Aestivation Types: Aestivation refers to the arrangement of petals in a flower bud. The diagrams represent different patterns:
Vexillary: One large petal (standard) overlaps two lateral petals, which overlap two smaller ones (e.g., pea family). Diagram 'a' shows an asymmetrical overlap, typical of vexillary.
Imbricate: Petals overlap irregularly, with some outer and some inner (e.g., Cassia). Diagram 'b' shows overlapping petals in a circular pattern.
Twisted: Petals overlap each other like a spiral (e.g., cotton). Diagram 'c' suggests a twisted arrangement.
Valvate: Petals meet edge to edge without overlapping (e.g., mustard). Diagram 'd' shows petals touching without overlap.
Diagram Analysis:
'a' resembles vexillary due to the asymmetrical shape.
'b' matches imbricate with overlapping petals.
'c' aligns with twisted due to the spiral-like arrangement.
'd' fits valvate with petals meeting edge to edge.
Option Analysis:
(1) a-Vexillary, b-Imbricate, c-Twisted, d-Valvate: Matches the diagram interpretation. Correct.
(2) a-Vexillary, b-Imbricate, c-Valvate, d-Twisted: Incorrect order for 'c' and 'd'.
(3) a-Vexillary, b-Twisted, c-Imbricate, d-Valvate: Incorrect order for 'b' and 'c'.
(4) a-Imbricate, b-Valvate, c-Vexillary, d-Twisted: Incorrect assignment for 'a' and 'c'.
Conclusion: Option (1) correctly identifies the aestivation types based on the diagrams.