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Glossary of botanical terms

This glossary of botanical terms is a list of definitions of terms and concepts relevant to botany and plants in general. Terms of plant morphology are included here as well as at the more specific Glossary of plant morphology and Glossary of leaf morphology. For other related terms, see Glossary of phytopathology, Glossary of lichen terms, and List of Latin and Greek words commonly used in systematic names.

A edit

 
In the bud, Tetradenia riparia leaves have their upper surfaces turned toward the stem and the axil. The lower surface is abaxial ("away from the axis"), and the upper surface is adaxial.
 
 
Welwitschia mirabilis presents an example of an acaulescent growth habit unusual in so large a plant species.
 
Schematic diagrams of the accumbent arrangement of the cotyledons and radicle in a seed of Erysimum (formerly Cheiranthus)
 
Achenes on the surface of the stem of the infructescence of a strawberry
 
Geranium incanum flowers are actinomorphic, having five axes of symmetry, as opposed to the two axes of symmetry of the zygomorphic flowers of most species of the related genus Pelargonium.
 
Fern frond with acuminate leaflets
 
Adelphous stamens in flower of Gossypium tomentosum
 
Watsonia flower slit open and with one stamen bent upward to show its adnate attachment to the petal
 
Diagram of a coconut fruit. The albumen (endosperm) is labelled Alb.
 
Caffeine is an alkaloid with four nitrogen atoms in its carbon skeleton.
 
Rothmannia leaf with extensively anastomose venation
 
Androgynous flower of Sandersonia aurantiaca cut open longitudinally to show the androecium, which comprises the anthers surrounding the green central pistil
 
Anther of Lilium in a state of anthesis, dehiscent and releasing pollen
 
A Neea species, family Nyctaginaceae, presents an example of an anthocarp: the calyx and style remain around the ripening fruit.
 
Aphananthous flowers of oaks such as Quercus robur, being anemophilous, have no need of being conspicuous to pollinating animals.
 
Apical bud of a Populus (poplar) shoot
 
The apparently separate nuts of Ochrosia borbonica actually are apocarpous carpels, two from each flower.
 
Apophyses on the tips of the cone scales of Araucaria cunninghamii amount to spikes.
 
Hairs on the leaves of Meniocus linifolius (formerly Alyssum linifolium) are stellate and appressed to the leaf surface.
 
Arachnoid leaves of an unidentified Gazania species
 
Spines of cactus Gymnocalycium bayrianum emerging from the areoles of the stem nodes
 
Seeds of a species of Blighia (ackee), one whole and one in longitudinal section, showing the pale aril
 
Infructescence of wild rye, showing prominent awns
 
Anatomy of an awn and bristles on a species of the Australian grass Rytidosperma longifolium
 
Axillary buds in leaf
ab-
Prefix meaning "position away from".[1]
abaxial
Surface of an organ facing away from the organ's axis, e.g. the lower surface of a lateral organ such as a leaf or petal.[2] Contrast adaxial.
abort
To abandon development of a structure or organ.[3]
abscission
Natural shedding of an organ that is mature or aged, as of a ripe fruit or an old leaf.[4]
abscission zone
Specialized layer of tissue that allows an organ to be shed by abscission when it is ripe or senescent. Such tissue is commonly formed, for example, at the base of a petiole or pedicel.
acaulescent
Having no apparent stem, or at least none visible above the ground surface.[2] Examples include some species of Oxalis,[5] Nolina,[6] and Yucca.[7] Antonym: caulescent (possessing stem).
accrescent
Increasing in size with age, such as a calyx that continues to grow after the corolla has fallen,[2] e.g. in Physalis peruviana.
accumbent
Lying against another part of the plant; when applied to a cotyledon, it means that an edge of the cotyledon lies along the folded radicle in the seed.[8]
-aceae
Suffix added to the word stem of a generic name to form the name of a taxonomic family;[9] for example, Rosaceae is the rose family, of which the type genus is Rosa.[10]
achene
Dry, one-seeded indehiscent fruit[11] in which the true fruit is not the so-called "berry", but the achenes, which are the so-called "seeds" on the infructescence, e.g. in the genus Fragaria.
acicular
Slender or needle-shaped.[11] See also Leaf shape.
acropetal
Moving from roots to leaves, e.g. of molecular signals in plants.
acrophyll
Regular leaves of a mature plant, produced above the base, as opposed to bathyphyll.
acrostichoid
(describing a type of sorus) Covering the entire abaxial surface of a frond, usually densely so, as in Elaphoglossum and Acrostichum.
actino-
Prefix that indicates a radial pattern, form, or morphology.
actinodromous
(of leaf venation) Palmate or radially arranged venation with three or more primary veins arising at or near the base of the leaf and reaching the margin in most species, but not all.
actinomorphic
Regular or radially symmetrical;[12] may be bisected into similar halves in at least two planes. Applies e.g. to steles and flowers in which the perianth segments within each whorl are alike in size and shape. Compare regular. Contrast asymmetrical, irregular, and zygomorphic.
aculeate
Armed with prickles,[13] e.g. the stem of a rose.
acumen
A long, tapering point, especially the apex of an acuminate leaf.
acuminate
Tapering gradually to a point, with concave sides approaching the point.[13] Contrast acute and mucronate. See also Leaf shape.
acute
1.   Sharply pointed, but not drawn out, with straight sides approaching the point.[13] Contrast acuminate. See also Leaf shape.
2.   Converging at an angle of less than 90°. Contrast obtuse.
ad-
Prefix meaning "near or toward"; also meaning "added to".[13]
adaxial
Surface of an organ facing toward the organ's axis,[13] e.g. the upper surface of a lateral organ such as a leaf or petal. Contrast abaxial.
adelphia

pl. adelphiae

A bundle or structure of stamens forming one unit in an adelphous flower; for example, the stamen tube around the pistil of Hibiscus.
adelphous
Having organs, particularly filaments such as stamens, connected into one or more adelphiae, whether in the form of bunches or tubes, such as is commonly seen in families such as Malvaceae. Usage of the term is not consistent; some authors include closely bunched filaments, while others include only adelphiae in which filaments are connected minimally at their bases. See, for example, Sims: "...the filaments are so closely pressed that they have the appearance of being monadelphous...".[14] Compare derived terms such as monadelphous, having stamens growing in a single bunch or tube, for example in Hibiscus, and diadelphous, growing in two bunches.
adherent
Slightly united to an organ of another kind,[13] usually to a part of another whorl, e.g. a sepal connected to a petal. Contrast adnate.
adnate
Grown from or closely fused to an organ of a different kind,[13] especially along a margin, e.g. a stamen fused to a petal. Adnate anthers have their halves attached to the filament through most of their length. Contrast connate.
adventitious
Produced in an unpredictable or unusual position,[13] e.g. an adventitious bud produced from a stem rather than from the more typical axil of a leaf. Adventitious roots may develop from nodes of prostrate stems of some plant species, or from the hypocotyl rather than from the radicle of a germinating monocotyledon.
adventive
Introduced accidentally[13] (usually referring to a weed).
aerial
Of the air; growing or borne above the surface of the ground or water.[15]
aestivation
Arrangement of sepals and petals or their lobes in an unexpanded flower bud. Contrast vernation.
aff. (affinis)
With affinity to others, akin to; often used for a provisionally recognized but unnamed taxon considered close to that name, perhaps a hybrid or extreme variant.
aggregate fruit
Cluster of fruits formed from the free carpels of a single flower, e.g. a blackberry. Compare multiple fruit.
agochoric
Plants that are spread through accidental transport.
agricultural weed
See weed.
agriophyte
Plant species that have invaded native vegetation and could survive there without human intervention. They are established there in natural habitats, remaining part of natural vegetation even after human influence has ceased, and are independent of humans in their continued existence.[16]
agrophic
Comb-like series of veins forking from a single side of a primary or secondary vein.
agrostology

Also graminology.

The scientific study of grasses, in the strictest sense only those species which are members of the family Poaceae. Broader usages sometimes also include grass-like or graminoid species from the families Cyperaceae, Juncaceae, and Typhaceae.
alate
Having a wing or wings.
albumen
Older name for the endosperm of flowering plants. Except for being a storage tissue for nutrients, it is not like the albumen (egg white) of animal embryos.
albuminous
(of seeds) Containing endosperm.
-ales
Suffix added to the stem of a generic name or descriptive name to form the name of a taxonomic order.
alien
Any plant introduced to an area outside its natural range. Often used interchangeably or in combination with foreign, exotic, non-native, and non-indigenous.
alkaloid
Any of a loosely defined class of organic compounds found in the tissues of many species of plants. Alkaloid molecules have one or more alkaline-reacting nitrogen atoms in their carbon structures. Many alkaloids are commercially important as drugs or poisons, e.g. caffeine, morphine, quinine, and strychnine, each of which occurs naturally in certain plants.
allelopathy
The secretion by a plant of biochemicals which influence the growth and reproduction of nearby plants.
allopatric
Having geographically separate, non-overlapping ranges of distribution.[17] Contrast sympatric.
alternate
1.  (adj.) (of leaves or flowers) Borne singly at different levels along a stem, including spiralled parts. Contrast opposite.
2.  (prep.) Occurring between something else, e.g. stamens alternating with petals.
alternipetalous
A configuration where parts of the flower, e.g. stamens, alternate in position with the petals.[18]
ament
A synonym of catkin.
amphitropous
(of an ovule) Bent so that both ends are near each other. Contrast anatropous, campylotropous, and orthotropous.
amplexicaul
With the base dilated and clasping the stem, usually of leaves.
amylum star
a vegetative propagative body filled with starch (amylum) and located around the lower nodes of certain stoneworts.
anastomose
Branching and then rejoining, as with leaf venation.
anastomosis
A connection or fusion of two or more veins that are normally diverging or branching, thereby forming a network.
anatropous
(of an ovule) Inverted so that the micropyle faces the placenta (this is the most common ovule orientation in flowering plants). Contrast amphitropous, campylotropous, and orthotropous.
ancipital
Flat, with two edges (versus round).[19]
androdioecious
Having bisexual flowers and male flowers on separate individuals. Contrast andromonoecious, polygamodioecious, polygamomonoecious, and polygamous.
androecium
A collective name for the male reproductive parts of a flower; the stamens of a flower considered collectively. Contrast gynoecium. Abbreviated A; e.g. A 3+3 indicates six stamens in two whorls.
androgynophore
A stalk bearing both the androecium and gynoecium of a flower above the level of insertion of the perianth.
androgynous
Having male and female flowers in the same inflorescence.
androphore
The stalk or column supporting the stamens in certain flowers.
andromonoecious
Having bisexual flowers and male flowers on the same individual plant. Contrast androdioecious, gynomonoecious, polygamodioecious, polygamomonoecious, and polygamous.
anemophilous
Adapted to pollination by wind.
anemophily
Adaptation to pollination by wind.
angiosperm
A flowering plant; a plant with developing seeds enclosed in an ovary.
anisomery
The condition of having a floral whorl with a different (usually smaller) number of parts from the other floral whorls.
anisotomic
Branching, with branches having unequal diameters, such as a trunk and its branch. Contrast isotomic.
annual
A plant that completes its life cycle (i.e. germinates, reproduces, and dies) within a single year or growing season.
annulus
1.  A ring-like structure; in the form of a ring. Pappus bristles are sometimes attached to a ring called an annulus or disk at the top of the achene beak. In some pollen grains, the exine around the apertures is either thicker or thinner. In pores, this border is termed an annulus. Certain flowers have ring-like constrictions at the mouth of the flower, e.g. in Huernia and Aristolochia.
2.  A ring of specialized cells on the sporangium.
anterior
Positioned in front of, toward the apex. Compare distal.
anthemoid
In the Compositae, a style with a brush-like tuft of sweeping hairs at the tip of each style branch.
anther
The pollen-bearing part of a stamen.
antheridium
in bryophytes, a specialized gametophytic organ that produces the male gametes.
antheridiophore
In liverworts of the order Marchantiales, a male gametophore, a specialized, stalked structure that bears the antheridia.
antherode
A sterile anther of a staminode.
anthesis
1.  (of a flower) The period during which pollen is presented and/or the stigma is receptive.
2.  (of a flowering plant) The period during which flowers in anthesis are present. Not defined for some cases, such as when pollen is released in the bud.
anthocarp
A type of fruit in which some part of the flower persists attached to the pericarp, e.g. in Nyctaginaceae.
anthophore
A stalk-like structure, internode located between the calyx and the other parts of the flower.
anticlinal
Pointing up, away from, or perpendicular to a surface. Contrast periclinal.
antrorse
Directed forward or upward, e.g. of hairs on a stem. Contrast retrorse.
apetalous
Lacking petals.
apex

pl. apices

The tip; the point furthest from the point of attachment.
aphananthous
(of flowers) Inconspicuous or unshowy, as opposed to phaneranthous or showy.
aphlebia

pl. aphlebiae

Imperfect or irregular leaf endings commonly found on ferns and fossils of ferns from the Carboniferous Period.
aphyllous
Leafless; having no leaves.[20]
apical
At or on the apex of a structure, usually a shoot, a stem, or the trunk of a tree, e.g. an apical meristem or an apical bud.
apiculate
especially of leaves, ending in a short triangular point. See also Leaf shape.
apiphily
A form of pollination whereby pollen is distributed by honey bees.
apo-
A prefix meaning "away from, separate, without".
apocarpous
(of a gynoecium) Consisting of one or more carpels which are free from one another (or almost so), e.g. in members of the Ranunculaceae and Dilleniaceae.
apomixis

adj. apomictic

A type of asexual reproduction whereby viable seeds or spores are produced asexually, without fertilization, such that the genetic material they contain is a clone of the parent's genetic material. A plant produced in this way is called an apomict.
apomorphy
In cladistics, a "different form" from the form of an ancestor (i.e., an innovation) of use in determining membership in a clade.
apopetalous
Having separate petals, not fused (sympetalous).
apophyllous
Perianth or other segments free, not united. Compare symphyllous, gamophyllous, and polyphyllous.
apophysis
1.  The external part of a cone scale.
2.  An outgrowth of an organ or an enlargement of a stem.
appendage
A secondary part attached to a main structure; an external growth that seldom has any obvious function, hence appendiculate.
appendiculate
Having the nature of or bearing appendages.
appressed
Pressed closely but not fused, e.g. leaves against a stem.
aquatic plant
A plant whose natural habitat is water, living in or on water for all or a substantial part of its lifespan; generally restricted to fresh or inland waters.
arachnoid
Cobwebby, from being covered with fine white hairs.
arborescent
Tree-like in growth or general appearance.
arboretum

pl. arboreta

A taxonomically arranged collection of trees.
archaeophyte
A non-native plant that has nonetheless been present in a particular geographic area for some time. Contrast neophyte.
archegonium

Plural archegonia.

A multicellular haploid structure or organ of the gametophyte phase of certain plants, producing and containing the ovum or female gamete. The corresponding male organ is called the antheridium.
archegoniophore
In liverworts of the order Marchantiales, a female gametophore: a specialized, stalked structure that bears the archegonia and the sporophytes.
arctotoid
In the Compositae, a style with a ring of sweeping hairs borne on the shaft of the style proximal to the style branches.
areolate
Having or being composed of areoles, as an areolate crustose lichen.
areole
1.  A space between the threads of a net, e.g. that part of a leaf surface defined by each of the elements of a vein network; as with cacti, the area between the veinlets of a leaf.
2.  A structure on the stem node of a cactus, morphologically a specialised branch; the region of a cactus upon which spines, glochids, and flowers are borne.
aril
A membranous or fleshy appendage formed by expansion of the funicle which partly or wholly covers a seed, e.g. the fleshy outer layer of lychee fruit, or that found in members of the Sapindaceae.
aristate
With a stiff, bristle-like awn or tip. See also Leaf shape.
article
A segment of a jointed stem or of a fruit with constrictions between the seeds; an organ part that separates easily from the rest of the organ at a joint or articulation.
articulate
Jointed; separating freely, leaving a clean scar; e.g. the fronds of certain ferns where they join the rhizome.
ascending
1.  (of a stem) Spreading horizontally, then directed upward; an ascending stem is more or less prostrate near its base, then erect.
2.  (of an ovule) Attached somewhat above the base.
ascidiate
Shaped like a pitcher, as with the leaves of pitcher plants, e.g. species of Nepenthes and Sarracenia.[21]
asexual reproduction
Reproduction that does not involve gametes. Often used interchangeably with vegetative reproduction.
asperulous
Having a rough, sandpapery texture; e.g. some leaf surfaces.
asymmetrical
Irregular or unequal; lacking any plane of symmetry; e.g. flowers of Canna.
attenuate
Narrowing gradually. See also Leaf shape.
auricle
An ear-shaped lobe, particularly a small, roundish, lateral appendage of a leaf or leaf-like organ.
auriculate
Attached at the base with ear-shaped appendages (auricles). See also Leaf shape.
autogamous
Self-pollinating, self-fertilizing – in flowering plants
awn
1.  Any long, bristle-like appendage.
2.  In the Poaceae, an appendage terminating or on the back of glumes or lemmas of some grass spikelets.
3.  In the Geraniaceae, the part of the style that remains attached to the carpel that separates from the carpophore (column).
4.  A generally straight, stiff pappus element, varying from stiffly bristle-like to hard and needle-like. In Strophanthus, the awn is the beak of the seed, stipe of the coma hairs.
axil
The upper angle between one part of a plant and another, e.g. the stem and a leaf.
axile
On an axis; of a placenta, on the central axis of the ovary.
axillary
Borne in or arising from the axil, usually referring to the axil of a leaf.
axis
The main stem of a whole plant or inflorescence; also, the line along which this stem extends.

B edit

 
 
Barbs occur on the spines of some species of cactus, as shown here, enlarged.
 
Berries of Olinia ventosa, including a cross-section showing hard seeds in the pulp
 
The bifoliate compound leaves of the mopane tree, Colophospermum mopane, suggest the common name "butterfly tree".
 
Cross-section of a silique of Arabidopsis thaliana, showing it to be biloculate, formed of two carpels, morphologically a silique and not a pod
 
 
Structure of a biternate compound leaf
 
This African baobab, Adansonia digitata, has an enormous bole beneath a relatively modest canopy that is typical of this species.
 
The large, colorful bracts of Bougainvillea are commonly mistaken for its petals.
 
Burrs, fruits of Arctium species
 
Buttress root of a mature elm
baccate
Fruit appearing like a berry that may or may not be a true berry.[22]
baculiform
Rod-like; longer than wide. Compare cylindrical.
barb
A rear-facing point, as in a fish hook.
barbed
Having barbs pointing in one direction.
barbellate
Having barbed hairs (barbellae).
bark
The protective external layer of tissue on the stems and roots of woody trees and shrubs; includes all of the living and non-living tissue external to the cambium.
basal
Situated or attached at or close to the base (of a plant or a phylogenetic tree diagram).
basifixed
Something attached by its base, e.g. an anther attached to the filament. Compare dorsifixed.
basipetal
Developing sequentially from the apex toward the base (i.e. with the youngest toward the base), e.g. of flowers in an inflorescence. Also, moving from leaves to roots, e.g. of molecular signals in plants.
bathyphyll
A specialized leaf produced at the base of a plant, usually when the plant is immature, and which serves to anchor the plant to a substrate; especially notable in the fern Teratophyllum. Contrast acrophyll.
beak
A prominent, pointed terminal projection, especially of a carpel or fruit.
berry
A type of indehiscent fruit with the seeds immersed in the pulp, e.g. a tomato.
bi-
A prefix meaning "two", e.g. bisulcate, having two sulci or grooves.
biennial
A plant which completes its life cycle (i.e. germinates, reproduces, and dies) within two years or growing seasons. Biennial plants usually form a basal rosette of leaves in the first year and then flower and fruit in the second year.
bifid
Forked; cut in two for about half its length. Compare trifid.
bifoliate
(of a compound leaf) Having precisely two leaflets, usually in a symmetrical pair, e.g. a leaf of Colophospermum mopane. Compare jugate lobed leaf, e.g. most species of Bauhinia.
bifusiform
Fusiform with a pinch in the middle.
bilabiate
Having two lips, e.g. the form of the petals in many irregular flowers.
bilateral
1.  Having two distinguishable sides, such as the two faces of a dorsiventral leaf.
2.  Arranged on opposite sides, e.g. leaves on a stem; Compare distichous and opposite.
3.  Bilaterally symmetrical, as in a leaf with a symmetrical outline.
biloculate
Having two loculi, e.g. in anthers or ovaries.
binomial
Making use of names consisting of two words to form the scientific name (or combination) in a Latin form. For example, where the first is the name of the genus to which the species belongs, and the second is the specific epithet given to that species to distinguish it from others in the same genus.
binomial nomenclature
The system of nomenclature in which the scientific name of a species (and not of a taxon at any other rank) is a combination of two names, the first name being the generic name. The second name is referred to botanically as the specific epithet. Note that the two names together (not just the second name) constitute the species name.
bipinnate
Doubly pinnate; e.g. a compound leaf with individual leaflets pinnately divided.
bipinnatisect
A pinnatisect leaf with deeply dissected segments.
bisexual
Bearing both male and female reproductive organs; usually, flowers with both stamens and carpels; synonymous with hermaphrodite, synoecious, and monoclinous. Bisexual flowers occur only on monoecious plants. See also androgynous, monoicous, and plant reproductive morphology.
bitegmic
(of an ovule) Covered by two integuments. Contrast unitegmic.
biternate
Ternate, with each division divided into three.
bivalve
Having two valves or hinged parts. Contrast trivalve.
blade
The lamina or flattened part of a leaf, excluding the stalk or petiole.
bloom
A fine white or bluish waxy powder occurring on plant parts, usually stems, leaves, and fruits. It is easily removed by rubbing.
bole
The trunk of a tree, usually the portion below the lowest branch. Compare canopy.
bostrychoid
Arranged on a conical surface (like a snail shell); used to describe inflorescences in which the buds are arranged in an almost helical manner on the outside of a long, tapering, conical rachis.
bract
A modified leaf associated with a flower or inflorescence and differing in shape, size, or color from other leaves (and without an axillary bud).
bracteate
Possessing bracts.
bracteole
A small bract borne singly or in pairs on the pedicel or calyx; synonymous with bractlet.
bracteolate
Possessing bracteoles (bractlets).
bracteose
Having many or showy bracts.[23]
bractlet
See bracteole.
branchlet
A small branch.
brevideciduous
A plant that loses all of its leaves only briefly before growing new ones, so that it is leafless for only a short time, e.g. approximately two weeks.
bristle
A straight, stiff hair (smooth or with minute teeth); the upper part of an awn (when the latter is bent and has a lower, stouter, and usually twisted part, called the column).
brochidodromous
Pinnate leaf venation in which the secondary veins do not terminate at the leaf margin, but are joined in a succession of prominent arcs.
brochus

pl. brochi

Width of one lumen of a pollen grain reticulum and half of the width of the surrounding muri (walls), hence heterobrochate and homobrochate, where the lumina are of different or similar sizes, respectively.
bryophyte
Informally, any plant that is a moss, hornwort, or liverwort. Formally, these plants are placed in three separate divisions: hornworts (Anthocerophyta), liverworts (Marchantiophyta), and mosses (Bryophyta).
bulb
A thick storage organ, usually underground, consisting of a stem and leaf bases (the inner ones fleshy).
bulbel
A bulb arising from another bulb. See bulblet.
bulbil
A small, deciduous bulb or tuber formed in the axil of a leaf or pinna; a means of vegetative propagation.
bulblet
A bulb arising from another bulb; a bulbel.
bullate
Having a rounded or blister-like appearance; arched or vaulted.
burl
A deformation or knot in the branches or trunk of a tree, sometimes sought after in woodworking.[24]
burr
1.  A prickly fruit.
2.  A rough or prickly propagule consisting of a seed or fruit and associated floral parts or bracts.
buttress root
A root growing from an above-ground stem or trunk, and providing support, e.g. commonly of Ficus macrophylla.

C edit

 
Dianthus chinensis has a caespitose growth habit.
 
Callus tissue of Nicotiana tabacum growing on a nutrient medium in plant tissue culture
 
Structure of flower of an orchid in genus Praecoxanthus, with the callus labelled
 
Bearded callus of a floret of the grass species Chrysopogon filipes
 
Scanning electron micrograph of the carpopodium at the base of the achene-like fruit of Zyzyura mayana, Asteraceae
 
Dormant leaf buds of deciduous trees are commonly protected by imbricate cataphylls that are shed when the bud sprouts.
 
 
The caudex of Dioscorea elephantipes grows largely above the soil surface. Many species that form caudices grow them underground.
 
Flowers growing from a branch of Syzygium moorei, an example of cauliflory
 
Some members of the Espeletia genus exhibit a growth habit that is caulirosulate.
 
Moehringia growing as a chasmophyte on an overhanging cliff
 
Chloroplasts within the cells of the leaves of the moss Bryum capillare
 
Not all chloroplasts are simple in shape. Chloroplasts of Spirogyra are helical within the tubular cells of their algal filaments.
 
 
The so-called "fleshy leaves" of cacti, such as on this Opuntia tomentosa, are actually cladodes (branches). The true leaves are the spines growing on the cladodes, which on this young cladode are still fleshy.
 
Colony of cells forming a coenobium, of an alga in the genus Pediastrum
 
Asclepias syriaca seeds, showing the coma of hairs in its pappus
 
Curcuma pseudomontana with red coma bracts
 
Pfaffia gnaphalioides flowers with basal coma hairs
 
Coma atop Muscari armeniacum, bearing sterile flowers
 
The conical compound inflorescence of Aeonium arboreum is a compound panicle composed of minor panicles, some of which are compound in their turn.
 
California buckeye (Aesculus californica) has a compound palmate leaf, the leaflets radiating from a central point.
 
The lobes of the gamopetalous corolla of Nicotiana flowers are conduplicate in the bud.
 
Casuarina equisetifolia male and female flowers and cones
 
Gamopetalous Watsonia flower split open between two petals to show the connate formation of the corolla tube; compare the adnate attachment of the stamen bases to the matching petals
 
Corms, one entire in its tunic, one partly peeled to show tunic cataphylls, and one split to show inner structure
 
The corona of this Passiflora flower is a ring of purple filaments between the petals and the stamens.
 
Cotyledons of seedlings of Koelreuteria. One plant shows the first new leaves above its cotyledons, and the rest show various younger stages of emerging cotyledons.
 
Crassula rupestris frequently grows as a cremnophyte on cliff faces in fynbos.
 
Nymphoides crenata has crenate leaf margins.
 
Mimetes cucullatus, so named for the hooded, cucullate shape of its white flowers
 
Murraya paniculata has leaves with cuneate (wedge-shaped) bases.
 
 
Cuspidate leaves of Diplacus bigelovii var. cuspidatus
 
Euphorbia milii is commercially grown for the aesthetic appearance of its brightly colored, bract-like structures called cyathophylls, which sit below the inflorescence.
caducous
Falling off early, e.g. the sepals of poppies, which fall off when the petals begin to open. Compare persistent and fugacious.
caespitose
Tufted or turf-like, e.g. the growth form of some grasses.
calcarate
possessing a spur.
calcareous
A soil type or a lichen substrate rock type that is rich in or largely composed of calcium carbonate.
calceolate
Shaped like a slipper.[25]
calcicole
A plant which thrives in calcareous soil. Also calciphile, calciphyte. Antonym: calcifuge. [25]
callose
Hardened; thickened; callous.
callus

pl. calli

1.  A protruding mass of tissue
2.  Undifferentiated tissue growth formed in response to wounding; may be grown in vitro.
3.  In orchids, fleshy outgrowths from the labellum which can be variously shaped from papillae to plates.
4.  In grasses, a hardened extension from the base of a floret (formed from the rachilla joint and/or the base of the lemma), which may or may not elongate and is often covered in hairs or bristles.
calyciflorous
Having petals and stamens attached to the calyx.
calycophyll
Leaf-like structure formed from a sepal or calyx lobe which enlarges, usually many-fold, before or after anthesis, especially when most of the other sepals or calyx lobes retain their original size. More extreme than an accrescent calyx, calycophylls are found in Rubiaceae. Compare semaphyll and pterophyll.
calyculate
Having an epicalyx.
calyculus
1.  A cup-shaped structure formed from bracts resembling an outer calyx.
2.  In some Asteraceae, a circle of bracts below the involucre.
calyptra
A hood or lid. See operculum.
calyx

pl. calyces

Collective term for the sepals of one flower; the outer whorl of a flower, usually green. Compare corolla.
calyx tube
A tube formed by the fusion of the sepals (calyx), at least at the base.
cambium
Tissue layer that provides partially undifferentiated cells for plant growth.
campanulate
Bell-shaped.
camptodromous
Pinnate venation in which the secondary veins curve toward the margins, in some cases becoming nearly parallel with them, and not reconnecting with other veins to form loops.
campylotropous
When the ovule is oriented transversely (i.e. with its axis at right angles to its stalk) and with a curved embryo sac. Compare amphitropus, anatropous, and orthotropous.
canaliculate
Channelled; having a longitudinal groove.
canescent
Approaching white in color, as in a leaf covered with white down or wool.
canopy
Branches and foliage of a tree; the crown. Also refers to the protective upper layer of a forest. Compare trunk.
capillary
1.  Tube, pore, or passage with a narrow, internal cross-section.
2.  Slender; hair-like.
capitate
1.  (of an inflorescence) Having a knob-like head, with the flowers unstalked and aggregated into a dense cluster.
2.  (of a stigma) Like the head of a pin.
capitulum
Dense cluster of sessile or subsessile flowers or florets, e.g. a flower head in the daisy family Asteraceae. See pseudanthium.
capsule
Dry fruit formed from two or more united carpels and dehiscing when ripe (usually by splitting into pieces or opening at summit by teeth or pores).
carduoid
In Asteraceae, having a style with a ring of sweeping hairs borne on the shaft of the style below the style branches.
carina
See keel.
carinal canal
Longitudinal cavity in the stems of Equisetum and extinct Equisetopsida, coinciding with a ridge in the stem surface.
carneous
Flesh-colored, especially as applied to some flowers.
carnose, carnous
Fleshy or pulpy in texture, especially as applied to some tissues or organs. Contrast coriaceous and corneous.
Caropodium
Genus of flowering plants in the family Apiaceae. Native range: Turkey to Iran. Not to be confused with Carpopodium
carpel
The basic female reproductive organ in angiosperms, either consisting of a single sporophyll or a single locule of a compound ovary, with a style and a stigma. The gynoecium is the collective term for all of the carpels of a single flower.
carpellary
Referring to carpels or to associated structures or outgrowths of carpels, for example staminodes attached to carpels in Nymphaeaceae, were frequently referred to as carpellary attachments. The current and past usage of the terms "carpellary attachments", paracarpels, and staminodes is confused and varies among authors.
carpopodium
On achenes (Cypselae), an elongation of the base of the gynoecium which looks distinct; the abscission zone, where the achene is separated from the receptacle.
2.  Genus Carpopodium in the family Brassicaceae; not to be confused with Caropodium.
cartilaginous
Hard and tough; gristly. Compare corneous and coriaceous.
caruncle
A small piece of flesh-like tissue, typically lumpy or warty, growing on the testa near the hilum. Contrast aril.
caryopsis
A dry, indehiscent, one-seeded fruit in which the seed coat is closely fused to the fruit wall, e.g. in most grasses.
Casparian strip
A continuous band of suberin in the radial primary cell walls of the endodermis in vascular plant stems and roots that forms a permeability barrier to the passive diffusion of external water and solutes into the vascular tissue.
cassideous
Hood-, helmet- or bonnet-shaped; generally referring to floral anatomy, e.g. in the flowers of Aconitum, Satyrium, etc.
castaneous
Chestnut-colored, reddish-brown.[26]
casual alien
An exotic plant that appears with no apparent human assistance but does not develop a sustained population(s), or one that persists only by repeated new introductions. Compare alien.
cataphyll
Any plant structure which is morphologically a leaf but which has at most an incidental or transient photosynthetic function. They are either shed when their main function has been completed, or are incorporated into structures where, when dead, they serve a protective or supportive purpose.
catenulate
In the shape of a chain; formed of parts or cells connected as if chained together, e.g. some diatoms, algae, and cyanobacteria such as Anabaena. See also concatenate.
catkin
A spike, usually pendulous, in which the mostly small flowers are unisexual and without a conspicuous perianth, e.g. in willows, poplars, oaks, and casuarinas. The individual flowers often have scaly bracts and are generally wind-pollinated. Catkins are usually shed as a unit.
caudate
Having a narrow, tail-like appendage or tip, e.g. a drip tip. Contrast acuminate, cuspidate, and mucronate.
caudex

pl. caudices

The stem of a plant, especially a woody one; also used to mean a rootstock, or particularly a basal stem structure or storage organ from which new growth arises. Compare lignotuber.
caudiciform
Stem-like or caudex-like; sometimes used to mean "pachycaul", meaning "thick-stemmed".
caulescent
possessing a well-developed stem above ground, similar to cauline. Antonym: acaulescent (lacking an apparent stem).
cauliflory

adj. cauliflorous

Having flowers or fruits growing directly from a tree's branches or trunk.[27]
cauline
Borne on an aerial stem or caulis, as with leaves, flowers, or fruits (when applied to the latter two organs, usually referring to older stems.
caulirosulate
Borne at the end of the stem or caulis, as with leaves or bracts.
cell
1.  The basic, microscopic unit of plant structure, generally consisting of compartments in a viscous fluid surrounded by a cell wall.
2.  A cavity of an anther or ovary.
cenanthous
(of a perianth) Lacking both stamens and pistil, i.e. a flower with neither androecium nor gynoecium.
centrifixed
Of a two-branched organ attached by its center, e.g. a hair or anther.
ceraceous
Having a waxy appearance, color, or texture, e.g. flowers of many species of Ceropegia, and the waxy fruit of some species of Myrica.
cernuous
Nodding, falling headlong or face down; inclined, stooping, or bowing forward. Applied to many species with a nodding, stooping habit, such as many Narcissus and Dierama species. Many plant species bear the specific epithet "cernua".
cespitose
An alternative spelling of caespitose, meaning tufted or turf-like, e.g. the growth form of some grasses.
chamber
A cavity of an ovary.
channelled
Sunken below the surface, resulting in a rounded channel.
chartaceous
Having a papery texture.
chasmogamous
Of flowers that are pollinated when the perianth is open. Compare cleistogamous.
chasmophyte
A plant adapted to growing in crevices or hollows, such as in cliff faces. Compare cremnophyte.[28][29]
chimera
An individual composed of two or more genetically distinct tissues, most commonly as a result of a graft and sometimes by mutations that occur during cell division or cellular transfers during seed development.
chiropterophilous
Pollinated by bats.
chlorophyll
Any of a variety of different chemical pigments in chloroplasts that are essential for photosynthesis.
chloroplast
An organelle present in plant cells which contains chlorophyll.
chlorosis
An abnormal lack or paleness of color in a normally green organ.
cilia

sing. cilium; adj. ciliate

Very small hairs or hair-like protrusions more or less confined to the margins of an organ, as with eyelashes; in motile cells, minute, hair-like protrusions which aid motility.
circinate
Spirally coiled with the tip innermost, e.g. circinate vernation of the developing fronds of most ferns.
cirrhose
(of a leaf) Ending in a tendril at the apex.
cirrus
See tendril.
cladode
A photosynthetic branch or stem, often leaf-like and usually with foliage leaves either absent or much reduced. Compare phyllode.
class
The principal category for taxa ranking between division and order.
clathrate
Shaped like a net or lattice; pierced with apertures, as with a cage.
clavate
Club-shaped.
clavuncula
In the Apocynaceae, an enlarged, drum-shaped stigma of which the sides and lower surface are the receptive zones. Coherent with the anthers or not.
claw
1.  A narrow, stalk-like, basal portion of a petal, sepal, or bract.
2.  In Melaleuca, the united portion of a stamen bundle.
cleistogamous
Having flowers which self-pollinate and never open fully, or which self-pollinate before opening. Compare chasmogamous.
climber
A plant growing more or less erect by leaning on or twining around another structure for support, or by clinging with tendrils.
climbing
See climber.
cline

adj. clinal

A continuous morphological variation in form within a species or sometimes between two species.
clone
A plant derived from the asexual vegetative reproduction of a parent plant, with both plants having identical genetic compositions.
coalescent
Having plant parts fused or grown together to form a single unit.
cochleariform
Concave and spoon-shaped.
cochleate
Coiled like a snail's shell.
coenobium
An arranged colony of algae that acts like a single organism.
coenocyte
A single cell with multiple nuclei, formed when nuclear division was not followed by cytokinesis.
coleoptile
One type of sheath in the structure of monocotyledonous seeds. The coleoptile is a protective sheath or cap (pileus), generally more or less pointed, that covers the monocotyledonous plumule as it emerges from the soil. It generally turns green and contributes to photosynthesis until its function is superseded by the main growth of the seedling. Contrast this with the coleorhiza, which remains underground until it is superseded as the roots emerge.
coleorhiza
One type of sheath in the structure of monocotyledonous seeds. The coleorhiza connects the coleoptile to the radicle and protects the monocotyledonous radicle during germination. Unlike the coleoptile, the coleorhiza is associated with the root and does not emerge from the soil during germination. Contrast coleoptile.
collenchyma
A specialized tissue consisting of living cells with unevenly thickened cellulose and pectin cell walls that performs a support function in organs such as leaves and young stems that are composed of primary plant tissues.
colleter
A multicellular, glandular hair that usually produces a mucilaginous substance and is located on sepals, stipules, or petioles, or on nearby parts of stems; commonly found on plants in the order Gentianales.
columella
In flowering plants, the central axis of the cone or fruit, e.g. in Callitris.
column
1.  A structure extending above the ovary and incorporating the style and stamens also known as the gynostegium, e.g. in orchids and milkweeds.
2.  In grasses, the lower, stouter, and usually twisted part of an awn, distinct from the slender upper part or bristle.
columnar
Shaped like a column.
coma
1.  A tuft of hairs from testa or funiculus at one or both ends of some seeds, e.g. in Strophanthus, Asclepias, or Alstonia.
2.  Sterile bracts, e.g. in Curcuma, Ananas, or Eucomis.
3.  Sterile flowers, e.g. in Muscari and Leopoldia, at the apex of some inflorescences.
4.  A tuft of hairs at the base of some flowers, e.g. in Pfaffia gnaphalioides.
5.  A tuft of hairs at the apex or base of some spikelets.
6.  An axil tuft of hairs in inflorescences in some Poaceae, e.g. in Eragrostis comata.
commercial name
A name often of no botanical standing and not governed by the ICNCP. The term generally applies to names such as Trademark Names, names covered by Plant Breeders Rights, Patents and Promotional Names, which are often used to enhance the sale of a plant.
commissure
The seam or face at which two carpels adhere. See also fissure and suture.
community
An ecological assemblage of plants that characteristically occur together.
compound
Composed of several parts, e.g. a leaf composed of multiple leaflets, a gynoecium composed of multiple carpels, or an inflorescence made up of multiple smaller inflorescences.
compound palmate
Having leaflets that radiate from a central point (usually at the top of a petiole), like spread-out fingers radiating from the palm of a hand. Compare palmate.
compressed
Flattened lengthwise, either laterally (from side to side) or dorsally (from front to back).
concatenate
Joined together in a chain-like form. See also concatenate and catenate.
concolorous
Having the same color throughout; uniformly colored.
conduplicate
Arranged such that two sides of a flat surface are folded along the midline to face each other. See also ptyxis, aestivation, and vernation.
cone
A type of fruit, usually woody, ovoid to globular, including scales, bracts, or bracteoles arranged around a central axis, e.g. in gymnosperms, especially conifers and Casuarina.
conflorescence
A rarely used term describing substantial differences between the overall structure of an inflorescence and that of its individual branches, e.g. the bottlebrush multiple-flower head of members of the genus Callistemon.
connate
Fused to another organ (or organs) of the same kind, e.g. petals in a gamopetalous corolla tube. Compare adnate.
connective
The part of an anther that connects the anther cells.
connivent
Coming into contact or converging.
conspecific
Belonging to the same species.
contiguous
Adjoining, touching, but not united.
contort
(of sepals or petals) A type of imbricate aestivation in which one side of each segment overlaps one of the adjacent segments and the other side is overlapped by the other adjacent segment. See convolute.
contorted
Twisted out of the normal shape.
convolute
1.  Referring to the arrangement of floral or foliar organs in a bud when each organ or segment has one edge overlapping the adjacent organ or segment; a form of imbricate arrangement. See contort.
2.  (of leaves) A type of vernation in which one leaf is rolled up inside another.
3.  A type of vernation of two leaves at a node, in which one half of each leaf is exposed and the other half is wrapped inside the other leaf.
corcle
A plant embryo, plumule, or plumule plus radicle.
cordate
Heart-shaped, with the notch lowermost; of the base of a leaf, like the notched part of a heart. Contrast obcordate.
coriaceous
Leathery; stiff and tough, but flexible. Compare corneous.
corm

adj. cormose, cormous

A fleshy, swollen stem base, usually underground and functioning in the storage of food reserves, with buds naked or covered by very thin scales; a type of rootstock.
cormel
A small corm (or cormlet), forming at the base of a growing larger corm.[30]
corneous
Horny in texture; stiff and hard, but somewhat tough. Compare coriaceous.
corolla
A collective term for the petals of a flower. Compare calyx.
corona
1.  In flowering plants, a ring of structures that may be united in a tube, arising from the corolla or perianth of a flower and standing between the perianth lobes and the stamens. The trumpet of a daffodil is a corona.
2.  In grasses, a hardened ring of tissue surmounting the lemma in some species.
cortex

pl. cortexes or cortices

A region of tissue located between the surface cells and the vascular cylinder.[31]
corticolous
Growing on bark or on wood with the bark stripped off. Compare lignicolous.
corymb

adj. corymbose

An inflorescence with branches arising at different points but reaching about the same height, giving the flower cluster a flat-topped appearance.
costa
A rib.
costapalmate
Having a definite costa (midrib), unlike the typical palmate or fan leaf, but with the leaflets arranged radially as in a palmate leaf.
cotyledon
The primary leaf or leaves of a plant embryo which upon germination develops into the seed-leaf or the first set of leaves.
craspedodromous
Pinnate venation in which the secondary veins terminate at the margins, often as teeth.
crateriform
In the shape of a saucer or shallow cup; hemispherical or more shallow.
cremnophyte
A plant adapted to growing on, especially hanging from, cliff faces or crevices. Compare chasmophyte.[28][29]
crenate
Having blunt or rounded teeth; scalloped.
crenulate
Minutely scalloped.
crisped
Finely curled, as with the edges of leaves and petals.
cristarque cell
A sclereid which contains a druse and has the lignin deposited excentrically on the cell wall to form a cup shape, or in cross-section, a ∪-shape.
crown
See canopy.
cross
To make something interbreed; the act of hybridization.
cruciform
Cross-shaped.
crustaceous
Hard, thin and brittle.
crustose
Forming a closely applied surface layer or crust.
cryptogam
Any of the "lower plants" which produce spores and do not have stamens, ovaries, or seeds; literally, plants whose sexual reproductive organs are not conspicuous. This group typically includes the ferns, bryophytes, and algae, and sometimes fungi (including lichenized fungi). Compare phanerogam.
cucullate
Hood-like or hooded, commonly referring to the shape of leaves or petals, e.g. Pelargonium cucullatum. Similarly derived terms include cuculliform and cuccularis.
culm
In grasses, sedges, rushes, and some other monocotyledons, an aerial stem bearing the inflorescence, extending strictly from the base of the plant to the lowest involucral bract (or base of the inflorescence).
cultigen
A plant whose origin or selection is primarily due to intentional human activity.
cultivar
A term derived from "cultivated variety" denoting an assemblage of cultivated plants clearly distinguished by one or more characters (morphological, physiological, cytological, chemical, or other). When reproduced (either sexually or asexually), the assemblage retains its distinguishing characters. A cultivar may arise in cultivation or be introduced from the wild. It is a variant that is of horticultural interest or value. Cultivar names are written with single quotation marks around them, e.g. 'Blue Carpet' or 'Alba'. All new names established after 1 January 1959 must be in common language (that is, not in Latin), but names established in Latin prior to this date are retained in Latin form.
cultivar epithet
The defining part of a name that denominates a cultivar. Cultivars are designated by fancy (q.v.) epithets appended either to the scientific name or to the common name of the taxon to which they belong; they are not italicized but placed in single quotation marks, e.g. Rubus nitidoides 'Merton Early'. 'Merton Early' is the cultivar epithet.
cuneate
Wedge-shaped, with straight sides converging at a base.
cupule
A cup-shaped structure composed of coalescent bracts, such as the cup of an acorn. See calybium.
cupular
Shaped like a cupule.
cupulate
Bearing cupules.
cupuliform
Nearly hemispherical, shaped like a cupola or dome.
cusp
A hard, pointed tip, stiffer and more formidable than a mucro, hence cuspidate.
cuspidate
Tipped with a cusp, as with some leaves.
cuticle
A waterproofing layer covering the epidermis of aerial plant surfaces and composed of the polymers cutin, and/or cutan and waxes.
cutting
An apical tip of shoot structure, root, or leaf which is cut from a plant and used for asexual vegetative propagation.
cyathium

pl. cyathia

An inflorescence of unisexual flowers surrounded by involucral bracts, especially the flowers of Euphorbia.
cyathophyll
In Euphorbia, the bract-like structure on which the involucre sits, usually but not always occurring in twos. They may sometimes be brightly colored and confused with petals.
cylindrical
Rod-like and two to three times as long as wide. Compare baculiform.
cynaroid
See carduoid.
cyme

adj. cymose

A type of inflorescence in which the main axis and all lateral branches end in a flower (each lateral may be repeatedly branched).
cymose
Having a cyme or cymes.
cypsela
A type of dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruit formed from an inferior ovary.

D edit

 
Seasonal, healthy decortication of Eucalyptus grandis outer bark
 
A decorticating machine collecting fiber from leaves
 
 
Dentate leaf of elm
 
 
Astragalus austriacus is regarded as diadelphous because it has one stamen unattached to the main adelphia (bunch).
 
The paired cotyledons of a castor bean seedling (Ricinus communis) are typical of a dicotyledon.
 
Discolorous leaves of Brachylaena discolor differ in color between their upper and lower surfaces.
 
Disk florets opening in a capitulum of a cultivated Helianthus. They open progressively from the edge to the center of the disk.
 
Dissepiment developing in tissue of carpels where they meet to form locules in the capsule of the ovary of Lilium
 
Boophone disticha has conspicuously distichous leaves.
 
Domatia at the bases of the thorns of Vachellia drepanolobium, the whistling thorn, with visible access holes
 
Dorsiventral (bilateral) leaves of Syzygium gerrardii and Triadica sebifera
 
Leaves of Epipremnum aureum (golden pothos) have a cuspidate drip tip.
deciduous
Dehiscing and falling seasonally, as with bark, leaves, or petals. Contrast persistent.
declinate
Curving downward, and then upward at the tip. Often qualified, e.g. declinate-ascendant.
decompound
Divided to more than one level, e.g. in bipinnate leaves, in which the leaflets of what would otherwise be a pinnate leaf are themselves pinnately divided.
decorticate
1.  (intr. v.) To shed the outer bark of a tree, usually seasonally as part of the natural growth cycle.
2.  (tr. v.) To strip the peel, crust, bark, or other surface tissues from a plant or from harvested material, such as in extracting fiber from harvested Agave leaves.
decumbent
Having branches growing horizontally along the ground but which are turned up at the ends.
decurrent
Extending downward beyond the point of insertion, e.g. when the base of a leaf or a fungal gill is prolonged downward along the stem in a raised line or narrow wing.
decussant
A synonym of decussate; the usage decussant is questionable and occurs rarely, probably as an error. The formally correct usage is decussate.
decussate
Opposite with successive pairs borne at right angles to the last; generally applied to the arrangement of leaves.
definite
Of a constant number, e.g. twice as many stamens as petals or sepals (or less), or an inflorescence ending in a flower or an aborted floral bud, typically a cymose inflorescence. Contrast indefinite.
deflexed
Bent downward. Contrast inflexed.
dehiscent
Breaking open at maturity to release contents; refers e.g. to the opening of fruits to release seeds, of anthers to release pollen, and of sporangia to release spores. Contrast indehiscent.
deltoid
Shaped like the uppercase Greek letter Δ, i.e. like a more or less equilateral triangle.
dendroid
Tree-like; branching like a tree.
dentate
Toothed, especially in reference to leaf margins.
denticulate
Finely toothed; a diminutive form of dentate.
deserticolous
Inhabiting a desert.
determinate
Limited, usually in growth. Contrast indeterminate.
diadelphous
Referring to a class of adelphous structure in which the stamens or similar organs are connected in two adelphiae instead of just one.
diaspore
Any reproductive part of a plant adapted for dispersal and for establishing new plants; may be a disseminule such as a seed, or other parts such as specialized buds, branches, inflorescences, or fruits.
dichasium
A cymose inflorescence with all branches below the terminal flower in regular opposite pairs. Compare monochasium and pleiochasium.
dichlamydeous
Having a perianth which is divided into a separate calyx and corolla. Compare homochlamydeous.
dichotomous
Forking into two equal branches. This may result from an equal division of the growing tip, or may be sympodial, in which the growing tip is aborted and replaced. Typically refers to mode of branch growth, as in Aloidendron dichotomum, but also to other organs, such as the venation patterns on leaves, the thorns of various species of Carissa (which morphologically are branches), and the thalli or hyphae of various algae and fungi.
dicotyledon

Also abbreviated dicot.

A flowering plant whose embryo has two or more cotyledons (seed leaves). Contrast monocotyledon.
digitate
With segments spreading from a common center, like the fingers of a hand. See also palmate and palmatisect. See also Leaf shape.
digitiform
Shaped like a finger.
dimorphic
Occurring in two different forms (with respect to shape and/or size), e.g. of stamens, fronds, or leaves. See also monomorphic (having a single form) and polymorphic (having many forms).
dioecious
(of vascular plants) Having male and female reproductive structures which develop only on different individuals and never on the same individual. Contrast monoecious.
dioicous
(of a bryophyte gametophyte) Having male and female reproductive structures which develop only on different individuals and never on the same individual. Contrast monoicous.
diploid
Having two complete sets of chromosomes in the nucleus of a sporophyte cell, i.e. one set from each of the parental gametes. This is often expressed symbolically as 2n, where n = the number of chromosomes in the haploid gamete.
diplostemonous
Having stamens arranged in two whorls, with the outer whorl alternating with the petals while the inner whorl is opposite the petals. Compare obdiplostemonous and haplostemonous.
disc

Also spelled disk.

A plate or ring of structures derived from the receptacle, and occurring between whorls of floral parts. In some groups, especially Sapindales, the nectary is in the form of a prominent disk. In daisies, the central part of the capitulum is a disk, hence flowers borne there are called disk flowers or florets.
discoid
Resembling a disc or plate, having both thickness and parallel faces and with a rounded margin. Also used to describe the flower head of Asteraceae where there are no ray florets but only disc florets.
discolorous
(of leaves) Having upper and lower surfaces of different colors.
disjunct
Occurring in widely separated geographic areas, distinctly separate; applies to a discontinuous range in which one or more populations are separated from other potentially interbreeding populations with sufficient distance so as to preclude gene flow between them.
disk floret
A floret occurring most typically in the disk of the capitulum of flowers in the family Asteraceae, and to some extent in other plants that bear a flowering head with a disk, such as Scabiosa.
dissected
Deeply divided; cut into many segments.
dissepiment
A partition or septum in a plant part, usually referring to septa between the loculi of capsules or of other fruits with multiple partitions.
distal
Remote from the point of origin or attachment; the free end. Contrast proximal.
distichous
Arranged in two opposite rows (and hence in the same plane).
distinct
Separate or free; not united.
distyly
The condition in which the flowers of a species occur in two forms that differ only by the length of the style and stamens, and flowers of only one of these forms appear on any one plant. Compare heterostyly.
diurnal
Of the day; occurring or opening in the daytime.
divaricate
Wide-spreading.
divergent
Spreading in different directions, generally upward.
division
A taxonomic rank below kingdom in the standard taxonomic hierarchy. "Division" is generally used only for plants, and is the approximate botanical equivalent of the term phylum, which is used for animals and other kingdoms.
domatia

sing. domatium

Any hollow structure formed by a plant that is inhabited by animals such as ants or mites.
dorsal
From Latin dorsum, a ridge or the back of an animal. Partly because the term originally referred to animals rather than plants, usage in botany is arbitrary according to context and source. In general "dorsal" refers to "the rear or back or upper surface", but in botanical usage such concepts are not always clearly defined and may be contradictory. For example:
  • facing away from the axis (abaxial) in a lateral organ of an erect plant
  • facing away from the substrate in any part of an erect plant, for example the upper surface of a more or less horizontal leaf (adaxial) or the upper part of the crown of the plant
  • facing away from the substrate in a prostrate or climbing plant or floating leaves such as those of Nymphaea.
Derived or related terms include dorsad, "toward the dorsal", and dorsum, "the dorsal part of the organ or organism as a unit". Related anatomical terms of location include ventral, lateral.
dorsifixed
Attached at or by the back, e.g. anthers on a filament.
dorsiventral
Having structurally and visibly different upper and lower surfaces, e.g. some leaves. Compare bilateral and isobilateral.
drip tip
A long, narrow, acuminate, caudate, or cuspidate extension at the tip of a leaf or leaflet. Commonly an adaptation to rainy conditions, as it promotes shedding of water by its dripping from the narrow tip. The term drip tip is not anatomically descriptive in the way that acuminate or cuspidate are, for example; rather, it is a description of the functional shape that aids dripping, regardless of the specific geometry of the shape itself.
drupe
A type of succulent fruit formed from one carpel; the single seed is enclosed by a stony layer of the fruit wall, e.g. in peaches and olives. Also called a kernel.
drupelet
A small drupe formed from one of the carpels in an apocarpous flower. Drupelets usually form a compound fruit, as in Rubus, but they may become widely separated, as in Ochna.
druse
A globular mass of calcium oxalate crystals, usually with the crystals radiating from an organic core.

E edit

 
Plants of the genus Corydalis bear seeds with attached elaiosomes, which have various functions, commonly attracting ants. On some Corydalis species, elaiosomes that attract ants also repel mice.[32]
 
Ficus lyrata is an example of a doubly-emarginate leaf with lateral and apical emargination; it also might be seen as a basally emarginate.
 
Petals of Heracleum sphondylium are variously emarginate at their tips. Flowers in the middle of the inflorescence have slightly emarginate petals, whereas flowers at the periphery are so deeply emarginate as to be almost cleft in two.
 
The pale embryo emerging from the upper surface of the sprouting date seed is tiny in comparison to the endosperm, its main food supply, which comprises almost all of the rest of the seed.
 
Water lilies and reeds represent two ecological categories of emergent aquatic vegetation.
 
Iris pseudacorus has clearly ensiform leaves: narrow, straight-edged, sword-shaped.
 
The enlarged calyx and smaller epicalyx of Hibiscus sabdariffa
 
Shoots from epicormic buds on Eucalyptus following a bushfire
 
Tillandsia recurvata growing as a harmless, non-parasitic epiphloedal epiphyte on a tree trunk that is also infested with an epiphloedal foliose lichen
 
Seeds or fruits are dispersed by epizoochory when they stick to the fur of animals.
 
The bases of equitant leaves enclose later leaves on the stem.
 
Sections of exalbuminous seeds
 
Aloe marlothii flowers with stamens and stigmata of mature flowers exserted from the mouths of the floral tubes
-eae
A suffix added to the stem of a generic name to form the name of a tribe, e.g. AsterAstereae.
ebracteate
Lacking bracts; synonymous with ebracteolate.
ecological amplitude
The range of environmental conditions in which an organism can survive.
edaphic
Of or influenced by the soil.
eglandular

Also aglandular

Not having glands.
elaiosome
An external structure attached to the seed of many species of plants. Elaiosomes generally look fleshy and in some species they are rich in oils or other nutritious materials. Their functions vary and are not always obvious; commonly they attract ants or other animals that aid in dispersal, but they may also repel other animals from eating the seed.[32]
elephophily
A form of pollination whereby pollen or spores are distributed by the feet of elephants, as in Rafflesia arnoldii.
ellipsoid
A three-dimensional shape that is elliptical in all sections through the long axis.
elliptical

Also elliptic.

Planar, shaped like a flattened circle, symmetrical about both the long and the short axis, tapering equally both to the tip and the base; oval.
emarginate
Typically in reference to leaf margins: notched or recessed at some part of the edge, such as the apex; the recess usually is broad and shallow. The location of a leaf's emargination(s) might be one or more of apical, lateral or basal
embryo
The young plant contained by a seed prior to germination.
emergent
A plant taller than the surrounding vegetation or, among aquatic plant species, one that bears flowers and commonly leaves above the surface of the water. Aquatic examples include water lilies, reeds, and papyrus. Some pondweeds such as Stuckenia are not emergent until they flower, at which time only their flowers appear above the water surface.
enation
Leaf-like outgrowth from a surface.[33]
enantiostyly
The condition in which the gynoecium protrudes laterally, to the right (dextrostyly) or to the left (sinistrostyly) of the androecium, e.g. Senna.
endemic
Having a natural distribution restricted to a particular geographic region. Compare native.
endocarp
The innermost layer of the wall of a fruit; in a drupe, the stony layer surrounding the seed.
endodermis
The innermost layer of the cortex of vascular plant roots, also present in the stems of pteridophytes. The radial walls are impregnated with suberin to form a permeability barrier known as the Casparian strip.
endosperm
1.  (angiosperms) A nutritive tissue surrounding the embryo of the seed, usually triploid, originating from the fusion of both polar nuclei with one gamete after the fertilization of the egg.
2.  (gymnosperms) The prothallus within the embryo sac.
endospory
The production of spores that germinate into a reduced multicellular gametophyte contained within the spore wall. Contrast exospory.
ensiform
Shaped like the blade of a sword.
entire
1.  Not divided.
2.  (of a margin) Smooth and not lobed or toothed (though possibly wavy or scalloped).
entomophily
A form of pollination whereby pollen or spores are distributed by insects.
epecophyte
Species of recent appearance, usually numerous and constant in the country, but confined to artificial habitats, such as meadows and ruderal vegetation and are dependent on humans for existence.[34]
ephemeral
Short-lived. See also caducous.
epicalyx
An involucre resembling an outer calyx, e.g. as in Hibiscus.
epicarp
The outer layer of the wall of a fruit, i.e. the "skin".
epicormic
Used to refer to buds, shoots, or flowers developing from the old wood of trees, especially after injury or fire.
epicotyl
The part of the plant axis or stem between the cotyledonary node and the first foliage leaves.
epicuticular wax
A layer of crystalline or amorphous wax deposited on the surface of the cuticle.
epidermis
An organ's outermost layer of cells, usually only one cell thick.
epigynous
Borne on the ovary; describes floral parts when attached above the level of the ovary and arising from tissue fused to the ovary wall. Compare hypogynous and perigynous.
epilithic
Growing on stone. Compare lithophytic, a plant growing on stone.
epipetalous
Of stamens that are attached to the petals.
epipetric
Growing on rock or stone, lithophytic, epilithic.
epiphloedal
Growing on the surface of bark. Contrast endophloedal (growing inside, not on, the bark) and epilithic (growing on rock, not bark).
epiphyte
A plant, alga or fungus that grows on another plant without deriving nourishment from it but using it for support.
epiphytic
Of an epiphyte; living on the surface of a plant. Compare epilithic, lithophytic.
episepalous
Of stamens that are attached to the sepals.
epitepalous
Of stamens that are attached to the tepals.
epithet
The adjectival component in a binomial scientific name, usually more specifically called a specific epithet; the final word or combination of words in a name of more than one word (other than a term denoting rank) that denominates an individual taxon. The simplest and commonest example is the second word in a two-word name of a species, such as "mirabilis" in Welwitschia mirabilis.
epizoochory
A type of seed dispersal that occurs when seeds or fruits physically adhere to the outside of vertebrate animal bodies.
epruinose
Not pruinose.
equitant
(of a leaf) Folded lengthwise and clasping another leaf.
erect
Upright, more or less perpendicular to the ground or point of attachment. Compare patent (spreading) and erecto-patent, between erect and patent.
ericoid
Having leaves like those of the European heaths (Erica); small and sharply pointed.
erose
(of a margin) Irregular as though nibbled or worn away.
ethelochoric
Deliberate introduction by seedlings, seeds or plants in a new habitat by humans.
etiolation
Weak growth due to lack of light, resulting in elongated stems and yellowish color.[35]
even-pinnate
Having an even number of leaflets in a compound leaf; synonymous with paripinnate.
evergreen
Not deciduous; having leaves all year.
ex
In nomenclature, indicating that the preceding author proposed the name but did not legitimately publish it, and that the succeeding author referred to the first author when legitimately publishing the name. See Author citation (botany).
exalbuminous
In seeds of a given species, having no endosperm, i.e. no albumen, e.g. in Fabaceae and Combretaceae.
exocarp
The outer layer of the pericarp, often the skin of fleshy fruits.
exospory
The production of spores that germinate into free-living multicellular gametophytes. Contrast endospory.
exotesta
The outer layer of the testa (seed coat). It is derived from the outer integument of the ovule.
exotic
Not native; introduced from another region or country.
exserted
Projected beyond, e.g. stamens beyond the corolla tube.
exstipulate
Lacking stipules.
extrastaminal
Outside the stamens or androecium, usually referring to the location of a nectary disk.
extrorse
(of anther locules) Opening toward the outside of the flower. Contrast introrse and latrorse.

F edit

 
Astragalus falcatus has conspicuously falcate pods; not many falcate anatomical structures are so markedly curved.
 
Rhigozum obovatum bears its leaves in well-defined fascicles.
 
Trunks and branches of some species of poplars contribute to the trees' fastigiate habit.
 
Favolaschia calocera, the orange pore fungus, has conspicuously faveolate fruiting bodies.
 
Emerging leaves of Oldenburgia grandis are heavily felted.
 
 
In the wild, the leaves of Fenestraria commonly are covered in soil, except for the transparent fenestration; this permits photosynthesis while reducing damage from exposure to intrense sunlight and herbivores.
 
Digitalis ferruginea owes its specific name to its ferruginous (rust-colored) flowers.
 
 
 
The pseudanthium of Zinnia elegans is typical of many Asteraceae in that it includes two types of florets, ray florets and disk florets.
 
Medicago sativa (alfalfa or lucerne) is an agriculturally important forb, grown in large volumes for forage, soil improvement, and other purposes.
 
Foveolate seeds of Physochlaina physaloides
F1 hybrid
A single cross; a plant breeding term for the result of a repeatable cross between two pure bred lines.
F2 hybrid
A plant breeding term for the result of a plant arising from a cross between two F1 hybrids; may also refer to self-pollination in a population of F1 hybrids.
fabiform
Shaped like a kidney bean.
facultative
Able to perform a particular life function, or to live generally, in more than one way.[36] Compare obligate.
falcate
Curved like the blade of a scythe.
family
A taxonomic group of one or more genera with features, ancestry, or both in common. It is the term for the principal rank between order and genus.
farina
Powdery, pale yellow, crystalline secretion consisting of flavonoids in Primula and other species.
farinaceous
Powderiness that is mealy.
fascicle

adj. fasciculate

A cluster of flowers, leaves, needles, vascular tissue, etc., e.g. a tuft of leaves all arising from the same node.
fasciculate
Branching in clusters, e.g. a bundle of sticks or needles; having fascicles.
fastigiate
1.  In Plant morphology, the habit of a plant that consists in part, of a bundle of erect, more or less parallel branches or stems, particularly if they form or taper to a peak or point. (Latin fastigiatus,meaning "having a peak".
2.  In palynology, the form of a pollen grain that has a fastigium, a pointed apex over a hollow between the layers of the pollen outer wall.
faucal
Pertaining to the fauces; located in the throat of a calyx or corolla.
fauces
The throat of a calyx or corolla; the conspicuously widened portion between the mouth and the apex of the tube. In Boraginaceae, the site of distinctive appendages.
faveolate
Honeycombed; having regular, angled pits. Compare foveolate.
felted
Having interlocked hairs to the extent of being matted.[28]
female flower
See pistillate flower.
fenestrate
Having translucent or transparent areas that let light through; this variously affects the behavior of animal visitors or permits photosynthesis in many arid-region plants that grow only to the soil surface. Also refers loosely to perforations, for which perforate is the more precise term.
ferruginous
Ruddy or rust-colored.
fertile
Capable of producing fruit; of flowers when they produce seed, or of anthers containing pollen.
fertilization
The union of male and female gametes during sexual reproduction.
fiber
1.  A fiber cell.
2.  Any flexible, strong, stringy, and very elongate structure.
fiber cell
A type of cell that is found in sclerenchyma; it is much elongated, and dies soon after an extensive modification of its cell wall. The cell wall is usually thickly lignified but is sometimes gelatinous.
filament
1.  The stalk of a stamen.
2.  Any very narrow, thread-like structure that is one or a few cells thick.
filamentous
Consisting of filaments or fibers; hairlike.
filiform
Thread-like, e.g. stamen filaments or leaf shapes.
fimbria

pl. fimbriae

Slender, hair-like projection; fringe.
fimbriate
Fringed, e.g. where the ends of a petal are split into two or more divisions.[37] Having fimbriae.
fissure
A split or crack, often referring to fissured bark; a line or opening of dehiscence.
fistule
A tube-shaped cavity.
fistulose
Hollow; usually applied to a tube-shaped cavity, as in a reed.
flabellate
Fan-shaped, e.g. a flabellate (fan-shaped) leaf.
flaccid
Limp; tending to wilt. Compare turgid.
flexistyly
Depending on the degree of maturation of the stamens, the style moves up or down (cataflexistyle or (ana-)hyperflexisyle).
flexuous
flexuose
Bent alternately in different directions; zigzag.
floccose
Having a soft and wooly covering of hairs.
flora
1.  All the plants growing in a certain region or country.
2.  An enumeration of them, generally with a guide to their identification (e.g. the Flora of North America, Flora of China, Flora of Victoria, Flora of New South Wales, and so on). In this case, flora is written with a capital F.
floral envelope
See perianth.
floral leaves
The upper leaves at the base of the flowering branches.
floral diagram
A graphical means to describe flower structure, usually a schematic cross-section through a young flower.
floral formula
A description of flower structure using numbers, letters, and various symbols.
floral tube
An imprecise term sometimes used as a synonym of hypanthium, corolla tube, or calyx tube.
floret
A small flower, usually referring to the individual true flowers clustered within an inflorescence, particularly those of the Poaceae grasses and the pseudanthia of family Asteraceae.
flower
The sexual reproductive structure of the angiosperms, typically with a gynoecium, androecium, perianth, and an axis.
foliate
Preceded by a number to signify having a certain number of leaflets, e.g. 3-foliate means "having three leaflets".
foliicolous
A growth habit of certain lichens, algae, and fungi that prefer to grow on the leaves of vascular plants.
follicle
A dry fruit formed from one carpel splitting along a single suture to which the seeds are attached, e.g. from the pod of a legume.[38]
foliole
A small, leaf-like appendage on the front or back.[of what?]
foliose
Leaf-like; flattened like a leaf.
forb
Any non-woody flowering plant that is not a grass, sedge, or rush.
forest
Vegetation dominated by trees with single trunks, including closely arranged trees with or without an understory of shrubs and herbs.
forma (in common usage, form)
A taxonomic category subordinate to species and within the taxonomic hierarchy, below variety (varietas), and usually differentiated by a minor character.
foveolate
Having regular tiny pits. Compare faveolate.
free
Not united with other organs of the same type; not attached at one end.
free central
(of placentation) Ovules attached to a free-standing column in the center of a unilocular ovary.
frond
A leaf of a fern, cycad, or palm.
frutescent
Shrub-like (fruticose) or becoming shrub-like.
fruticose
Shrubby; having the branching character of a shrub.
fruit
A seed-bearing structure, present in all angiosperms, formed from the mature ovary and sometimes associated floral parts upon fertilization.
fugacious
Disappearing, falling off, or withering. Compare persistent and caducous.
funicle (funiculus)
The stalk of an ovule.
funnelform
Having a form gradually widening from the base to the apex; funnel-shaped.
furcate
Forked, usually applied to a terminal division; with two long lobes.
fused
Joined together.
fusiform
Rod-shaped and narrowing gradually from the middle toward each end; spindle-shaped.

G edit

 
Galbulus (berry-like, fleshy) cones on the coniferous tree Podocarpus elatus
 
Gametophores (red male antheridia and brown female archegonia) borne on a gametophyte of a Chara species of green algae
 
Longitudinal section of immature male pine cone, showing male gametophytes (pollen grains) developing between the cone scales
 
 
The leaves, buds, and young stalks of Eucalyptus macrocarpa are glaucous, covered with a thick waxy pruinosity.
 
Glochids at the base of an Opuntia cactus spine
 
Glumes of a grass species with a fairly large inflorescence
 
Scanning electron micrograph of a stoma on the leaf of Haemanthus. The two lip-shaped cells on either side of the pore are the guard cells.
 
Drops of guttation fluid on the dentate points fringing the immature leaf of a grapevine
 
Examples of gymnosperms
LEFT
1-Welwitschia mirabilis
2-Cycas revoluta
3-Taxus baccata
4-Ginkgo biloba
RIGHT
1-Cupressus sempervirens
2-Sequoiadendron giganteum
3-Agathis dammara
4-Araucaria heterophylla
galbulus
In gymnosperms, a fleshy cone (megastrobilus); chiefly relates to cones borne by junipers and cypresses, which are often mistakenly called berries.
galea
An overhanging, helmet-shaped, structure that protects the reproductive parts from precipitation, wind or unwanted visitors.
gall
Abnormal outgrowth on external plant tissues, caused by various parasites, from viruses, fungi and bacteria, to other plants, insects and mites.
gamete
A cell or nucleus that fuses with another of the opposite sex during sexual reproduction.
gametophore
Specialized structures on the gametophytes of some bryophyte species, for example many species in the order Marchantiales; in such species the gametes are produced on the gametophores.
gametophyte
The haploid multicellular phase in the alternation of generations of plants and algae that bears
glossary, botanical, terms, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Glossary of botanical terms news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This glossary of botanical terms is a list of definitions of terms and concepts relevant to botany and plants in general Terms of plant morphology are included here as well as at the more specific Glossary of plant morphology and Glossary of leaf morphology For other related terms see Glossary of phytopathology Glossary of lichen terms and List of Latin and Greek words commonly used in systematic names Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z See also References External linksA edit nbsp In the bud Tetradenia riparia leaves have their upper surfaces turned toward the stem and the axil The lower surface is abaxial away from the axis and the upper surface is adaxial nbsp Viburnum abscission nbsp Welwitschia mirabilis presents an example of an acaulescent growth habit unusual in so large a plant species nbsp Schematic diagrams of the accumbent arrangement of the cotyledons and radicle in a seed of Erysimum formerly Cheiranthus nbsp Achenes on the surface of the stem of the infructescence of a strawberry nbsp Geranium incanum flowers are actinomorphic having five axes of symmetry as opposed to the two axes of symmetry of the zygomorphic flowers of most species of the related genus Pelargonium nbsp Fern frond with acuminate leaflets nbsp Adelphous stamens in flower of Gossypium tomentosum nbsp Watsonia flower slit open and with one stamen bent upward to show its adnate attachment to the petal nbsp Diagram of a coconut fruit The albumen endosperm is labelled Alb nbsp Caffeine is an alkaloid with four nitrogen atoms in its carbon skeleton nbsp Rothmannia leaf with extensively anastomose venation nbsp Androgynous flower of Sandersonia aurantiaca cut open longitudinally to show the androecium which comprises the anthers surrounding the green central pistil nbsp Anther of Lilium in a state of anthesis dehiscent and releasing pollen nbsp A Neea species family Nyctaginaceae presents an example of an anthocarp the calyx and style remain around the ripening fruit nbsp Aphananthous flowers of oaks such as Quercus robur being anemophilous have no need of being conspicuous to pollinating animals nbsp Apical bud of a Populus poplar shoot nbsp The apparently separate nuts of Ochrosia borbonica actually are apocarpous carpels two from each flower nbsp Apophyses on the tips of the cone scales of Araucaria cunninghamii amount to spikes nbsp Hairs on the leaves of Meniocus linifolius formerly Alyssum linifolium are stellate and appressed to the leaf surface nbsp Arachnoid leaves of an unidentified Gazania species nbsp Spines of cactus Gymnocalycium bayrianum emerging from the areoles of the stem nodes nbsp Seeds of a species of Blighia ackee one whole and one in longitudinal section showing the pale aril nbsp Infructescence of wild rye showing prominent awns nbsp Anatomy of an awn and bristles on a species of the Australian grass Rytidosperma longifolium nbsp Axillary buds in leafab Prefix meaning position away from 1 abaxial Surface of an organ facing away from the organ s axis e g the lower surface of a lateral organ such as a leaf or petal 2 Contrast adaxial abort To abandon development of a structure or organ 3 abscission Natural shedding of an organ that is mature or aged as of a ripe fruit or an old leaf 4 abscission zone Specialized layer of tissue that allows an organ to be shed by abscission when it is ripe or senescent Such tissue is commonly formed for example at the base of a petiole or pedicel acaulescent Having no apparent stem or at least none visible above the ground surface 2 Examples include some species of Oxalis 5 Nolina 6 and Yucca 7 Antonym caulescent possessing stem accrescent Increasing in size with age such as a calyx that continues to grow after the corolla has fallen 2 e g in Physalis peruviana accumbent Lying against another part of the plant when applied to a cotyledon it means that an edge of the cotyledon lies along the folded radicle in the seed 8 aceae Suffix added to the word stem of a generic name to form the name of a taxonomic family 9 for example Rosaceae is the rose family of which the type genus is Rosa 10 achene Dry one seeded indehiscent fruit 11 in which the true fruit is not the so called berry but the achenes which are the so called seeds on the infructescence e g in the genus Fragaria acicular Slender or needle shaped 11 See also Leaf shape acropetal Moving from roots to leaves e g of molecular signals in plants acrophyll Regular leaves of a mature plant produced above the base as opposed to bathyphyll acrostichoid describing a type of sorus Covering the entire abaxial surface of a frond usually densely so as in Elaphoglossum and Acrostichum actino Prefix that indicates a radial pattern form or morphology actinodromous of leaf venation Palmate or radially arranged venation with three or more primary veins arising at or near the base of the leaf and reaching the margin in most species but not all actinomorphic Regular or radially symmetrical 12 may be bisected into similar halves in at least two planes Applies e g to steles and flowers in which the perianth segments within each whorl are alike in size and shape Compare regular Contrast asymmetrical irregular and zygomorphic aculeate Armed with prickles 13 e g the stem of a rose acumen A long tapering point especially the apex of an acuminate leaf acuminate Tapering gradually to a point with concave sides approaching the point 13 Contrast acute and mucronate See also Leaf shape acute 1 Sharply pointed but not drawn out with straight sides approaching the point 13 Contrast acuminate See also Leaf shape 2 Converging at an angle of less than 90 Contrast obtuse ad Prefix meaning near or toward also meaning added to 13 adaxial Surface of an organ facing toward the organ s axis 13 e g the upper surface of a lateral organ such as a leaf or petal Contrast abaxial adelphia pl adelphiae A bundle or structure of stamens forming one unit in an adelphous flower for example the stamen tube around the pistil of Hibiscus adelphous Having organs particularly filaments such as stamens connected into one or more adelphiae whether in the form of bunches or tubes such as is commonly seen in families such as Malvaceae Usage of the term is not consistent some authors include closely bunched filaments while others include only adelphiae in which filaments are connected minimally at their bases See for example Sims the filaments are so closely pressed that they have the appearance of being monadelphous 14 Compare derived terms such as monadelphous having stamens growing in a single bunch or tube for example in Hibiscus and diadelphous growing in two bunches adherent Slightly united to an organ of another kind 13 usually to a part of another whorl e g a sepal connected to a petal Contrast adnate adnate Grown from or closely fused to an organ of a different kind 13 especially along a margin e g a stamen fused to a petal Adnate anthers have their halves attached to the filament through most of their length Contrast connate adventitious Produced in an unpredictable or unusual position 13 e g an adventitious bud produced from a stem rather than from the more typical axil of a leaf Adventitious roots may develop from nodes of prostrate stems of some plant species or from the hypocotyl rather than from the radicle of a germinating monocotyledon adventive Introduced accidentally 13 usually referring to a weed aerial Of the air growing or borne above the surface of the ground or water 15 aestivation Arrangement of sepals and petals or their lobes in an unexpanded flower bud Contrast vernation aff affinis With affinity to others akin to often used for a provisionally recognized but unnamed taxon considered close to that name perhaps a hybrid or extreme variant aggregate fruit Cluster of fruits formed from the free carpels of a single flower e g a blackberry Compare multiple fruit agochoric Plants that are spread through accidental transport agricultural weed See weed agriophyte Plant species that have invaded native vegetation and could survive there without human intervention They are established there in natural habitats remaining part of natural vegetation even after human influence has ceased and are independent of humans in their continued existence 16 agrophic Comb like series of veins forking from a single side of a primary or secondary vein agrostology Also graminology The scientific study of grasses in the strictest sense only those species which are members of the family Poaceae Broader usages sometimes also include grass like or graminoid species from the families Cyperaceae Juncaceae and Typhaceae alate Having a wing or wings albumen Older name for the endosperm of flowering plants Except for being a storage tissue for nutrients it is not like the albumen egg white of animal embryos albuminous of seeds Containing endosperm ales Suffix added to the stem of a generic name or descriptive name to form the name of a taxonomic order alien Any plant introduced to an area outside its natural range Often used interchangeably or in combination with foreign exotic non native and non indigenous alkaloid Any of a loosely defined class of organic compounds found in the tissues of many species of plants Alkaloid molecules have one or more alkaline reacting nitrogen atoms in their carbon structures Many alkaloids are commercially important as drugs or poisons e g caffeine morphine quinine and strychnine each of which occurs naturally in certain plants allelopathy The secretion by a plant of biochemicals which influence the growth and reproduction of nearby plants allopatric Having geographically separate non overlapping ranges of distribution 17 Contrast sympatric alternate 1 adj of leaves or flowers Borne singly at different levels along a stem including spiralled parts Contrast opposite 2 prep Occurring between something else e g stamens alternating with petals alternipetalous A configuration where parts of the flower e g stamens alternate in position with the petals 18 ament A synonym of catkin amphitropous of an ovule Bent so that both ends are near each other Contrast anatropous campylotropous and orthotropous amplexicaul With the base dilated and clasping the stem usually of leaves amylum star a vegetative propagative body filled with starch amylum and located around the lower nodes of certain stoneworts anastomose Branching and then rejoining as with leaf venation anastomosis A connection or fusion of two or more veins that are normally diverging or branching thereby forming a network anatropous of an ovule Inverted so that the micropyle faces the placenta this is the most common ovule orientation in flowering plants Contrast amphitropous campylotropous and orthotropous ancipital Flat with two edges versus round 19 androdioecious Having bisexual flowers and male flowers on separate individuals Contrast andromonoecious polygamodioecious polygamomonoecious and polygamous androecium A collective name for the male reproductive parts of a flower the stamens of a flower considered collectively Contrast gynoecium Abbreviated A e g A 3 3 indicates six stamens in two whorls androgynophore A stalk bearing both the androecium and gynoecium of a flower above the level of insertion of the perianth androgynous Having male and female flowers in the same inflorescence androphore The stalk or column supporting the stamens in certain flowers andromonoecious Having bisexual flowers and male flowers on the same individual plant Contrast androdioecious gynomonoecious polygamodioecious polygamomonoecious and polygamous anemophilous Adapted to pollination by wind anemophily Adaptation to pollination by wind angiosperm A flowering plant a plant with developing seeds enclosed in an ovary anisomery The condition of having a floral whorl with a different usually smaller number of parts from the other floral whorls anisotomic Branching with branches having unequal diameters such as a trunk and its branch Contrast isotomic annual A plant that completes its life cycle i e germinates reproduces and dies within a single year or growing season annulus 1 A ring like structure in the form of a ring Pappus bristles are sometimes attached to a ring called an annulus or disk at the top of the achene beak In some pollen grains the exine around the apertures is either thicker or thinner In pores this border is termed an annulus Certain flowers have ring like constrictions at the mouth of the flower e g in Huernia and Aristolochia 2 A ring of specialized cells on the sporangium anterior Positioned in front of toward the apex Compare distal anthemoid In the Compositae a style with a brush like tuft of sweeping hairs at the tip of each style branch anther The pollen bearing part of a stamen antheridium in bryophytes a specialized gametophytic organ that produces the male gametes antheridiophore In liverworts of the order Marchantiales a male gametophore a specialized stalked structure that bears the antheridia antherode A sterile anther of a staminode anthesis 1 of a flower The period during which pollen is presented and or the stigma is receptive 2 of a flowering plant The period during which flowers in anthesis are present Not defined for some cases such as when pollen is released in the bud anthocarp A type of fruit in which some part of the flower persists attached to the pericarp e g in Nyctaginaceae anthophore A stalk like structure internode located between the calyx and the other parts of the flower anticlinal Pointing up away from or perpendicular to a surface Contrast periclinal antrorse Directed forward or upward e g of hairs on a stem Contrast retrorse apetalous Lacking petals apex pl apices The tip the point furthest from the point of attachment aphananthous of flowers Inconspicuous or unshowy as opposed to phaneranthous or showy aphlebia pl aphlebiae Imperfect or irregular leaf endings commonly found on ferns and fossils of ferns from the Carboniferous Period aphyllous Leafless having no leaves 20 apical At or on the apex of a structure usually a shoot a stem or the trunk of a tree e g an apical meristem or an apical bud apiculate especially of leaves ending in a short triangular point See also Leaf shape apiphily A form of pollination whereby pollen is distributed by honey bees apo A prefix meaning away from separate without apocarpous of a gynoecium Consisting of one or more carpels which are free from one another or almost so e g in members of the Ranunculaceae and Dilleniaceae apomixis adj apomictic A type of asexual reproduction whereby viable seeds or spores are produced asexually without fertilization such that the genetic material they contain is a clone of the parent s genetic material A plant produced in this way is called an apomict apomorphy In cladistics a different form from the form of an ancestor i e an innovation of use in determining membership in a clade apopetalous Having separate petals not fused sympetalous apophyllous Perianth or other segments free not united Compare symphyllous gamophyllous and polyphyllous apophysis 1 The external part of a cone scale 2 An outgrowth of an organ or an enlargement of a stem appendage A secondary part attached to a main structure an external growth that seldom has any obvious function hence appendiculate appendiculate Having the nature of or bearing appendages appressed Pressed closely but not fused e g leaves against a stem aquatic plant A plant whose natural habitat is water living in or on water for all or a substantial part of its lifespan generally restricted to fresh or inland waters arachnoid Cobwebby from being covered with fine white hairs arborescent Tree like in growth or general appearance arboretum pl arboreta A taxonomically arranged collection of trees archaeophyte A non native plant that has nonetheless been present in a particular geographic area for some time Contrast neophyte archegonium Plural archegonia A multicellular haploid structure or organ of the gametophyte phase of certain plants producing and containing the ovum or female gamete The corresponding male organ is called the antheridium archegoniophore In liverworts of the order Marchantiales a female gametophore a specialized stalked structure that bears the archegonia and the sporophytes arctotoid In the Compositae a style with a ring of sweeping hairs borne on the shaft of the style proximal to the style branches areolate Having or being composed of areoles as an areolate crustose lichen areole 1 A space between the threads of a net e g that part of a leaf surface defined by each of the elements of a vein network as with cacti the area between the veinlets of a leaf 2 A structure on the stem node of a cactus morphologically a specialised branch the region of a cactus upon which spines glochids and flowers are borne aril A membranous or fleshy appendage formed by expansion of the funicle which partly or wholly covers a seed e g the fleshy outer layer of lychee fruit or that found in members of the Sapindaceae aristate With a stiff bristle like awn or tip See also Leaf shape article A segment of a jointed stem or of a fruit with constrictions between the seeds an organ part that separates easily from the rest of the organ at a joint or articulation articulate Jointed separating freely leaving a clean scar e g the fronds of certain ferns where they join the rhizome ascending 1 of a stem Spreading horizontally then directed upward an ascending stem is more or less prostrate near its base then erect 2 of an ovule Attached somewhat above the base ascidiate Shaped like a pitcher as with the leaves of pitcher plants e g species of Nepenthes and Sarracenia 21 asexual reproduction Reproduction that does not involve gametes Often used interchangeably with vegetative reproduction asperulous Having a rough sandpapery texture e g some leaf surfaces asymmetrical Irregular or unequal lacking any plane of symmetry e g flowers of Canna attenuate Narrowing gradually See also Leaf shape auricle An ear shaped lobe particularly a small roundish lateral appendage of a leaf or leaf like organ auriculate Attached at the base with ear shaped appendages auricles See also Leaf shape autogamous Self pollinating self fertilizing in flowering plants awn 1 Any long bristle like appendage 2 In the Poaceae an appendage terminating or on the back of glumes or lemmas of some grass spikelets 3 In the Geraniaceae the part of the style that remains attached to the carpel that separates from the carpophore column 4 A generally straight stiff pappus element varying from stiffly bristle like to hard and needle like In Strophanthus the awn is the beak of the seed stipe of the coma hairs axil The upper angle between one part of a plant and another e g the stem and a leaf axile On an axis of a placenta on the central axis of the ovary axillary Borne in or arising from the axil usually referring to the axil of a leaf axis The main stem of a whole plant or inflorescence also the line along which this stem extends Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZB edit nbsp Baculiform desmid in genus Closterium nbsp Barbs occur on the spines of some species of cactus as shown here enlarged nbsp Berries of Olinia ventosa including a cross section showing hard seeds in the pulp nbsp The bifoliate compound leaves of the mopane tree Colophospermum mopane suggest the common name butterfly tree nbsp Cross section of a silique of Arabidopsis thaliana showing it to be biloculate formed of two carpels morphologically a silique and not a pod nbsp Bipinnate leaf of Gymnocladus dioicus nbsp Structure of a biternate compound leaf nbsp This African baobab Adansonia digitata has an enormous bole beneath a relatively modest canopy that is typical of this species nbsp The large colorful bracts of Bougainvillea are commonly mistaken for its petals nbsp Burrs fruits of Arctium species nbsp Buttress root of a mature elmbaccate Fruit appearing like a berry that may or may not be a true berry 22 baculiform Rod like longer than wide Compare cylindrical barb A rear facing point as in a fish hook barbed Having barbs pointing in one direction barbellate Having barbed hairs barbellae bark The protective external layer of tissue on the stems and roots of woody trees and shrubs includes all of the living and non living tissue external to the cambium basal Situated or attached at or close to the base of a plant or a phylogenetic tree diagram basifixed Something attached by its base e g an anther attached to the filament Compare dorsifixed basipetal Developing sequentially from the apex toward the base i e with the youngest toward the base e g of flowers in an inflorescence Also moving from leaves to roots e g of molecular signals in plants bathyphyll A specialized leaf produced at the base of a plant usually when the plant is immature and which serves to anchor the plant to a substrate especially notable in the fern Teratophyllum Contrast acrophyll beak A prominent pointed terminal projection especially of a carpel or fruit berry A type of indehiscent fruit with the seeds immersed in the pulp e g a tomato bi A prefix meaning two e g bisulcate having two sulci or grooves biennial A plant which completes its life cycle i e germinates reproduces and dies within two years or growing seasons Biennial plants usually form a basal rosette of leaves in the first year and then flower and fruit in the second year bifid Forked cut in two for about half its length Compare trifid bifoliate of a compound leaf Having precisely two leaflets usually in a symmetrical pair e g a leaf of Colophospermum mopane Compare jugate lobed leaf e g most species of Bauhinia bifusiform Fusiform with a pinch in the middle bilabiate Having two lips e g the form of the petals in many irregular flowers bilateral 1 Having two distinguishable sides such as the two faces of a dorsiventral leaf 2 Arranged on opposite sides e g leaves on a stem Compare distichous and opposite 3 Bilaterally symmetrical as in a leaf with a symmetrical outline biloculate Having two loculi e g in anthers or ovaries binomial Making use of names consisting of two words to form the scientific name or combination in a Latin form For example where the first is the name of the genus to which the species belongs and the second is the specific epithet given to that species to distinguish it from others in the same genus binomial nomenclature The system of nomenclature in which the scientific name of a species and not of a taxon at any other rank is a combination of two names the first name being the generic name The second name is referred to botanically as the specific epithet Note that the two names together not just the second name constitute the species name bipinnate Doubly pinnate e g a compound leaf with individual leaflets pinnately divided bipinnatisect A pinnatisect leaf with deeply dissected segments bisexual Bearing both male and female reproductive organs usually flowers with both stamens and carpels synonymous with hermaphrodite synoecious and monoclinous Bisexual flowers occur only on monoecious plants See also androgynous monoicous and plant reproductive morphology bitegmic of an ovule Covered by two integuments Contrast unitegmic biternate Ternate with each division divided into three bivalve Having two valves or hinged parts Contrast trivalve blade The lamina or flattened part of a leaf excluding the stalk or petiole bloom A fine white or bluish waxy powder occurring on plant parts usually stems leaves and fruits It is easily removed by rubbing bole The trunk of a tree usually the portion below the lowest branch Compare canopy bostrychoid Arranged on a conical surface like a snail shell used to describe inflorescences in which the buds are arranged in an almost helical manner on the outside of a long tapering conical rachis bract A modified leaf associated with a flower or inflorescence and differing in shape size or color from other leaves and without an axillary bud bracteate Possessing bracts bracteole A small bract borne singly or in pairs on the pedicel or calyx synonymous with bractlet bracteolate Possessing bracteoles bractlets bracteose Having many or showy bracts 23 bractlet See bracteole branchlet A small branch brevideciduous A plant that loses all of its leaves only briefly before growing new ones so that it is leafless for only a short time e g approximately two weeks bristle A straight stiff hair smooth or with minute teeth the upper part of an awn when the latter is bent and has a lower stouter and usually twisted part called the column brochidodromous Pinnate leaf venation in which the secondary veins do not terminate at the leaf margin but are joined in a succession of prominent arcs brochus pl brochi Width of one lumen of a pollen grain reticulum and half of the width of the surrounding muri walls hence heterobrochate and homobrochate where the lumina are of different or similar sizes respectively bryophyte Informally any plant that is a moss hornwort or liverwort Formally these plants are placed in three separate divisions hornworts Anthocerophyta liverworts Marchantiophyta and mosses Bryophyta bulb A thick storage organ usually underground consisting of a stem and leaf bases the inner ones fleshy bulbel A bulb arising from another bulb See bulblet bulbil A small deciduous bulb or tuber formed in the axil of a leaf or pinna a means of vegetative propagation bulblet A bulb arising from another bulb a bulbel bullate Having a rounded or blister like appearance arched or vaulted burl A deformation or knot in the branches or trunk of a tree sometimes sought after in woodworking 24 burr 1 A prickly fruit 2 A rough or prickly propagule consisting of a seed or fruit and associated floral parts or bracts buttress root A root growing from an above ground stem or trunk and providing support e g commonly of Ficus macrophylla Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZC edit nbsp Dianthus chinensis has a caespitose growth habit nbsp Callus tissue of Nicotiana tabacum growing on a nutrient medium in plant tissue culture nbsp Structure of flower of an orchid in genus Praecoxanthus with the callus labelled nbsp Bearded callus of a floret of the grass species Chrysopogon filipes nbsp Scanning electron micrograph of the carpopodium at the base of the achene like fruit of Zyzyura mayana Asteraceae nbsp Dormant leaf buds of deciduous trees are commonly protected by imbricate cataphylls that are shed when the bud sprouts nbsp Male catkins of Betula pendula nbsp The caudex of Dioscorea elephantipes grows largely above the soil surface Many species that form caudices grow them underground nbsp Flowers growing from a branch of Syzygium moorei an example of cauliflory nbsp Some members of the Espeletia genus exhibit a growth habit that is caulirosulate nbsp Moehringia growing as a chasmophyte on an overhanging cliff nbsp Chloroplasts within the cells of the leaves of the moss Bryum capillare nbsp Not all chloroplasts are simple in shape Chloroplasts of Spirogyra are helical within the tubular cells of their algal filaments nbsp Circinate vernation of crosiers of the fern Sadleria cyatheoides nbsp The so called fleshy leaves of cacti such as on this Opuntia tomentosa are actually cladodes branches The true leaves are the spines growing on the cladodes which on this young cladode are still fleshy nbsp Colony of cells forming a coenobium of an alga in the genus Pediastrum nbsp Asclepias syriaca seeds showing the coma of hairs in its pappus nbsp Curcuma pseudomontana with red coma bracts nbsp Pfaffia gnaphalioides flowers with basal coma hairs nbsp Coma atop Muscari armeniacum bearing sterile flowers nbsp The conical compound inflorescence of Aeonium arboreum is a compound panicle composed of minor panicles some of which are compound in their turn nbsp California buckeye Aesculus californica has a compound palmate leaf the leaflets radiating from a central point nbsp The lobes of the gamopetalous corolla of Nicotiana flowers are conduplicate in the bud nbsp Casuarina equisetifolia male and female flowers and cones nbsp Gamopetalous Watsonia flower split open between two petals to show the connate formation of the corolla tube compare the adnate attachment of the stamen bases to the matching petals nbsp Corms one entire in its tunic one partly peeled to show tunic cataphylls and one split to show inner structure nbsp The corona of this Passiflora flower is a ring of purple filaments between the petals and the stamens nbsp Cotyledons of seedlings of Koelreuteria One plant shows the first new leaves above its cotyledons and the rest show various younger stages of emerging cotyledons nbsp Crassula rupestris frequently grows as a cremnophyte on cliff faces in fynbos nbsp Nymphoides crenata has crenate leaf margins nbsp Mimetes cucullatus so named for the hooded cucullate shape of its white flowers nbsp Murraya paniculata has leaves with cuneate wedge shaped bases nbsp Examples of cupules of Fagaceae A Quercus rubra B Quercus trojanaC Fagus sylvatica D Castanea sativa nbsp Cuspidate leaves of Diplacus bigelovii var cuspidatus nbsp Euphorbia milii is commercially grown for the aesthetic appearance of its brightly colored bract like structures called cyathophylls which sit below the inflorescence caducous Falling off early e g the sepals of poppies which fall off when the petals begin to open Compare persistent and fugacious caespitose Tufted or turf like e g the growth form of some grasses calcarate possessing a spur calcareous A soil type or a lichen substrate rock type that is rich in or largely composed of calcium carbonate calceolate Shaped like a slipper 25 calcicole A plant which thrives in calcareous soil Also calciphile calciphyte Antonym calcifuge 25 callose Hardened thickened callous callus pl calli 1 A protruding mass of tissue 2 Undifferentiated tissue growth formed in response to wounding may be grown in vitro 3 In orchids fleshy outgrowths from the labellum which can be variously shaped from papillae to plates 4 In grasses a hardened extension from the base of a floret formed from the rachilla joint and or the base of the lemma which may or may not elongate and is often covered in hairs or bristles calyciflorous Having petals and stamens attached to the calyx calycophyll Leaf like structure formed from a sepal or calyx lobe which enlarges usually many fold before or after anthesis especially when most of the other sepals or calyx lobes retain their original size More extreme than an accrescent calyx calycophylls are found in Rubiaceae Compare semaphyll and pterophyll calyculate Having an epicalyx calyculus 1 A cup shaped structure formed from bracts resembling an outer calyx 2 In some Asteraceae a circle of bracts below the involucre calyptra A hood or lid See operculum calyx pl calyces Collective term for the sepals of one flower the outer whorl of a flower usually green Compare corolla calyx tube A tube formed by the fusion of the sepals calyx at least at the base cambium Tissue layer that provides partially undifferentiated cells for plant growth campanulate Bell shaped camptodromous Pinnate venation in which the secondary veins curve toward the margins in some cases becoming nearly parallel with them and not reconnecting with other veins to form loops campylotropous When the ovule is oriented transversely i e with its axis at right angles to its stalk and with a curved embryo sac Compare amphitropus anatropous and orthotropous canaliculate Channelled having a longitudinal groove canescent Approaching white in color as in a leaf covered with white down or wool canopy Branches and foliage of a tree the crown Also refers to the protective upper layer of a forest Compare trunk capillary 1 Tube pore or passage with a narrow internal cross section 2 Slender hair like capitate 1 of an inflorescence Having a knob like head with the flowers unstalked and aggregated into a dense cluster 2 of a stigma Like the head of a pin capitulum Dense cluster of sessile or subsessile flowers or florets e g a flower head in the daisy family Asteraceae See pseudanthium capsule Dry fruit formed from two or more united carpels and dehiscing when ripe usually by splitting into pieces or opening at summit by teeth or pores carduoid In Asteraceae having a style with a ring of sweeping hairs borne on the shaft of the style below the style branches carina See keel carinal canal Longitudinal cavity in the stems of Equisetum and extinct Equisetopsida coinciding with a ridge in the stem surface carneous Flesh colored especially as applied to some flowers carnose carnous Fleshy or pulpy in texture especially as applied to some tissues or organs Contrast coriaceous and corneous Caropodium Genus of flowering plants in the family Apiaceae Native range Turkey to Iran Not to be confused with Carpopodium carpel The basic female reproductive organ in angiosperms either consisting of a single sporophyll or a single locule of a compound ovary with a style and a stigma The gynoecium is the collective term for all of the carpels of a single flower carpellary Referring to carpels or to associated structures or outgrowths of carpels for example staminodes attached to carpels in Nymphaeaceae were frequently referred to as carpellary attachments The current and past usage of the terms carpellary attachments paracarpels and staminodes is confused and varies among authors carpopodium On achenes Cypselae an elongation of the base of the gynoecium which looks distinct the abscission zone where the achene is separated from the receptacle 2 Genus Carpopodium in the family Brassicaceae not to be confused with Caropodium cartilaginous Hard and tough gristly Compare corneous and coriaceous caruncle A small piece of flesh like tissue typically lumpy or warty growing on the testa near the hilum Contrast aril caryopsis A dry indehiscent one seeded fruit in which the seed coat is closely fused to the fruit wall e g in most grasses Casparian strip A continuous band of suberin in the radial primary cell walls of the endodermis in vascular plant stems and roots that forms a permeability barrier to the passive diffusion of external water and solutes into the vascular tissue cassideous Hood helmet or bonnet shaped generally referring to floral anatomy e g in the flowers of Aconitum Satyrium etc castaneous Chestnut colored reddish brown 26 casual alien An exotic plant that appears with no apparent human assistance but does not develop a sustained population s or one that persists only by repeated new introductions Compare alien cataphyll Any plant structure which is morphologically a leaf but which has at most an incidental or transient photosynthetic function They are either shed when their main function has been completed or are incorporated into structures where when dead they serve a protective or supportive purpose catenulate In the shape of a chain formed of parts or cells connected as if chained together e g some diatoms algae and cyanobacteria such as Anabaena See also concatenate catkin A spike usually pendulous in which the mostly small flowers are unisexual and without a conspicuous perianth e g in willows poplars oaks and casuarinas The individual flowers often have scaly bracts and are generally wind pollinated Catkins are usually shed as a unit caudate Having a narrow tail like appendage or tip e g a drip tip Contrast acuminate cuspidate and mucronate caudex pl caudices The stem of a plant especially a woody one also used to mean a rootstock or particularly a basal stem structure or storage organ from which new growth arises Compare lignotuber caudiciform Stem like or caudex like sometimes used to mean pachycaul meaning thick stemmed caulescent possessing a well developed stem above ground similar to cauline Antonym acaulescent lacking an apparent stem cauliflory adj cauliflorous Having flowers or fruits growing directly from a tree s branches or trunk 27 cauline Borne on an aerial stem or caulis as with leaves flowers or fruits when applied to the latter two organs usually referring to older stems caulirosulate Borne at the end of the stem or caulis as with leaves or bracts cell 1 The basic microscopic unit of plant structure generally consisting of compartments in a viscous fluid surrounded by a cell wall 2 A cavity of an anther or ovary cenanthous of a perianth Lacking both stamens and pistil i e a flower with neither androecium nor gynoecium centrifixed Of a two branched organ attached by its center e g a hair or anther ceraceous Having a waxy appearance color or texture e g flowers of many species of Ceropegia and the waxy fruit of some species of Myrica cernuous Nodding falling headlong or face down inclined stooping or bowing forward Applied to many species with a nodding stooping habit such as many Narcissus and Dierama species Many plant species bear the specific epithet cernua cespitose An alternative spelling of caespitose meaning tufted or turf like e g the growth form of some grasses chamber A cavity of an ovary channelled Sunken below the surface resulting in a rounded channel chartaceous Having a papery texture chasmogamous Of flowers that are pollinated when the perianth is open Compare cleistogamous chasmophyte A plant adapted to growing in crevices or hollows such as in cliff faces Compare cremnophyte 28 29 chimera An individual composed of two or more genetically distinct tissues most commonly as a result of a graft and sometimes by mutations that occur during cell division or cellular transfers during seed development chiropterophilous Pollinated by bats chlorophyll Any of a variety of different chemical pigments in chloroplasts that are essential for photosynthesis chloroplast An organelle present in plant cells which contains chlorophyll chlorosis An abnormal lack or paleness of color in a normally green organ cilia sing cilium adj ciliate Very small hairs or hair like protrusions more or less confined to the margins of an organ as with eyelashes in motile cells minute hair like protrusions which aid motility circinate Spirally coiled with the tip innermost e g circinate vernation of the developing fronds of most ferns cirrhose of a leaf Ending in a tendril at the apex cirrus See tendril cladode A photosynthetic branch or stem often leaf like and usually with foliage leaves either absent or much reduced Compare phyllode class The principal category for taxa ranking between division and order clathrate Shaped like a net or lattice pierced with apertures as with a cage clavate Club shaped clavuncula In the Apocynaceae an enlarged drum shaped stigma of which the sides and lower surface are the receptive zones Coherent with the anthers or not claw 1 A narrow stalk like basal portion of a petal sepal or bract 2 In Melaleuca the united portion of a stamen bundle cleistogamous Having flowers which self pollinate and never open fully or which self pollinate before opening Compare chasmogamous climber A plant growing more or less erect by leaning on or twining around another structure for support or by clinging with tendrils climbing See climber cline adj clinal A continuous morphological variation in form within a species or sometimes between two species clone A plant derived from the asexual vegetative reproduction of a parent plant with both plants having identical genetic compositions coalescent Having plant parts fused or grown together to form a single unit cochleariform Concave and spoon shaped cochleate Coiled like a snail s shell coenobium An arranged colony of algae that acts like a single organism coenocyte A single cell with multiple nuclei formed when nuclear division was not followed by cytokinesis coleoptile One type of sheath in the structure of monocotyledonous seeds The coleoptile is a protective sheath or cap pileus generally more or less pointed that covers the monocotyledonous plumule as it emerges from the soil It generally turns green and contributes to photosynthesis until its function is superseded by the main growth of the seedling Contrast this with the coleorhiza which remains underground until it is superseded as the roots emerge coleorhiza One type of sheath in the structure of monocotyledonous seeds The coleorhiza connects the coleoptile to the radicle and protects the monocotyledonous radicle during germination Unlike the coleoptile the coleorhiza is associated with the root and does not emerge from the soil during germination Contrast coleoptile collenchyma A specialized tissue consisting of living cells with unevenly thickened cellulose and pectin cell walls that performs a support function in organs such as leaves and young stems that are composed of primary plant tissues colleter A multicellular glandular hair that usually produces a mucilaginous substance and is located on sepals stipules or petioles or on nearby parts of stems commonly found on plants in the order Gentianales columella In flowering plants the central axis of the cone or fruit e g in Callitris column 1 A structure extending above the ovary and incorporating the style and stamens also known as the gynostegium e g in orchids and milkweeds 2 In grasses the lower stouter and usually twisted part of an awn distinct from the slender upper part or bristle columnar Shaped like a column coma 1 A tuft of hairs from testa or funiculus at one or both ends of some seeds e g in Strophanthus Asclepias or Alstonia 2 Sterile bracts e g in Curcuma Ananas or Eucomis 3 Sterile flowers e g in Muscari and Leopoldia at the apex of some inflorescences 4 A tuft of hairs at the base of some flowers e g in Pfaffia gnaphalioides 5 A tuft of hairs at the apex or base of some spikelets 6 An axil tuft of hairs in inflorescences in some Poaceae e g in Eragrostis comata commercial name A name often of no botanical standing and not governed by the ICNCP The term generally applies to names such as Trademark Names names covered by Plant Breeders Rights Patents and Promotional Names which are often used to enhance the sale of a plant commissure The seam or face at which two carpels adhere See also fissure and suture community An ecological assemblage of plants that characteristically occur together compound Composed of several parts e g a leaf composed of multiple leaflets a gynoecium composed of multiple carpels or an inflorescence made up of multiple smaller inflorescences compound palmate Having leaflets that radiate from a central point usually at the top of a petiole like spread out fingers radiating from the palm of a hand Compare palmate compressed Flattened lengthwise either laterally from side to side or dorsally from front to back concatenate Joined together in a chain like form See also concatenate and catenate concolorous Having the same color throughout uniformly colored conduplicate Arranged such that two sides of a flat surface are folded along the midline to face each other See also ptyxis aestivation and vernation cone A type of fruit usually woody ovoid to globular including scales bracts or bracteoles arranged around a central axis e g in gymnosperms especially conifers and Casuarina conflorescence A rarely used term describing substantial differences between the overall structure of an inflorescence and that of its individual branches e g the bottlebrush multiple flower head of members of the genus Callistemon connate Fused to another organ or organs of the same kind e g petals in a gamopetalous corolla tube Compare adnate connective The part of an anther that connects the anther cells connivent Coming into contact or converging conspecific Belonging to the same species contiguous Adjoining touching but not united contort of sepals or petals A type of imbricate aestivation in which one side of each segment overlaps one of the adjacent segments and the other side is overlapped by the other adjacent segment See convolute contorted Twisted out of the normal shape convolute 1 Referring to the arrangement of floral or foliar organs in a bud when each organ or segment has one edge overlapping the adjacent organ or segment a form of imbricate arrangement See contort 2 of leaves A type of vernation in which one leaf is rolled up inside another 3 A type of vernation of two leaves at a node in which one half of each leaf is exposed and the other half is wrapped inside the other leaf corcle A plant embryo plumule or plumule plus radicle cordate Heart shaped with the notch lowermost of the base of a leaf like the notched part of a heart Contrast obcordate coriaceous Leathery stiff and tough but flexible Compare corneous corm adj cormose cormous A fleshy swollen stem base usually underground and functioning in the storage of food reserves with buds naked or covered by very thin scales a type of rootstock cormel A small corm or cormlet forming at the base of a growing larger corm 30 corneous Horny in texture stiff and hard but somewhat tough Compare coriaceous corolla A collective term for the petals of a flower Compare calyx corona 1 In flowering plants a ring of structures that may be united in a tube arising from the corolla or perianth of a flower and standing between the perianth lobes and the stamens The trumpet of a daffodil is a corona 2 In grasses a hardened ring of tissue surmounting the lemma in some species cortex pl cortexes or cortices A region of tissue located between the surface cells and the vascular cylinder 31 corticolous Growing on bark or on wood with the bark stripped off Compare lignicolous corymb adj corymbose An inflorescence with branches arising at different points but reaching about the same height giving the flower cluster a flat topped appearance costa A rib costapalmate Having a definite costa midrib unlike the typical palmate or fan leaf but with the leaflets arranged radially as in a palmate leaf cotyledon The primary leaf or leaves of a plant embryo which upon germination develops into the seed leaf or the first set of leaves craspedodromous Pinnate venation in which the secondary veins terminate at the margins often as teeth crateriform In the shape of a saucer or shallow cup hemispherical or more shallow cremnophyte A plant adapted to growing on especially hanging from cliff faces or crevices Compare chasmophyte 28 29 crenate Having blunt or rounded teeth scalloped crenulate Minutely scalloped crisped Finely curled as with the edges of leaves and petals cristarque cell A sclereid which contains a druse and has the lignin deposited excentrically on the cell wall to form a cup shape or in cross section a shape crown See canopy cross To make something interbreed the act of hybridization cruciform Cross shaped crustaceous Hard thin and brittle crustose Forming a closely applied surface layer or crust cryptogam Any of the lower plants which produce spores and do not have stamens ovaries or seeds literally plants whose sexual reproductive organs are not conspicuous This group typically includes the ferns bryophytes and algae and sometimes fungi including lichenized fungi Compare phanerogam cucullate Hood like or hooded commonly referring to the shape of leaves or petals e g Pelargonium cucullatum Similarly derived terms include cuculliform and cuccularis culm In grasses sedges rushes and some other monocotyledons an aerial stem bearing the inflorescence extending strictly from the base of the plant to the lowest involucral bract or base of the inflorescence cultigen A plant whose origin or selection is primarily due to intentional human activity cultivar A term derived from cultivated variety denoting an assemblage of cultivated plants clearly distinguished by one or more characters morphological physiological cytological chemical or other When reproduced either sexually or asexually the assemblage retains its distinguishing characters A cultivar may arise in cultivation or be introduced from the wild It is a variant that is of horticultural interest or value Cultivar names are written with single quotation marks around them e g Blue Carpet or Alba All new names established after 1 January 1959 must be in common language that is not in Latin but names established in Latin prior to this date are retained in Latin form cultivar epithet The defining part of a name that denominates a cultivar Cultivars are designated by fancy q v epithets appended either to the scientific name or to the common name of the taxon to which they belong they are not italicized but placed in single quotation marks e g Rubus nitidoides Merton Early Merton Early is the cultivar epithet cuneate Wedge shaped with straight sides converging at a base cupule A cup shaped structure composed of coalescent bracts such as the cup of an acorn See calybium cupular Shaped like a cupule cupulate Bearing cupules cupuliform Nearly hemispherical shaped like a cupola or dome cusp A hard pointed tip stiffer and more formidable than a mucro hence cuspidate cuspidate Tipped with a cusp as with some leaves cuticle A waterproofing layer covering the epidermis of aerial plant surfaces and composed of the polymers cutin and or cutan and waxes cutting An apical tip of shoot structure root or leaf which is cut from a plant and used for asexual vegetative propagation cyathium pl cyathia An inflorescence of unisexual flowers surrounded by involucral bracts especially the flowers of Euphorbia cyathophyll In Euphorbia the bract like structure on which the involucre sits usually but not always occurring in twos They may sometimes be brightly colored and confused with petals cylindrical Rod like and two to three times as long as wide Compare baculiform cynaroid See carduoid cyme adj cymose A type of inflorescence in which the main axis and all lateral branches end in a flower each lateral may be repeatedly branched cymose Having a cyme or cymes cypsela A type of dry one seeded indehiscent fruit formed from an inferior ovary Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZD edit nbsp Seasonal healthy decortication of Eucalyptus grandis outer bark nbsp A decorticating machine collecting fiber from leaves nbsp Decussate phyllotaxis of Crassula rupestris nbsp Dentate leaf of elm nbsp Denticulate leaves of Ziziphus mauritiana nbsp Astragalus austriacus is regarded as diadelphous because it has one stamen unattached to the main adelphia bunch nbsp The paired cotyledons of a castor bean seedling Ricinus communis are typical of a dicotyledon nbsp Discolorous leaves of Brachylaena discolor differ in color between their upper and lower surfaces nbsp Disk florets opening in a capitulum of a cultivated Helianthus They open progressively from the edge to the center of the disk nbsp Dissepiment developing in tissue of carpels where they meet to form locules in the capsule of the ovary of Lilium nbsp Boophone disticha has conspicuously distichous leaves nbsp Domatia at the bases of the thorns of Vachellia drepanolobium the whistling thorn with visible access holes nbsp Dorsiventral bilateral leaves of Syzygium gerrardii and Triadica sebifera nbsp Leaves of Epipremnum aureum golden pothos have a cuspidate drip tip deciduous Dehiscing and falling seasonally as with bark leaves or petals Contrast persistent declinate Curving downward and then upward at the tip Often qualified e g declinate ascendant decompound Divided to more than one level e g in bipinnate leaves in which the leaflets of what would otherwise be a pinnate leaf are themselves pinnately divided decorticate 1 intr v To shed the outer bark of a tree usually seasonally as part of the natural growth cycle 2 tr v To strip the peel crust bark or other surface tissues from a plant or from harvested material such as in extracting fiber from harvested Agave leaves decumbent Having branches growing horizontally along the ground but which are turned up at the ends decurrent Extending downward beyond the point of insertion e g when the base of a leaf or a fungal gill is prolonged downward along the stem in a raised line or narrow wing decussant A synonym of decussate the usage decussant is questionable and occurs rarely probably as an error The formally correct usage is decussate decussate Opposite with successive pairs borne at right angles to the last generally applied to the arrangement of leaves definite Of a constant number e g twice as many stamens as petals or sepals or less or an inflorescence ending in a flower or an aborted floral bud typically a cymose inflorescence Contrast indefinite deflexed Bent downward Contrast inflexed dehiscent Breaking open at maturity to release contents refers e g to the opening of fruits to release seeds of anthers to release pollen and of sporangia to release spores Contrast indehiscent deltoid Shaped like the uppercase Greek letter D i e like a more or less equilateral triangle dendroid Tree like branching like a tree dentate Toothed especially in reference to leaf margins denticulate Finely toothed a diminutive form of dentate deserticolous Inhabiting a desert determinate Limited usually in growth Contrast indeterminate diadelphous Referring to a class of adelphous structure in which the stamens or similar organs are connected in two adelphiae instead of just one diaspore Any reproductive part of a plant adapted for dispersal and for establishing new plants may be a disseminule such as a seed or other parts such as specialized buds branches inflorescences or fruits dichasium A cymose inflorescence with all branches below the terminal flower in regular opposite pairs Compare monochasium and pleiochasium dichlamydeous Having a perianth which is divided into a separate calyx and corolla Compare homochlamydeous dichotomous Forking into two equal branches This may result from an equal division of the growing tip or may be sympodial in which the growing tip is aborted and replaced Typically refers to mode of branch growth as in Aloidendron dichotomum but also to other organs such as the venation patterns on leaves the thorns of various species of Carissa which morphologically are branches and the thalli or hyphae of various algae and fungi dicotyledon Also abbreviated dicot A flowering plant whose embryo has two or more cotyledons seed leaves Contrast monocotyledon digitate With segments spreading from a common center like the fingers of a hand See also palmate and palmatisect See also Leaf shape digitiform Shaped like a finger dimorphic Occurring in two different forms with respect to shape and or size e g of stamens fronds or leaves See also monomorphic having a single form and polymorphic having many forms dioecious of vascular plants Having male and female reproductive structures which develop only on different individuals and never on the same individual Contrast monoecious dioicous of a bryophyte gametophyte Having male and female reproductive structures which develop only on different individuals and never on the same individual Contrast monoicous diploid Having two complete sets of chromosomes in the nucleus of a sporophyte cell i e one set from each of the parental gametes This is often expressed symbolically as 2n where n the number of chromosomes in the haploid gamete diplostemonous Having stamens arranged in two whorls with the outer whorl alternating with the petals while the inner whorl is opposite the petals Compare obdiplostemonous and haplostemonous disc Also spelled disk A plate or ring of structures derived from the receptacle and occurring between whorls of floral parts In some groups especially Sapindales the nectary is in the form of a prominent disk In daisies the central part of the capitulum is a disk hence flowers borne there are called disk flowers or florets discoid Resembling a disc or plate having both thickness and parallel faces and with a rounded margin Also used to describe the flower head of Asteraceae where there are no ray florets but only disc florets discolorous of leaves Having upper and lower surfaces of different colors disjunct Occurring in widely separated geographic areas distinctly separate applies to a discontinuous range in which one or more populations are separated from other potentially interbreeding populations with sufficient distance so as to preclude gene flow between them disk floret A floret occurring most typically in the disk of the capitulum of flowers in the family Asteraceae and to some extent in other plants that bear a flowering head with a disk such as Scabiosa dissected Deeply divided cut into many segments dissepiment A partition or septum in a plant part usually referring to septa between the loculi of capsules or of other fruits with multiple partitions distal Remote from the point of origin or attachment the free end Contrast proximal distichous Arranged in two opposite rows and hence in the same plane distinct Separate or free not united distyly The condition in which the flowers of a species occur in two forms that differ only by the length of the style and stamens and flowers of only one of these forms appear on any one plant Compare heterostyly diurnal Of the day occurring or opening in the daytime divaricate Wide spreading divergent Spreading in different directions generally upward division A taxonomic rank below kingdom in the standard taxonomic hierarchy Division is generally used only for plants and is the approximate botanical equivalent of the term phylum which is used for animals and other kingdoms domatia sing domatium Any hollow structure formed by a plant that is inhabited by animals such as ants or mites dorsal From Latin dorsum a ridge or the back of an animal Partly because the term originally referred to animals rather than plants usage in botany is arbitrary according to context and source In general dorsal refers to the rear or back or upper surface but in botanical usage such concepts are not always clearly defined and may be contradictory For example facing away from the axis abaxial in a lateral organ of an erect plant facing away from the substrate in any part of an erect plant for example the upper surface of a more or less horizontal leaf adaxial or the upper part of the crown of the plant facing away from the substrate in a prostrate or climbing plant or floating leaves such as those of Nymphaea Derived or related terms include dorsad toward the dorsal and dorsum the dorsal part of the organ or organism as a unit Related anatomical terms of location include ventral lateral dorsifixed Attached at or by the back e g anthers on a filament dorsiventral Having structurally and visibly different upper and lower surfaces e g some leaves Compare bilateral and isobilateral drip tip A long narrow acuminate caudate or cuspidate extension at the tip of a leaf or leaflet Commonly an adaptation to rainy conditions as it promotes shedding of water by its dripping from the narrow tip The term drip tip is not anatomically descriptive in the way that acuminate or cuspidate are for example rather it is a description of the functional shape that aids dripping regardless of the specific geometry of the shape itself drupe A type of succulent fruit formed from one carpel the single seed is enclosed by a stony layer of the fruit wall e g in peaches and olives Also called a kernel drupelet A small drupe formed from one of the carpels in an apocarpous flower Drupelets usually form a compound fruit as in Rubus but they may become widely separated as in Ochna druse A globular mass of calcium oxalate crystals usually with the crystals radiating from an organic core Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZE edit nbsp Plants of the genus Corydalis bear seeds with attached elaiosomes which have various functions commonly attracting ants On some Corydalis species elaiosomes that attract ants also repel mice 32 nbsp Ficus lyrata is an example of a doubly emarginate leaf with lateral and apical emargination it also might be seen as a basally emarginate nbsp Petals of Heracleum sphondylium are variously emarginate at their tips Flowers in the middle of the inflorescence have slightly emarginate petals whereas flowers at the periphery are so deeply emarginate as to be almost cleft in two nbsp The pale embryo emerging from the upper surface of the sprouting date seed is tiny in comparison to the endosperm its main food supply which comprises almost all of the rest of the seed nbsp Water lilies and reeds represent two ecological categories of emergent aquatic vegetation nbsp Iris pseudacorus has clearly ensiform leaves narrow straight edged sword shaped nbsp The enlarged calyx and smaller epicalyx of Hibiscus sabdariffa nbsp Shoots from epicormic buds on Eucalyptus following a bushfire nbsp Tillandsia recurvata growing as a harmless non parasitic epiphloedal epiphyte on a tree trunk that is also infested with an epiphloedal foliose lichen nbsp Seeds or fruits are dispersed by epizoochory when they stick to the fur of animals nbsp The bases of equitant leaves enclose later leaves on the stem nbsp Sections of exalbuminous seeds nbsp Aloe marlothii flowers with stamens and stigmata of mature flowers exserted from the mouths of the floral tubes eae A suffix added to the stem of a generic name to form the name of a tribe e g Aster Astereae ebracteate Lacking bracts synonymous with ebracteolate ecological amplitude The range of environmental conditions in which an organism can survive edaphic Of or influenced by the soil eglandular Also aglandular Not having glands elaiosome An external structure attached to the seed of many species of plants Elaiosomes generally look fleshy and in some species they are rich in oils or other nutritious materials Their functions vary and are not always obvious commonly they attract ants or other animals that aid in dispersal but they may also repel other animals from eating the seed 32 elephophily A form of pollination whereby pollen or spores are distributed by the feet of elephants as in Rafflesia arnoldii ellipsoid A three dimensional shape that is elliptical in all sections through the long axis elliptical Also elliptic Planar shaped like a flattened circle symmetrical about both the long and the short axis tapering equally both to the tip and the base oval emarginate Typically in reference to leaf margins notched or recessed at some part of the edge such as the apex the recess usually is broad and shallow The location of a leaf s emargination s might be one or more of apical lateral or basal embryo The young plant contained by a seed prior to germination emergent A plant taller than the surrounding vegetation or among aquatic plant species one that bears flowers and commonly leaves above the surface of the water Aquatic examples include water lilies reeds and papyrus Some pondweeds such as Stuckenia are not emergent until they flower at which time only their flowers appear above the water surface enation Leaf like outgrowth from a surface 33 enantiostyly The condition in which the gynoecium protrudes laterally to the right dextrostyly or to the left sinistrostyly of the androecium e g Senna endemic Having a natural distribution restricted to a particular geographic region Compare native endocarp The innermost layer of the wall of a fruit in a drupe the stony layer surrounding the seed endodermis The innermost layer of the cortex of vascular plant roots also present in the stems of pteridophytes The radial walls are impregnated with suberin to form a permeability barrier known as the Casparian strip endosperm 1 angiosperms A nutritive tissue surrounding the embryo of the seed usually triploid originating from the fusion of both polar nuclei with one gamete after the fertilization of the egg 2 gymnosperms The prothallus within the embryo sac endospory The production of spores that germinate into a reduced multicellular gametophyte contained within the spore wall Contrast exospory ensiform Shaped like the blade of a sword entire 1 Not divided 2 of a margin Smooth and not lobed or toothed though possibly wavy or scalloped entomophily A form of pollination whereby pollen or spores are distributed by insects epecophyte Species of recent appearance usually numerous and constant in the country but confined to artificial habitats such as meadows and ruderal vegetation and are dependent on humans for existence 34 ephemeral Short lived See also caducous epicalyx An involucre resembling an outer calyx e g as in Hibiscus epicarp The outer layer of the wall of a fruit i e the skin epicormic Used to refer to buds shoots or flowers developing from the old wood of trees especially after injury or fire epicotyl The part of the plant axis or stem between the cotyledonary node and the first foliage leaves epicuticular wax A layer of crystalline or amorphous wax deposited on the surface of the cuticle epidermis An organ s outermost layer of cells usually only one cell thick epigynous Borne on the ovary describes floral parts when attached above the level of the ovary and arising from tissue fused to the ovary wall Compare hypogynous and perigynous epilithic Growing on stone Compare lithophytic a plant growing on stone epipetalous Of stamens that are attached to the petals epipetric Growing on rock or stone lithophytic epilithic epiphloedal Growing on the surface of bark Contrast endophloedal growing inside not on the bark and epilithic growing on rock not bark epiphyte A plant alga or fungus that grows on another plant without deriving nourishment from it but using it for support epiphytic Of an epiphyte living on the surface of a plant Compare epilithic lithophytic episepalous Of stamens that are attached to the sepals epitepalous Of stamens that are attached to the tepals epithet The adjectival component in a binomial scientific name usually more specifically called a specific epithet the final word or combination of words in a name of more than one word other than a term denoting rank that denominates an individual taxon The simplest and commonest example is the second word in a two word name of a species such as mirabilis in Welwitschia mirabilis epizoochory A type of seed dispersal that occurs when seeds or fruits physically adhere to the outside of vertebrate animal bodies epruinose Not pruinose equitant of a leaf Folded lengthwise and clasping another leaf erect Upright more or less perpendicular to the ground or point of attachment Compare patent spreading and erecto patent between erect and patent ericoid Having leaves like those of the European heaths Erica small and sharply pointed erose of a margin Irregular as though nibbled or worn away ethelochoric Deliberate introduction by seedlings seeds or plants in a new habitat by humans etiolation Weak growth due to lack of light resulting in elongated stems and yellowish color 35 even pinnate Having an even number of leaflets in a compound leaf synonymous with paripinnate evergreen Not deciduous having leaves all year ex In nomenclature indicating that the preceding author proposed the name but did not legitimately publish it and that the succeeding author referred to the first author when legitimately publishing the name See Author citation botany exalbuminous In seeds of a given species having no endosperm i e no albumen e g in Fabaceae and Combretaceae exocarp The outer layer of the pericarp often the skin of fleshy fruits exospory The production of spores that germinate into free living multicellular gametophytes Contrast endospory exotesta The outer layer of the testa seed coat It is derived from the outer integument of the ovule exotic Not native introduced from another region or country exserted Projected beyond e g stamens beyond the corolla tube exstipulate Lacking stipules extrastaminal Outside the stamens or androecium usually referring to the location of a nectary disk extrorse of anther locules Opening toward the outside of the flower Contrast introrse and latrorse Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZF edit nbsp Astragalus falcatus has conspicuously falcate pods not many falcate anatomical structures are so markedly curved nbsp Rhigozum obovatum bears its leaves in well defined fascicles nbsp Trunks and branches of some species of poplars contribute to the trees fastigiate habit nbsp Favolaschia calocera the orange pore fungus has conspicuously faveolate fruiting bodies nbsp Emerging leaves of Oldenburgia grandis are heavily felted nbsp Fenestrate leaves of Darlingtonia californica nbsp In the wild the leaves of Fenestraria commonly are covered in soil except for the transparent fenestration this permits photosynthesis while reducing damage from exposure to intrense sunlight and herbivores nbsp Digitalis ferruginea owes its specific name to its ferruginous rust colored flowers nbsp Calochortus fimbriatus has fimbriate flowers nbsp Panaeolus cinctulus has gently flexuous stipes nbsp The pseudanthium of Zinnia elegans is typical of many Asteraceae in that it includes two types of florets ray florets and disk florets nbsp Medicago sativa alfalfa or lucerne is an agriculturally important forb grown in large volumes for forage soil improvement and other purposes nbsp Foveolate seeds of Physochlaina physaloidesF1 hybrid A single cross a plant breeding term for the result of a repeatable cross between two pure bred lines F2 hybrid A plant breeding term for the result of a plant arising from a cross between two F1 hybrids may also refer to self pollination in a population of F1 hybrids fabiform Shaped like a kidney bean facultative Able to perform a particular life function or to live generally in more than one way 36 Compare obligate falcate Curved like the blade of a scythe family A taxonomic group of one or more genera with features ancestry or both in common It is the term for the principal rank between order and genus farina Powdery pale yellow crystalline secretion consisting of flavonoids in Primula and other species farinaceous Powderiness that is mealy fascicle adj fasciculate A cluster of flowers leaves needles vascular tissue etc e g a tuft of leaves all arising from the same node fasciculate Branching in clusters e g a bundle of sticks or needles having fascicles fastigiate 1 In Plant morphology the habit of a plant that consists in part of a bundle of erect more or less parallel branches or stems particularly if they form or taper to a peak or point Latin fastigiatus meaning having a peak 2 In palynology the form of a pollen grain that has a fastigium a pointed apex over a hollow between the layers of the pollen outer wall faucal Pertaining to the fauces located in the throat of a calyx or corolla fauces The throat of a calyx or corolla the conspicuously widened portion between the mouth and the apex of the tube In Boraginaceae the site of distinctive appendages faveolate Honeycombed having regular angled pits Compare foveolate felted Having interlocked hairs to the extent of being matted 28 female flower See pistillate flower fenestrate Having translucent or transparent areas that let light through this variously affects the behavior of animal visitors or permits photosynthesis in many arid region plants that grow only to the soil surface Also refers loosely to perforations for which perforate is the more precise term ferruginous Ruddy or rust colored fertile Capable of producing fruit of flowers when they produce seed or of anthers containing pollen fertilization The union of male and female gametes during sexual reproduction fiber 1 A fiber cell 2 Any flexible strong stringy and very elongate structure fiber cell A type of cell that is found in sclerenchyma it is much elongated and dies soon after an extensive modification of its cell wall The cell wall is usually thickly lignified but is sometimes gelatinous filament 1 The stalk of a stamen 2 Any very narrow thread like structure that is one or a few cells thick filamentous Consisting of filaments or fibers hairlike filiform Thread like e g stamen filaments or leaf shapes fimbria pl fimbriae Slender hair like projection fringe fimbriate Fringed e g where the ends of a petal are split into two or more divisions 37 Having fimbriae fissure A split or crack often referring to fissured bark a line or opening of dehiscence fistule A tube shaped cavity fistulose Hollow usually applied to a tube shaped cavity as in a reed flabellate Fan shaped e g a flabellate fan shaped leaf flaccid Limp tending to wilt Compare turgid flexistyly Depending on the degree of maturation of the stamens the style moves up or down cataflexistyle or ana hyperflexisyle flexuous flexuose Bent alternately in different directions zigzag floccose Having a soft and wooly covering of hairs flora 1 All the plants growing in a certain region or country 2 An enumeration of them generally with a guide to their identification e g the Flora of North America Flora of China Flora of Victoria Flora of New South Wales and so on In this case flora is written with a capital F floral envelope See perianth floral leaves The upper leaves at the base of the flowering branches floral diagram A graphical means to describe flower structure usually a schematic cross section through a young flower floral formula A description of flower structure using numbers letters and various symbols floral tube An imprecise term sometimes used as a synonym of hypanthium corolla tube or calyx tube floret A small flower usually referring to the individual true flowers clustered within an inflorescence particularly those of the Poaceae grasses and the pseudanthia of family Asteraceae flower The sexual reproductive structure of the angiosperms typically with a gynoecium androecium perianth and an axis foliate Preceded by a number to signify having a certain number of leaflets e g 3 foliate means having three leaflets foliicolous A growth habit of certain lichens algae and fungi that prefer to grow on the leaves of vascular plants follicle A dry fruit formed from one carpel splitting along a single suture to which the seeds are attached e g from the pod of a legume 38 foliole A small leaf like appendage on the front or back of what foliose Leaf like flattened like a leaf forb Any non woody flowering plant that is not a grass sedge or rush forest Vegetation dominated by trees with single trunks including closely arranged trees with or without an understory of shrubs and herbs forma in common usage form A taxonomic category subordinate to species and within the taxonomic hierarchy below variety varietas and usually differentiated by a minor character foveolate Having regular tiny pits Compare faveolate free Not united with other organs of the same type not attached at one end free central of placentation Ovules attached to a free standing column in the center of a unilocular ovary frond A leaf of a fern cycad or palm frutescent Shrub like fruticose or becoming shrub like fruticose Shrubby having the branching character of a shrub fruit A seed bearing structure present in all angiosperms formed from the mature ovary and sometimes associated floral parts upon fertilization fugacious Disappearing falling off or withering Compare persistent and caducous funicle funiculus The stalk of an ovule funnelform Having a form gradually widening from the base to the apex funnel shaped furcate Forked usually applied to a terminal division with two long lobes fused Joined together fusiform Rod shaped and narrowing gradually from the middle toward each end spindle shaped Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZG edit nbsp Galbulus berry like fleshy cones on the coniferous tree Podocarpus elatus nbsp Gametophores red male antheridia and brown female archegonia borne on a gametophyte of a Chara species of green algae nbsp Longitudinal section of immature male pine cone showing male gametophytes pollen grains developing between the cone scales nbsp Glandular hairs on the stem of Geranium dissectum nbsp The leaves buds and young stalks of Eucalyptus macrocarpa are glaucous covered with a thick waxy pruinosity nbsp Glochids at the base of an Opuntia cactus spine nbsp Glumes of a grass species with a fairly large inflorescence nbsp Scanning electron micrograph of a stoma on the leaf of Haemanthus The two lip shaped cells on either side of the pore are the guard cells nbsp Drops of guttation fluid on the dentate points fringing the immature leaf of a grapevine nbsp Examples of gymnosperms LEFT 1 Welwitschia mirabilis 2 Cycas revoluta 3 Taxus baccata 4 Ginkgo biloba RIGHT 1 Cupressus sempervirens 2 Sequoiadendron giganteum 3 Agathis dammara 4 Araucaria heterophyllagalbulus In gymnosperms a fleshy cone megastrobilus chiefly relates to cones borne by junipers and cypresses which are often mistakenly called berries galea An overhanging helmet shaped structure that protects the reproductive parts from precipitation wind or unwanted visitors gall Abnormal outgrowth on external plant tissues caused by various parasites from viruses fungi and bacteria to other plants insects and mites gamete A cell or nucleus that fuses with another of the opposite sex during sexual reproduction gametophore Specialized structures on the gametophytes of some bryophyte species for example many species in the order Marchantiales in such species the gametes are produced on the gametophores gametophyte The haploid multicellular phase in the alternation of generations of plants and algae that bears a href, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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