Basal angiosperm groups tend to have carpels arranged spirally around a conical or dome-shaped
receptacle. In later lineages, carpels tend to be in
whorls. The relationship of the other flower parts to the gynoecium can be an important systematic and taxonomic character. In some flowers, the stamens, petals, and sepals are often said to be "fused" into a "floral tube" or
hypanthium. However, as Leins & Erbar (2010) pointed out, "the classical view that the wall of the inferior ovary results from the "congenital" fusion of dorsal carpel flanks and the
floral axis does not correspond to the ontogenetic processes that can actually be observed. All that can be seen is an intercalary growth in a broad circular zone that changes the shape of the floral axis (receptacle)". And what happened during evolution is not a phylogenetic fusion but the formation of a unitary intercalary meristem. Evolutionary developmental biology investigates such developmental processes that arise or change during evolution. If the hypanthium is absent, the flower is
hypogynous, and the stamens, petals, and sepals are all attached to the receptacle below the gynoecium. Hypogynous flowers are often referred to as having a
superior ovary. This is the typical arrangement in most flowers. If the hypanthium is present up to the base of the style(s), the flower is
epigynous. In an epigynous flower, the stamens, petals, and sepals are attached to the hypanthium at the top of the ovary or, occasionally, the hypanthium may extend beyond the top of the ovary. Epigynous flowers are often referred to as having an
inferior ovary. Plant families with epigynous flowers include
orchids,
asters, and
evening primroses. Between these two extremes are
perigynous flowers, in which a hypanthium is present, but is either free from the gynoecium (in which case it may appear to be a cup or tube surrounding the gynoecium) or connected partly to the gynoecium (with the stamens, petals, and sepals attached to the hypanthium part of the way up the ovary). Perigynous flowers are often referred to as having a
half-inferior ovary (or, sometimes,
partially inferior or
half-superior). This arrangement is particularly frequent in the
rose family and
saxifrages. Occasionally, the gynoecium is born on a stalk, called the
gynophore, as in
Isomeris arborea. Image:Spathoglottis flwrs reduced.jpg|Flowers and fruit (capsules) of the ground orchid,
Spathoglottis plicata, illustrating an inferior ovary. Image:Hegi ovary.png|Illustration showing longitudinal sections through hypogynous (a), perigynous (b), and epigynous (c) flowers ==Placentation==