In reference to an
inflorescence (a shoot specialised for bearing flowers, and bearing no leaves other than
bracts), an indeterminate type (such as a
raceme) is one in which the first flowers to develop and open are from the buds at the base, followed progressively by buds nearer to the growing tip. The growth of the shoot is not impeded by the opening of the early flowers or development of fruits and its appearance is of growing, producing, and maturing flowers and fruit indefinitely. In practice the continued growth of the terminal end necessarily peters out sooner or later, though without producing any definite terminal flower, and in some species it may stop growing before any of the buds have opened. Not all plants produce indeterminate inflorescences however; some produce a definite terminal flower that terminates the development of new buds towards the tip of that inflorescence. In most species that produce a
determinate inflorescence in this way, all of the flower buds are formed before the first ones begin to open, and all open more or less at the same time. In some species with determinate inflorescences however, the
terminal flower blooms first, which stops the elongation of the main axis, but side buds develop lower down. One type of example is
Dianthus; another type is exemplified by
Allium; and yet others, by
Daucus. ==Animals==