A
catkin or
ament is a slim, cylindrical
flower cluster, with inconspicuous or no
petals, usually
wind-
pollinated (
anemophilous) but sometimes insect-pollinated (as in
Salix). They contain many, usually
unisexual flowers, arranged closely along a central stem which is often drooping. They are found in many
plant families, including
Betulaceae,
Fagaceae,
Moraceae, and
Salicaceae. For some time, they were believed to be a key
synapomorphy among the proposed
Hamamelididae, also known as Amentiferae (
i.e., literally plants
bearing aments). Based on
molecular phylogeny work, it is now believed that Hamamelididae is a
polyphyletic group. This suggests that the catkin flower arrangement has arisen at least twice independently by
convergent evolution, in
Fagales and in
Salicaceae. Such a convergent evolution raises questions about what the
ancestral inflorescence characters might be and how catkins did evolve in these two lineages.