that fuse together as they mature.
Pineapples: Each "diamond" on the outside was once a separate flower. The seeds are embedded near the outer edge of the flesh.
Figs: The fruit is an inverted flower cluster. The tiny, crunchy "seeds" inside are actually individual dry fruits (achenes).
SUMMARY COMPARISON CHART (in progress)
Fruit Classification
Seed Enclosure (Endocarp)
Number of Seeds
Common Examples
Drupe
Hard, stony pit
Usually 1
Peach, cherry
Berry
Fleshy, no distinct core
Usually many
Tomato, grape
Pome
Papery/leathery core
Several
Apple, pear
Pepo
Fleshy center, hard rind
Many
Watermelon, squash
Legume (Dry)
Pod splitting on two sides
Several
Peas, beans
Achene (Dry)
Thin shell, loose seed inside
1
Sunflower, strawberry specks
Nut (Dry)
Hard, woody, indehiscent shell
1
Hazelnut, acorn