English Language & Usage Asked on September 27, 2021
An orange is made up of segments, but what is the word for the small tear-drop shaped pieces that comprise the segment itself — within each segment membrane?
If you break a segment in half you can see these pieces all stacked together.
This structure and elements are common across all citrus fruits so I would expect there to be a name for them.
The word is vesicles; those within the supremed segments you are referring to are the juice vesicles, while those in the rind (well, the flavedo), are the oliferous vesicles. Each is a little bladder or sac filled with some sort of fluid, respectively juice and oil. The juice vesicles are actually modified hair cells.
The website www.speciale.it has an article on Citrus Fruit that offers this diagram:
And explains:
Under the epidermis, we find the flavedo, characterised by its yellow, green or orange colour. The flavedo contains the oliferous vesicles on the inside and are very fine and fragile; the essential oil contained within can be collected by scraping on the flavedo layer. Under the flavedo, we find the albedo made up of tubular-like cells and which combine together to constitute the tissue mass compressed into the intercellular area.
Note that the text and diagram do not match up: the aromatic vesicles described in the text should be the oil sacs out in the rind, not the juicy ones within the segment.
A similar diagram can be found at www.citrusbr.com:
Correct answer by tchrist on September 27, 2021
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