The pistillate (female) flowers are oval or round ovaries surrounded by spongy bracts.
There is a ring of 25 to 35 staminate flowers around one pistillate flower.
The ovary of the pistillate flower enlarges into a lobed fruit about 2 millimeters long.
The species is known from a single staminate flower and a single pistillate flower both preserved in the same piece of amber.
Of note is the damage which is present on the pistillate flower.
The style in the pistillate flower extends outward and is divided at the tip.
The pistillate flower has a reddish or brownish bract with a gold center and white tip.
The flowers are usually bisexual, with a solitary pistillate flower at the end of each major axis.
The pistillate flower occurs singly and produces a rounded, woolly brown fruit with usually four chambers.
Each pistillate (female) flower is solitary and has a three-lobed ovary, three styles, and no petals.