Analogy — Developmental Stages in Botany ‘‘Flower’’ is related to ‘‘Bud’’ as the mature stage to its earlier undeveloped stage. By parallel reasoning, ‘‘Fruit’’ is related to which earlier stage?

Verbal Reasoning Analogy Difficulty: Medium
Choose an option
Answer

Correct Answer: Flower

Explanation

Introduction / Context:Developmental analogies track life-cycle progressions. A bud is an immature stage that develops into a flower. We now apply the same temporal development to a fruit, identifying which earlier stage directly precedes it in typical angiosperm development.

Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Bud → Flower (bud matures into a flower).
  • Fruit forms from the ovary of a flower after fertilization.
  • We want the stage that corresponds to the bud/flower relationship.

Concept / Approach:The first pair depicts mature stage (flower) vs its immediate juvenile (bud). Similarly, a fruit’s immediate prior stage is a flower (post-pollination, pre-fruit set). Although seeds develop within the fruit, the fruit itself does not develop from a seed; it develops from a flower’s ovary.

Step-by-Step Solution:1) Map progression: Bud → Flower (immature → mature).2) For fruit, the immediate earlier source stage is the Flower.3) Choose ‘‘Flower’’ to maintain consistent developmental sequencing.

Verification / Alternative check:Botany basics: After fertilization in the flower, the ovary develops into the fruit, enclosing seeds. This verifies the immediate predecessor is the flower stage, not the seed.

Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Seed: develops inside the fruit; not the precursor stage of the fruit’s structure.
  • Tree: an organismal level, not the immediate developmental stage.
  • Stem: plant organ, not the direct stage that becomes fruit.

Common Pitfalls:Confusing internal components (seed) with structural precursors. The analogy focuses on stage-to-stage development of the same structure, favoring ‘‘flower.’’

Final Answer:Flower

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