The blossoms themselves each consist of about twenty stamens and a single pistil, bound together at the base by a short, green, tubular corolla and an even shorter calyx, just 5 mm long altogether.
There are usually 3-4 stigmas attached to a single pistil per flower, which is 1 or 3-4 carpellate.
In the middle of the cyathium stands a female flower: a single pistil with branched stigmas.
The gynoecium consists of two carpels fused into a single, bicarpellate pistil with an inferior ovary.
The flowers, unfortunately, are similar at first glance, with four or five stamens (short stalks topped with a small pollen sac) surrounding a single pistil (a small globular structure containing the ovary).
As with other Banksia species, each flower comprises a perianth of four united tepals, with a single anther on a short filament attached near the tip; and a single pistil.
The female parts, in the center of a flower, are the carpels-one or more of these may be merged to form a single pistil.
There are 15 stamens and a single pistil.
The androecium contains five stamens, while the gynoecium contains two carpels fused into a single pistil with an inferior, glabrous ovary.
Multiple carpels may combine into a single pistil, or into multiple pistils.