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Glossary of plant morphology

This page provides a glossary of plant morphology. Botanists and other biologists who study plant morphology use a number of different terms to classify and identify plant organs and parts that can be observed using no more than a handheld magnifying lens. This page provides help in understanding the numerous other pages describing plants by their various taxa. The accompanying page—Plant morphology—provides an overview of the science of the external form of plants. There is also an alphabetical list: Glossary of botanical terms. In contrast, this page deals with botanical terms in a systematic manner, with some illustrations, and organized by plant anatomy and function in plant physiology.[1]

This glossary primarily includes terms that deal with vascular plants (ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms), particularly flowering plants (angiosperms). Non-vascular plants (bryophytes), with their different evolutionary background, tend to have separate terminology. Although plant morphology (the external form) is integrated with plant anatomy (the internal form), the former became the basis of the taxonomic description of plants that exists today, due to the few tools required to observe.[2][3]

Many of these terms date back to the earliest herbalists and botanists, including Theophrastus. Thus, they usually have Greek or Latin roots. These terms have been modified and added to over the years, and different authorities may not always use them the same way.[2][3]

This page has two parts: The first deals with general plant terms, and the second with specific plant structures or parts.

General plant terms edit

  • Abaxial – located on the side facing away from the axis.
  • Adaxial – located on the side facing towards the axis.
  • Dehiscent – opening at maturity
  • Gall – outgrowth on the surface caused by invasion by other lifeforms, such as parasites
  • Indehiscent – not opening at maturity
  • Reticulate – web-like or network-like
  • Striated – marked by a series of lines, grooves, or ridges
  • Tesselate – marked by a pattern of polygons, usually rectangles
  • Wing (plant) – any flat surfaced structure emerging from the side or summit of an organ; seeds, stems.

Plant habit edit

Plant habit refers to the overall shape of a plant, and it describes a number of components such as stem length and development, branching pattern, and texture. While many plants fit neatly into some main categories, such as grasses, vines, shrubs, or trees, others can be more difficult to categorise. The habit of a plant provides important information about its ecology: that is, how it has adapted to its environment. Each habit indicates a different adaptive strategy. Habit is also associated with the development of the plant. As such, it may change as the plant grows and is more properly called its growth habit. In addition to shape, habit indicates plant structure; for instance, whether the plant is herbaceous or woody.

Each plant commences its growth as a herbaceous plant. Plants that remain herbaceous are shorter and seasonal, dying back at the end of their growth season. Woody plants (such as trees, shrubs and woody vines (lianas) will gradually acquire woody (lignaceous) tissues, which provide strength and protection for the vascular system,[4] and they tend to be tall and relatively long lived. The formation of woody tissue is an example of secondary growth, a change in existing tissues, in contrast to primary growth that creates new tissues, such as the elongating tip of a plant shoot. The process of wood formation (lignification) is commonest in the Spermatophytes (seed bearing plants) and has evolved independently a number of times. The roots may also lignify, aiding in the role of supporting and anchoring tall plants, and may be part of a descriptor of the plant's habit.

Plant habit can also refer to whether the plant possesses any specialised systems for the storage of carbohydrates or water, allowing the plant to renew its growth after an unfavourable period. Where the amount of water stored is relatively high, the plant is referred to as a succulent. Such specialised plant parts may arise from the stems or roots. Examples include plants growing in unfavourable climates, very dry climates where storage is intermittent depending on climatic conditions, and those adapted to surviving fires and regrowing from the soil afterwards.

Some types of plant habit include:

  • Herbaceous plants (also called herbs or forbs): a plant whose structures above the surface of the soil, vegetative or reproductive, die back at the end of the annual growing season, and never become woody. While these structures are annual in nature, the plant itself may be annual, biannual, or perennial. Herbaceous plants that survive for more than one season possess underground storage organs, and thus are referred to as geophytes.

Terms used in describing plant habit, include:

 
An acaulescent species of Streptocarpus has only one leaf, and appears to have no stem
  • Acaulescent – the leaves and inflorescence rise from the ground, and appear to have no stem. They are also known as rosette forms, some of the many conditions that result from very short internodes (i.e. close distances between nodes on the plant stem. See also radical, where leaves arise apparently without stems.
  • Acid plant – plants with acid saps, normally due to the production of ammonium salts (malic and oxalic acid)
  • Actinomorphic – parts of plants that are radially symmetrical in arrangement.
  • Arborescent – growing into a tree-like habit, normally with a single woody stem.
  • Ascending – growing uprightly, in an upward direction.
  • Assurgent – growth ascending.
  • Branching – dividing into multiple smaller segments.
  • Caducous – falling away early.
  • Caulescent – with a well-developed stem above ground.
  • Caulirosulate - arranged in rose-like clusters at the end of the stem (to describe leaves or bracts).
  • Cespitose – forming dense tufts, normally applied to small plants typically growing into mats, tufts, or clumps.
  • Creeping – growing along the ground and producing roots at intervals along the surface.
  • Deciduous – falling away after its function is completed.
  • Decumbent – growth starts off prostrate and the ends turn upright.
  • Deflexed – bending downward.
  • Determinate growth – Growing for a limited time, floral formation and leaves (see also Indeterminate).
  • Dimorphic – of two different forms.
  • Ecad – a plant assumed to be adapted to a specific habitat.
  • Ecotone – the boundary that separates two plant communities, generally of major rank – trees in woods and grasses in savanna for example.
  • Ectogenesis – variation in plants due to conditions outside of the plants.
  • Ectoparasite – a parasitic plant that has most of its mass outside of the host, the body and reproductive organs of the plant live outside of the host.
  • Epigeal – living on the surface of the ground. See also terms for seeds.
    • Epigean – occurring on the ground.
    • Epigeic – plants with stolons on the ground.
    • Epigeous – on the ground. Used for leaf fungus that live on the surface of the leaf.
  • Epiphloedal – growing on the bark of trees.
    • Epiphloedic – an organism that grows on the bark of trees.
  • Epiphyllous – growing on the leaves. For example, Helwingia japonica has epiphyllous flowers (ones that form on the leaves).[5]
  • Epiphyte – growing on another organism but not parasitic. Not growing on the ground.
    • Epiphytic – having the nature of an epiphyte.
  • Equinoctial – a plant that has flowers that open and close at definite times during the day.
  • Erect – having an essentially upright vertical habit or position.
  • Escape – a plant originally under cultivation that has become wild, a garden plant growing in natural areas.
  • Evergreen – remaining green in the winter or during the normal dormancy period for other plants.
  • Eupotamous – living in rivers and streams.
  • Euryhaline – normally living in salt water but tolerant of variable salinity.
  • Eurythermous – tolerant of a wide range of temperatures.
  • Exclusive species – confined to specific location.
  • Exotic – not native to the area or region.
  • Exsiccatus – a dried plant, most often used for specimens in a herbarium.
  • Indeterminate growth – Inflorescence and leaves growing for an indeterminate time, until stopped by other factors such as frost (see also Determinate).
  • Lax – non upright, growth not strictly upright or hangs down from the point of origin.
  • Lithophyte – Growing on rocks
    • Endolithic – growing in crevices of rocks.
    • Epilithic – growing on the surface of rocks.
  • Mallee – a term applied to certain Australian species which grow with multiple stems springing from an underground lignotuber.
  • Parasitic – using another plant as a source of nourishment.
  • Precocious – flowering before the leaves emerge.
  • Procumbent – growing prostrate or trailing, but not rooting at the nodes.
  • Prostrate – lying flat on the ground, leaves, stems or even flowers in some species.
  • Repent – creeping.
  • Rosette – cluster of leaves with very short internodes that are crowded together, normally on the surface of the soil but sometimes higher on the stem.
    • Rostellate – like a rosette (cf. rostellum).
    • Rosulate – arranged into a rosette.
  • Runner – an elongated, slender branch that roots at the nodes or tip.
  • Stolon – A branch that forms near the base of the plant, grows horizontally, and roots and produces new plants at the nodes or apex.
    • Stoloniferous – plants producing stolons.
  • Semi-erect – Not growing perfectly straight.
  • Suffrutescent – somewhat shrubby, or shrubby at the base.
  • Upright – Growing upward.
  • Virgate – wand-like, slender erect growing stem with many leaves or very short branches.
  • Woody – forming secondary growth laterally around the plant so as to form wood.

Duration edit

Duration of individual plant lives are described using these terms:

  • Acme – the time when the plant or population has its maximum vigor.
  • Annual – plants that live, reproduce, and die in one growing season.
  • Biennial – plants that need two growing seasons to complete their life cycle, normally completing vegetative growth the first year and flowering the second year.
  • Herbs – see herbaceous.
  • Herbaceous – plants with shoot systems that die back to the ground each year – both annual and non-woody perennial plants.
  • Herbaceous perennial – non-woody plants that live for more than two years, with the shoot system dying back to soil level each year.
  • Woody perennial – true shrubs and trees, and some vines, with shoot systems that remain alive above the soil level from one year to the next.
  • Monocarpic – plants that live for a number of years then, after flowering and seed setting, die.

Plant structures edit

Introduction edit

Life cycles
 
Alternating generations: Haploid gametophyte (top), diploid sporophyte (bottom)
 
Angiosperms. Only the sporophyte is visible, the gametophytes being the pollen and ovule

Plant structures or organs fulfil specific functions, and those functions determine the structures that perform them. Among terrestrial (land) plants, the vascular and non-vascular plants (Bryophytes) evolved independently in terms of their adaptation to terrestrial life and are treated separately here (see Bryophytes).[6]

Life cycle edit

Common structural elements are present in the embryonic part of the life cycle, which is the diploid multicellular phase. The embryo develops into the sporophyte, which at maturity produces haploid spores, which germinate to produce the gametophyte, the haploid multicellular phase. The haploid gametophyte then produces gametes, which may fuse to form a diploid zygote, and finally an embryo. This phenomenon of alternating diploid and haploid multicellular phases is common to the embryophytes (land plants) and is referred to as the alternation of generations. A major difference between vascular and non-vascular plants is that in the latter the haploid gametophyte is the more visible and longer-lived stage. In vascular plants, the diploid sporophyte has evolved as the dominant and visible phase of the life cycle. In seed plants and some other groups of vascular plants the gametophyte phases are strongly reduced in size and contained within the pollen and ovules. The female gametophyte is entirely contained within the sporophyte's tissues, while the male gametophyte in its pollen grain is released and transferred by wind or animal vectors to fertilize the ovules.[1]

Morphology edit

Amongst the vascular plants, the structures and functions of the Pteridophyta (ferns), which reproduce seedlessly, are also sufficiently different to justify separate treatment, as here (see Pteridophytes). The remainder of the vascular plant sections address the higher plants (Spermatophytes or Seed Plants, i.e. Gymnosperms and Angiosperms or flowering plants). In the higher plants, the terrestrial sporophyte has evolved specialised parts. In essence, they have a lower, underground component and an upper, aerial component. The underground part develops roots that seek water and nourishment from the soil, while the upper component, or shoot, grows toward the light and develops a plant stem, leaves and specialised reproductive structures (sporangia). In angiosperms, the sporangia are located in the stamen anthers (microsporangia) and ovules (megasporangia). The specialised sporangia bearing stem is the flower. In angiosperms, if the female sporangium is fertilised, it becomes the fruit, a mechanism for dispersing the seeds produced from the embryo. [6]

Vegetative structures edit

Thus, the terrestrial sporophyte has two growth centres, the stem growing upwards while the roots grow downwards. New growth occurs at the tips (apices) of both the shoot and roots, where the undifferentiated cells of the meristem divide. Branching occurs to form new apical meristems. Growth of the stem is indeterminate in pattern (not pre-determined to stop at a particular point).[1] The functions of the stem are to raise and support the leaves and reproductive organs above the level of the soil, to facilitate absorption of light for photosynthesis, gas exchange, water exchange (transpiration), pollination, and seed dispersal. The stem also serves as a conduit, from roots to overhead structures, for water and other growth-enhancing substances. These conduits consist of specialised tissues known as vascular bundles, which give the name "vascular plants" to the angiosperms. The point of insertion, on the stem, of leaves or buds is a node, and the space between two successive nodes, an internode.

The leaves, which emerge from the shoot, are specialised structures that carry out photosynthesis, and gas (oxygen and carbon dioxide) and water exchange. They are sheathed by an outer layer or epidermis that is coated with a waxy waterproof protective layer, which is punctuated by specialised pores, known as stomata, which regulate gas and water exchange. The leaves also possess vascular bundles, which are generally visible as veins, whose patterns are called venation. Leaves tend to have a shorter life span than the stems or branches that bear them, and when they fall, an area at the attachment zone, called the abscission zone leaves a scar on the stem.

In the angle (adaxial) between the leaf and the stem, is the axil. Here can be found buds (axillary buds), which are miniature and often dormant branches with their own apical meristem. They are often covered by leaves.

Floral structure edit
Floral structure
 
Location of main floral parts in angiosperms
 
1: Pedicel 2: Receptacle 3: Nectary 4: Sepal 5: Petal 6: Filament 7: Anther 8: Stigma 9: Style 10: Ovary 11: Ovule 12: Bract

The flower, which is one of the defining features of angiosperms, is essentially a stem whose leaf primordia become specialised, following which the apical meristem stops growing: a determinate growth pattern, in contrast to vegetative stems.[1][6] The flower stem is known as a pedicel, and those flowers with such a stem are called pedicellate, while those without are called sessile.[7] In the angiosperms, the flowers are arranged on a flower stem as an inflorescence. Just beneath (subtended) the flower there may be a modified, and usually reduced, leaf, called a bract. A secondary smaller bract is a bracteole (bractlet, prophyll, prophyllum), often on the side of the pedicel, and generally paired. A series of bracts subtending the calyx (see below) is an epicalyx. Angiosperms are dealt with in more detail here; these structures are very different in gymnosperms.[7]

In angiosperms, the specialised leaves that play a part in reproduction are arranged around the stem in an ordered fashion, from the base to the apex of the flower. The floral parts are arranged at the end of a stem without any internodes. The receptacle (also called the floral axis, or thalamus) is generally very small. Some flower parts are solitary, while others may form a tight spiral, or whorl, around the flower stem. First, at the base, are those non-reproductive structures involved in protecting the flower when it is still a bud, the sepals, then are those parts that play a role in attracting pollinators and are typically coloured, the petals, which together with the sepals make up the perianth (perigon, perigonium). If the perianth is differentiated, the outer whorl of sepals forms the calyx, and the inner whorl of petals, the corolla. If the perianth is not differentiated into sepals and petals, they are collectively known as tepals. In some flowers, a tube or cup-like hypanthium (floral tube) is formed above or around the ovary and bears the sepals, petals, and stamens. There may also be a nectary producing nectar. Nectaries may develop on or in the perianth, receptacle, androecium (stamens), or gynoecium. In some flowers nectar may be produced on nectariferous disks. Disks may arise from the receptacle and are doughnut- or disk-shaped. They may also surround the stamens (extrastaminal), be at the stamen bases (staminal), or be inside the stamina (intrastaminal).[8]

Reproductive structures edit

Finally, the actual reproductive parts form the innermost layers of the flower. These leaf primordia become specialised as sporophylls, leaves that form areas called sporangia, which produce spores, and cavitate internally. The sporangia on the sporophytes of pteridophytes are visible, but those of gymnosperms and angiosperms are not. In the angiosperms there are two types. Some form male organs (stamens), the male sporangia (microsporangia) producing microspores. Others form female organs (carpels), the female sporangia (megasporangia) producing a single large megaspore.[8] These in turn produce the male gametophytes and female gametophytes

These two components are the androecium and gynoecium, respectively. The Androecium (literally, men's house) is a collective term for the male organs (stamens or microsporophylls). While sometimes leaflike (laminar), more commonly they consist of a long thread-like column, the filament, surmounted by a pollen bearing anther. The anther usually consists of two fused thecae. A theca is two microspoorangia. The gynoecium (women's house) is the collective term for the female organs (carpels). A carpel is a modified megasporophyll consisting of two or more ovules, which develop conduplicatively (folded along the line). The carpels may be single, or collected together, to form an ovary, and contain the ovules. Another term, pistil, refers to the ovary as its expanded base, the style, a column arising from the ovary, and an expanded tip, the stigma.[8]

Within the stamen, the microsporangium forms grains of pollen, surrounded by a protective microspore, which form the male gametophyte. Within the carpel the megasporangium form the ovules, with its protective layers (integument) in the megaspore, and the female gametophyte. Unlike the male gametophyte, which is transported in the pollen, the female gametophyte remains within the ovule.[8]

Most flowers have both male and female organs, and hence are considered bisexual (perfect), which is thought to be the ancestral state. However, others have either one or the other and are therefore unisexual, or imperfect. In which case they may be either male (staminate) or female (pistillate). Plants may bear either all bisexual flowers (hermaphroditic), both male and female flowers (monoecious), or only one sex (dioecious), in which case separate plants are either male or female flower-bearing. Where both bisexual and unisexual flowers exist on the same plant, it is called polygamous. Polygamous plants may have bisexual and staminate flowers (andromonoecious), bisexual and pistillate flowers (gynomonoecious), or both (trimonoecious). Other combinations include the presence of bisexual flowers on some individual plants and staminate on others (androdioecious), or bisexual and pistillate (gynodioecious). Finally, trioecious plants have bisexual, staminate, or pistillate flowers on different individuals. Arrangements other than hermaphroditic help to ensure outcrossing.[9]

Fertilisation and embryogenesis edit

The development of the embryo and gametophytes is called embryology. The study of pollens which persist in soil for many years is called palynology. Reproduction occurs when male and female gametophytes interact. This generally requires an external agent such as wind or insects to carry the pollen from the stamen to the vicinity of the ovule. This process is called pollination. In gymnosperms (literally naked seed) pollen comes into direct contact with the exposed ovule. In angiosperms the ovule is enclosed in the carpel, requiring a specialised structure, the stigma, to receive the pollen. On the surface of the stigma, the pollen germinates; that is, the male gametophyte penetrates the pollen wall into the stigma, and a pollen tube, an extension of the pollen grain, extends towards the carpel, carrying with it the sperm cells (male gametes) until they encounter the ovule, where they gain access through a pore in the ovule's integument (micropyle), allowing fertilisation to occur. Once the ovule has been fertilised, a new sporophyte, protected and nurtured by the female gametophyte, develops and becomes an embryo. When development stops, the embryo becomes dormant, as a seed. Within the embryo are the primordial shoot and root.

In angiosperms, as the seed develops after fertilisation, so does the surrounding carpel, its walls thickening or hardening, developing colours or nutrients that attract animals or birds. This new entity with its dormant seeds is the fruit, whose functions are protecting the seed and dispersing it. In some cases, androecium and gynaecium may be fused. The resulting structure is a gynandrium (gynostegium, gynostemium, or column), which is supported by an androgynosphore.[8]

Vegetative morphology edit

  • Ptyxis – the way in which an individual leaf is folded within an unopened bud.
  • Vernation – the arrangement of leaves in an unopened bud.

Roots edit

Plants, with regard to identification and classification, are not often characterized by their roots, which are important in determining plant duration. However, in some groups, including the grasses, roots are important for proper identification.

  • Adventitious – roots that form from other than the hypocotyl or from other roots. Roots forming on the stem are adventitious.
  • Aerial – roots growing in the air.
  • (Root) crown – the place where the roots and stem meet, which may or may not be clearly visible.[10]
  • Fibrous – describes roots that are thread-like and normally tough.
  • Fleshy – describes roots that are relatively thick and soft, normally made up of storage tissue. Roots are typically long and thick but not thickly rounded in shape.
  • Haustorial – specialized roots that invade other plants and absorb nutrients from those plants.
  • Lignotuber – root tissue that allows plants to regenerate after fire or other damage.
  • Primary – root that develop from the radicle of the embryo, and is normally the first root to emerge from the seed as it germinates.
  • Root Hairs – very small roots, often one cell wide, that do most of the water and nutrient absorption.
  • Secondary – roots forming off of the primary root; often called branch roots.
  • Taproot – a primary root that more-or-less enlarges and grows downward into the soil.
  • Tuberous – roots that are thick and soft with storage tissue, and are typically thick and round in shape.
Root structure terms edit
  • Epiblema – Outermost (epidermal) layer of rootlets. Normally 1-cell-layer thick (uniseriate). Normally do not have a cuticle, and permit water conduction.
  • Quiescent centre – a small region inside the root's apical region that has a slower division rate.
  • Root Cap – a cover or cap-like structure that protects the tip of root.
    • Multiple root caps - several layers of root caps on a single root apex; seen in Pandanus sp.
    • Root Pocket – a cap-like structure on the root-apex of some aquatic plants, which, unlike root-caps, doesn't reappear if removed somehow.
  • Root hair – fine cellular appendages from cells of epiblema. They are unicellular, which means one root hair and corresponding cell of epiblema comprise only 1 cell. By contrast, stem and leaf hairs can be unicellular or multicellular. Root hairs of older portions of roots are destroyed over time, and only at a certain region near a growing apex (called the root-hair-region) are root hairs seen. Although microscopic, root-hairs can be observed by the unaided eye in chili and Brassica seedlings.
Terms classifying roots and their modifications edit
  • Tap-Root-System:
    • Storage roots:
      • Conical root – Storage root that is broad at its base (upper portion) and gradually tapers to its apex (lower portion): e.g., Carrot.
      • Fusiform root – Storage root that is swollen in the centre and tapers towards both apex and base: e.g., radish (Raphanus sativus).
      • Napiform root – Root whose upper (basal) portion is heavily swollen but whose lower (apical) portion is narrow and tapering: e.g., beet, turnip.
      • Tuberous or tubercular tap-root – In its narrow sense, a tap-root that is thick and fleshy (due to storage) but that does not conform to the fusiform, conical, napiform shape: Mirabilis jalapa. In its broader sense, a tap-root that is thick and fleshy (due to storage); i.e. when tuberation take place in a tap-root.
    • Pneumatophores (respiratory roots) – Part of tap-root system as respiratory roots; found in many mangrove trees. They arise from the thick, mature branches of tap-root systems, and grow upwards. The inner tissue of respiratory roots is full of hollow, airy, tube-like dead cells, giving it a spongy texture. The outer surface of pneumatophores contains tiny pores or openings, which are called pneumathodes: e.g., Heritiera fomes, Rhizophora mucronata. Pneumatophores can be unbranched or sparingly branched.
    • Vivipary – This is a feature of many mangrove trees, where the seed germinates when the seed (and fruit) remain joined to the mother plant until the radicle and hypocotyl grow, reach the ground, and establish there.[11]

(See also: seeds and germination related sections and articles)

  • Adventitious root systems
    • Fibrous root – Originate from the base of a young stem and replace the primary root (and also from the stem nodes, and sometimes internodes), and emanate as a parallel cluster or bunch from around the node. The adventitious roots of monocots are usually of this type. Replacement of a tap root system by a fibrous root is seen in onions, tuberose (Polyanthes tuberosa), grasses, etc. Fibrous roots from normal-stem nodes are seen in grasses like maize, sugarcane, bamboo, etc. Fibrous roots from nodes help in the survival of the plant and thus in vegetative reproduction, when the plant's base is damaged or cut inside the stem axis.
    • Many dicots, too, release adventitious toots from stem-nodes, especially those that can regenerate vegetatively (Hibiscus rosa-sinensis, Coleus, etc.) and those that have a week stem with creeping habit (Centella asiatica, Bacopa monnieri, etc.). These roots are called adventitious, not fibrous, roots.
    • Adventitious storage roots – similar function as storage-taproots.
      • Tuberous roots or root tubers – Narrow sense, those storage roots that do not conform to a specific shape, such as fasciculated, nodulose moniliform, annulated, etc.: e.g. sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas), whose edible part is a root of this type. Broader sense, adventitious roots swollen due to their storage function.
      • Fasciculated root – When several tubercular roots grow as a parallel bunch or bundle. Seen in Dahlia sp., Ruellia tuberosa, Asparagus racemosus, etc. Orchis maculata have a pair of bulbous storage-roots.
      • Nodulose root – Not to be confused with root-nodules. Storage pattern is a root axis swollen near the apical portion, thus forming a bulbous or tuberous structure at or near the root tip. It is commonly seen associated with a rhizomatous stem. It is seen in Costus speciosus,[12] Curcuma amada,[12][13] Curcuma domestica, Asparagus sprengeri, Arrowroot (Maranta), etc.[13] and some species of Calathea.[13]
      • Moniliform or Beaded root – When more than one swelling, or nodule-like, structures occur at intervals along the root axis. Such an alternating swollen-and-constricted pattern is seen in Cyperus sp., Dioscorea alata,[12] Vitis trifolia, Portulaca sp., Basella sp., Momordica sp. and some grasses.[13]
      • Annulated root – Like moniliform roots, annulated roots also contain alternating swollen and constricted regions; but here the length of constricted regions is so short that the root appears as a stack of discs. It is seen in Cephalis ipecacuanha (Rubiaceae).
    • Floating or Aquatic-respiratory root – The upright, spongy structures helps the plant to float.[12][13] Seen in Jussiaea repens.
    • Epiphytic root – This type of root seen in epiphytic orchids. The thick root hangs from the plant's base directly into air. The root is covered with a special, usually 4- to 5-cell layer thick,[12] spongy tissue (called Velamen), which helps the plant to absorb moisture from the atmosphere. Epiphytic orchid have another sort of root, called clinging roots, that help the orchid plant cling to the substratum (host). Since a similar function is seen in many other plants' adventitious roots, it is being mentioned in more general terms in the mechanical advancements section.
    • Parasitic root or Haustoria –
    • Assimilatory or Photosynthetic roots –
    • Mechanical advancements –
      • Prop-roots – In some dome-shaped (deliquescent) trees, from the mature horizontal boughs (stem-branches) some quite thick (millimeters to centimeters) roots come down. After growing and reaching the ground, they establish more elaborate root branches as well as show massive secondary thickening. Thus, they start to resemble the main trunk. Besides carrying the weight of horizontal boughs, when the main trunk is destroyed due to ageing or accident, the established prop-roots support the remaining plant-body, thus helping in vegetative reproduction. E.g. Ficus benghalensis. The Great Banyan Tree at IBG Kolkata is an example how prop-roots help in vegetative reproduction.
      • Stilt roots – From upright (erect) trunks, some hard, thick, almost straight roots come-out obliquely and penetrate the ground. Thus they act like a camera-tripod. They increase balance and support as well as, when these roots penetrates the ground, they increase soil grip.
      • Root-Buttress or Plank Buttress or Buttress-Root –
      • Climbing roots –
      • Clinging roots –
      • Contractile-roots or Pull-roots –
      • Haptera – root-like projections found in macroalgae or lichens that anchor the organism to a rocky substrate.
    • Protective functions –
      • Root-thorns –
    • Reproductive roots – These roots contain root-buds and actively take part in shoot-regeneration, and thus in vegetative reproduction. This is an unusual feature because roots normally do not contain buds.

Stems edit

 
Parts of plant stem
 
Euonymus alata, an example of alate stems
 
Saraca cauliflora, an example of cauliflora
 
Sciadopitys verticillata, an example of a verticillate plant
  • Accessory buds – an embryonic shoot occurring above or to the side of an axillary bud; also known as supernumerary bud.
  • Acrocarpous – produced at the end of a branch.
  • Acutangular – a stem that has several longitudinally running ridges with sharp edges.
  • Adventitious buds – a bud that arises at points on the plant other than at the stem apex or leaf axil.
  • Alate – having wing-like structures, usually on the seeds or stems, as in Euonymus alata.
  • Alternate – buds are staggered on opposite sides of the branch.
  • Bark – the outer layers of woody plants: cork, phloem, and vascular cambium.
  • Branches
  • Bud – an immature stem tip, typically an embryonic shoot, either producing a stem, leaves, or flowers.
  • Bulb – an underground stem normally with a short basal surface and with thick fleshy leaves.
  • Bundle scar – a small mark on a leaf scar indicating a point where a vein from the leaf was once connected to the stem.
  • Caudex – the hard base produced by herbaceous perennials, which serves in overwintering the plant.
  • Caulescent – with a distinctive stem.
  • Cauliflora – with the flowers and fruit on the stem, or trunk, as in Saraca cauliflora.
  • Cladode – a flattened stem that performs the function of a leaf; an example is the pad of the opuntia cactus.
  • Cladophyll – a flattened stem that is leaf-like and green – used for photosynthesis. Normally such plants have no, or greatly reduced, leaves.
  • Climbing – typically long stems that cling to other objects.
  • Corm – a compact, upright-orientated stem that is bulb-like, with hard or fleshy texture, and normally covered by papery, thin, dry leaves. Most often produced under the soil surface.
  • Cuticle – a waterproof waxy membrane covering leaves and primary shoots.
  • Decumbent – stems that lie on the ground but whose ends turn upward.
  • Dormant – a state of no, or reduced, growth
  • Earlywood – the portion of the annual growth ring that is formed early in the season.
  • Epidermis – a layer of cells that cover all primary tissue, separating it from the outside environment.
  • Erect – growing upright.
  • Flower bud – a bud from which only flowers develop
  • Fruticose – woody stemmed with a shrub-like habit. Branching near the soil with woody based stems.
  • Guard cell – one of the paired epidermal cells that control the opening and closing of a stoma in plant tissue.
  • Heartwood – the older, nonliving central wood of a tree or woody plant, usually darker and harder than the younger sapwood. Also called duramen.
  • Herbaceous – non-woody and dying to the ground at the end of the growing season. Annual plants die, while perennials regrow from parts on the soil surface, or below ground, the next growing season.
  • Internode – space between nodes.
  • Latent buds – axillary buds whose development is inhibited, sometimes for many years, due to the influence of apical and other buds. Also known as dormant buds.
  • Lateral buds – a bud located on the side of the stem, usually in a leaf axil.
  • Late wood – the portion of the annual ring that is formed after the formation of earlywood has ceased.
  • Leaf – the photosynthetic organ of a plant that is attached to a stem, generally at specific intervals.
  • Leaf axils – the space created between a leaf and its branch. This is especially pronounced on monocots like the bromeliads.
  • Leaf buds – buds that produces leafy shoots.
  • Leaf scar – the mark left on a branch from the previous location of a bud or leaf.
  • Lenticel – One of the small, corky pores or narrow lines, on the surface of the stems of woody plants, that allow for the interchange of gases between the interior tissue and the surrounding air.
  • Node – where leaves and buds are attached to the stem.
  • Opposite – buds that are arranged in pairs on opposite sides of the branch
  • Orthotropic growth – growth in the vertical direction.
  • Pith – the spongy tissue at the center of a stem.
  • Chambered pith – a form of pith in which the parenchyma collapses or is torn during development, leaving the sclerenchyma plates to alternate with hollow zones
  • Diaphragmed pith – pith in which plates or nests of sclerenchyma may be interspersed with the parenchyma.
  • Plagiotropic growth – growth inclined away from the vertical, inclined towards the horizontal.
  • Pore –
  • Prickle – an extension of the cortex and epidermis that ends with a sharp point.
  • Prostrate – growing flat on the soil surface.
  • Rhizome – a horizontally orientated, prostrate stem with reduced scale-like leaves, normally growing under ground but also on the soil surface. Also produced by some species that grow in trees or water.
  • Rootstock – the underground part of a plant normally referring to a caudex or rhizome.
  • Runner – an above-ground stem, usually rooting and producing new plants at the nodes.
  • Sapwood –
  • Scandent – a stem that climbs.
  • Spine – an adapted leaf that is usually hard and sharp and is used for protection, and occasionally shading, of the plant
  • Stem – vascular tissue that provides support for the plant,
  • Stolon – a horizontally growing stem similar to a rhizome, produced near the base of the plant. They spread out above or along the soil surface. Roots and new plants develop at the nodes or ends.
  • Stoloniferous – a plant that produces stolons.
  • Stoma – a small pore on the surface of the leaves used for gas exchange with the environment while preventing water loss.
  • Suberose – having a corky texture.
  • Tendril – a thigmotropic organ which attaches a climbing plant to a support, a portion of a stem or leaf modified to serve as a holdfast for other objects.
  • Terminal – at the end of a stalk or stem.
  • Terminal scale bud scar –
  • Thorn
  • Tiller – a shoot of a grass plant.
  • Tuber – an enlarged stem or root that stores nutrients.
  • Turgid – swollen.
  • Twigs –
  • Vascular bundles – a strand of woody fibers and associated tissues.
  • Verticillate/Verticil/Verticillatus – leaves or flowers arranged in whorls; said of a collection of three or more leaves or flowers that arise from the same point.

Buds edit

  • Accessory bud – an embryonic shoot occurring above or to the side of an axillary bud; also known as supernumerary bud.
  • Adventitious bud – a bud that arises at a point on the plant other than at the stem apex or a leaf axil.
  • Axillary – an embryonic shoot which lies at the junction of the stem and petiole of a plant.
  • Dormant – see "Latent bud".
  • Epicormic – vegetative buds that lie dormant beneath the bark, shooting after crown disturbance[14]
  • Flower bud –
  • Lateral –
  • Latent bud – an axillary bud whose development is inhibited, sometimes for many years, due to the influence of apical and other buds. Also known as a dormant bud.
  • Leaf bud – a bud that produces a leafy shoot.
  • Mixed – buds that have both embryonic flowers and leaves.
  • Naked –
  • Pseudoterminal –
  • Reproductive – buds with embryonic flowers.
  • Scaly –
  • Terminal – bud at the tip or end of the stem.
  • Vegetative – buds containing embryonic leaves.

Leaves edit

 
Leaf morphology:
Shape, margin and venation.

Leaf Parts: – A complete leaf is composed of a blade, petiole, and stipules, but in many plants one or more might be lacking or highly modified.

  • Blade – see lamina.
  • Lamina – the flat and laterally-expanded portion of a leaf blade.
  • Leaflet – a separate blade, among others, of a compound leaf
  • Ligule – a projection from the top of the sheath on the adaxial side of the sheath-blade joint in grasses.
  • Midrib – the central vein of the leaf blade.
  • Midvein – the central vein of a leaflet.
  • Petiole – a leaf stalk supporting a blade and attaching to a stem at a node.
  • Petiolule - the leaf stalk of a leaflet.
  • Pulvinus – the swollen base of a petiole or petiolule, usually involved in leaf movements and leaf orientation.
  • Rachilla – a secondary axis of a multiply compound leaf.
  • Rachis – main axis of a pinnately compound leaf.
  • Sheath – the proximal portion of a grass leaf, usually surrounding the stem.
  • Stipels – paired scales, spines, glands, or blade-like structures at the base of a petiolule.
  • Stipules – paired scales, spines, glands, or blade-like structures at the base of a petiole.
  • Stipuloid – resembling stipules.

Duration of leaves:

  • Deciduous – leaves are shed after the growing season.
  • Evergreen – leaves are retained throughout the year, sometimes for several years.
  • Fugacious – lasting for a short time: soon falling away from the parent plant.
  • Marcescent – dead leaves, calyx, or petals are persistent and retained.
  • Persistent – see Marcescence.

Venation:

  • Acrodromous – the veins run parallel to the leaf edge and fuse at the leaf tip.
  • Actinodromous – the main veins of a leaf radiate from the tip of the petiole.
  • Brochidodromous – the veins turn away from the leaf edge to join the next higher vein.
  • Campylodromous – secondary veins diverge at the base of the lamina and rejoin at the tip.
  • Craspedodromous – secondary veins run straight to the leaf edge and end there.
    • Furcate – forked, dividing into two divergent branches.
  • Reticulate – veins interconnected to form a network. Net-veined.
  • Vein – the externally visible vascular bundles found on leaves, petals, and other parts.
  • Veinlet – a small vein.

Leaf Arrangement or Phyllotaxy:

  • Whorl – three or more leaves or branches or pedicels arising from the same node.

Leaf Type:

  • Abruptly pinnate – a compound leaf without a terminal leaflet.

Leaf Blade Shape:

  • Acicular (acicularis) – slender and pointed, needle-like.
  • Acuminate (acuminata) – tapering to a long point.
  • Aristate (aristata) – ending in a stiff, bristle-like point.
  • Bipinnate (bipinnata) – each leaflet also pinnate.
  • Cordate (cordata) – heart-shaped, stem attaches to cleft.
  • Cuneate (cuneata) – triangular, stem attaches to point.
  • Deltoid (deltoidea) – triangular, stem attaches to side.
  • Digitate (digitata) – divided into finger-like lobes.
  • Elliptic (elliptica) – oval, with a short or no point.
  • Falcate (falcata) – sickle-shaped.
  • Flabellate (flabellata) – semi-circular, or fan-like.
  • Hastate (hastata) – shaped like a spear point, with flaring pointed lobes at the base.
  • Lance-shaped, lanceolate (lanceolata) – long, wider in the middle.
  • Linear (linearis) – long and very narrow.
  • Lobed (lobata) – with several points.
  • Obcordate (obcordata) – heart-shaped, stem attaches to tapering point.
  • Oblanceolate (oblanceolata) – top wider than bottom.
  • Oblong (oblongus) – having an elongated form with slightly parallel sides.
  • Obovate (obovata) – teardrop-shaped, stem attaches to tapering point.
  • Obtuse (obtusus) – with a blunt tip.
  • Orbicular (orbicularis) – circular.
  • Ovate (ovata) – Oval, egg-shaped, with a tapering point.
  • Palmate (palmata) – divided into many lobes.
  • Pedate (pedata) – palmate, with cleft lobes.
  • Peltate (peltata) – rounded, stem underneath.
  • Perfoliate (perfoliata) – stem through the leaves.
  • Pinnate (pinnata) – two rows of leaflets.
    • odd-pinnate – pinnate with a terminal leaflet.
    • paripinnate, even-pinnate – pinnate lacking a terminal leaflet.
  • Pinnatisect (pinnatifida) – cut, but not to the midrib (it would be pinnate then).
  • Reniform (reniformis) – kidney-shaped.
  • Rhomboid (rhomboidalis) – diamond-shaped.
  • Round (rotundifolia) – circular.
  • Sagittate (sagittata) – arrowhead-shaped.
  • Spatulate, spathulate (spathulata) – spoon-shaped.
  • Spear-shaped (hastata) – pointed, with barbs.
  • Subulate (subulata) – awl-shaped with a tapering point.
  • Sword-shaped (ensiformis) – long, thin, pointed.
  • Trifoliate, ternate (or trifoliolate) (trifoliata) – divided into three leaflets.
  • Tripinnate (tripinnata) – pinnately compound in which each leaflet is itself bipinnate.
  • Truncate (truncata) – with a squared off end.
  • Unifoliate (unifoliata) – with a single leaf.

Leaf Base Shape:

  • Semiamplexicaul – the leaf base wraps around the stem, but not completely.

Leaf Blade Apex:

  • Acuminate – narrowing to a point (a term used for other structures, too).
  • Acute – with a sharp, rather abrupt ending-point.
    • Acutifolius – with acute leaves.
  • Attenuate – tapering gradually to a narrow end.

Leaf Blade Margins:

  • Crenulate – with shallow, small rounded teeth.

Epidermis and periderm texture edit

  • Acanceous – prickly.
  • Acantha – a prickle or spine.
  • Acanthocarpus – fruits are spiny.
  • Acanthocladous – branches are spiny.
  • Aculeate – having a covering of prickles or needle-like growth.
    • Aculeolate – having spine-like processes.
  • Aden – a gland.
    • Adenoid – gland-like.
    • Adenophore – a stalk that supports a gland.
    • Adenophyllous – leaves with glands.
  • Arachnoid – having entangled hairs that resemble cobwebs.
  • Bloom – waxy coating that covers some plants.
  • Canescent – with gray pubescence.
  • Ciliate – with a fringe of marginal hairs.
  • Coriaceouse – with a tough or leathery texture.
  • Fimbriate – finely cut into fringes, the edge of a frilly petal or leaf.
  • Floccose –
  • Glabrate –
  • Glabrous – smooth without any pubescences at all.
  • Glandular –
  • Glandular-punctate – covered across the surface with glands.
  • Hirsute – with long shaggy hairs, often stiff or bristly to the touch.
  • Lanate – with thick wool-like hairs.
  • Verrucose – with a warty surface having low rounded bumps.
  • Villose – covered with fine, long hairs that are not matted.

Floral morphology edit

  • Accrescent – growing larger after anthesis, normally referring to the calyx.
  • Anthesis – the period when the flower is fully open and functional, ending when the stigma or stamens wither.

Basic flower parts edit

Androecium edit
  • Androecium – the stamens collectively.
    • Basifixed – attached by the base.
    • Connective – the part of the stamen joining the anther cells.
    • Diadelphous – united by filaments to form two groups.
    • Didynamous – having four stamens in two pairs of unequal length.
    • Epipetalous – borne on the corolla, often used in reference to stamens attached to the corolla.
    • Exserted – sticking out past the corolla, the stamens protrude past the margin of the corolla lip.
    • Extrose – opening towards the outside of the flower.
    • Gynandrium – combined male and female structure.
    • Gynostegium – adnation of stamens and the style and stigma (Orchidaceae).
    • Included –
    • Introrse – opening on the inside of the corolla, the stamens are contained within the margins of the petals.
    • Monodelphous – stamen filaments united as a tube.
    • Poricidal – anthers opening through terminal pores.
    • Staminode – a sterile stamen.
      • Staminodial – (1) concerning a sterile stamen; (2) flowers with sterile stamens.
    • Synandrous – anthers are connected (Araceae).
    • Syngenesious – anthers are united as a tube; the filaments are free (Asteraceae).
    • Tetradynamous – having six stamens, four of which are longer than the others.
    • Translator – a structure uniting the pollinia in Asclepiadaceae and Orchidaceae.
    • Trinucleate – pollen containing three nuclei when shed.
    • Valvular – anthers opening through valves or small flaps; e.g. Berberis.
    • Versatile – anthers pivoting freely on the filament.
  • Pollen –
  • Stamen –
    • Anther – the distal end of the stamen where pollen is produced, normally composed of two parts called anther-sacs and pollen-sacs (thecae).
    • Filament – the stalk of a stamen.
Gynoecium edit
Style position
 
Terminal (apical)
 
Lateral
 
Gynobasic
  • Gynoecium – the whorl of carpels; may comprise one (syncarpous), or more (apocarpous), pistils, each pistil consisting of an ovary, style, and stigma.
    • Apocarpus – the gynoecium consists of more than one pistil.
    • Cell –
    • Compound pistil –
    • Funicle – the stalk that connects the ovule to the placenta.
    • Funiculus –
    • Loculus – the cavities located within a carpel, ovary, or anther.
    • Locule
    • multicarpellate –
    • Placenta –
    • Placentation –
      • Axile –
      • Basal –
      • Free-central –
      • Pariental –
    • Septum –
    • Simple pistil
    • Syncarpous – the gynoecium consists of one pistil.
    • Unicarpellate –
  • Stigma
    • Sessile - absent style.
  • Style – position is relative to the body of the ovary.[15]
    • Terminal or apical – arising at the apex of the ovary (commonest).
    • Subapical – arising from the side of the ovary just below the apex.
    • Lateral – arising from the side of the ovary lower than subapical.
    • Gynobasic – arising from the base of the ovary.
  • Ovary
  • Ovules –
  • Pistil –
Other edit
 
Bracts, Taraxacum officinale
 
Bracts
  • Acephalous – without a head, used to describe a flower style without a well-developed stigma.
  • Bract – the leaf- or scale-like appendages that are located just below a flower, a flower stalk, or an inflorescence; they usually are reduced in size and sometimes showily or brightly colored.
  • Calyx – the whorl of sepals at the base of a flower, the outer whorl of the perianth.
  • Carpel – the ovule-producing reproductive organ of a flower, consisting of the stigma, style, and ovary.
  • Claw – a noticeably narrowed or attenuated organ base, typically a petal; e.g. Viola.
  • Connate – when the same parts of a flower are fused to each other, petals in a gamopetalous flower; e.g. Petunia.
  • Corolla – the whorl of petals of a flower.
  • Corona – an additional structure between the petals and the stamens.
  • Disk – an enlargement or outgrowth from the receptacle of the flower, located at the center of the flowers of various plants. The term is also used for the central area of the head in composites where tubular flowers are attached.
  • Epicalyx – a series of bracts below the calyx.
  • Floral axis –
  • Floral envelope – the perianth[16]
  • Flower –
  • Fruit – a structure containing all the seeds produced by a single flower.
  • Hypanthium –
  • Nectar – a fluid produced by nectaries that is high in sugar content; used to attract pollinators.
  • Nectary – a gland that secrets nectar, most often found in flowers, but also produced on other parts of plants.
  • Nectar disk – when the floral disk contains nectar secreting glands; often modified as its main function in some flowers.
  • Pedicel – the stem or stalk that holds a single flower in an inflorescence.
  • Peduncle – the part of a stem that bears the entire inflorescence, normally having no leaves, or the leaves having been reduced to bracts. When the flower is solitary, it is the stem or stalk holding the flower.
    • Peduncular – referring to or having a peduncle.
    • Pedunculate – having a peduncle.
  • Perianth –
    • Achlamydeous – without a perianth.
  • Petal –
  • Rachis –
  • Receptacle – the end of the pedicel that joins to the flower were the different parts of the flower are joined together; also called the torus. In Asteraceae, the top of the pedicel upon which the flowers are joined.
  • Seed –
  • Sepal –
    • Antipetalous – when the stamens number the same as, and are arranged opposite, the corolla segments; e.g. Primula.
    • Antisepalouse – when the stamens number the same as, and are arranged opposite, the calyx segments.
    • Connective – the part of the stamen joining the anther cells.
  • Tepal –

Inflorescences edit

 
Pedicellate attachment
 
Sessile attachment
 
Verticillaster, Lamium album
  • Capitulum – the flowers are arranged into a head composed of many separate unstalked flowers, the single flowers being packed close together and called florets, which is the typical arrangement in Asteraceae.
  • Compound Umbel – an umbel where each stalk of the main umbel produces another smaller umbel of flowers.
  • Corymb – a grouping of flowers where all the flowers are at the same level, the flower stalks of different lengths forming a flat-topped flower cluster.
  • Cyme – is a cluster of flowers where the end of each growing point produces a flower. New growth comes from side shoots, and the oldest and first flowers to bloom are at the top.
  • Single – one flower per stem, or flowers greatly spread apart so as to appear to not arise from the same branch.
  • Spike – flowers arising from the main stem are without individual flower stalks. The flowers attach directly to the stem.
  • Solitary – same as single, with one flower per stem.
  • Raceme – a flower spike with flowers that have stalks of equal length. The stem tip continues to grow and produces more flowers, with the bottom flowers opening first and blooming progressing up the stem.
  • Panicle – a raceme with branches, each branch having a smaller raceme of flowers. The terminal bud of each branch continues to grow, producing more side shoots and flowers.
  • Pedicel – stem holding a one flower in an inflorescence.
  • Peduncle – stem holding an inflorescence, or a single flower.
  • Umbel – where the flower head has all flower stalks rising from the same point and of equal length, the flower head seeming hemispherical like an open umbrella.
  • Verticillaster – a whorled collection of flowers around a stem, the flowers produced in rings at intervals up the stem. As the stem tip continues to grow, more whorls of flowers are produced. Typical in Lamiaceae.
  • Verticil – flowers arranged in whorls at the nodes.

Insertion of floral parts edit

  • Epigynous – flowers are present above the ovary.
  • Half-inferior –
  • Hypogynous – flowers are present below the ovary
  • Inferior –
  • Insertion –
    • Stamens –
    • Ovary –
  • Perigynous –
  • Superior –

Specialized terms edit

  • Wing – a lateral petal of the flowers of species in Fabaceae and Polygalaceae.
  • Valvate – meeting along the margins but not overlapping.

Union of flower parts edit

  • Adelphous – androecium with the stamen filaments partly or completely fused together.

Flower sexuality and presence of floral parts edit

  • Achlamydeous – a flower without a perianth.
  • Apetalous – a flower without petals.
  • Accrescent – said of the calyx when it is persistent and enlarges as the fruit grows and ripens; sometimes applied to other structures.
  • Androgynous – used for the inflorescence of Carex when a spike has both staminate and pistillate flowers; the pistillate flowers are normally at the base of the spike.
  • Bisexual –
  • Complete – of a flower, having all the possible parts represented: sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils.[17]
  • Gynodioecy – describes a plant species or population that has some plants that are female and some plants that are hermaphrodites.
  • Homogamous – when the flower's anthers and stigma are ripe at the same time.
  • Imperfect – of a flower or inflorescence, being unisexual and having organs of only a single sex.[17]
  • Naked – uncovered, stripped of leaves, or lacking other covering such as sepals or petals.[17]
  • Perfect – possessing both stamens and ovary (male and female parts).

Flower symmetry edit

  • Actinomorphic – having a radial symmetry, as in regular flowers.
    • Actinomorphy – when the flower parts are arranged with radial symmetry.
  • Radial – symmetric when bisected through any angle (circular)
  • Unisexual –
  • Zygomorphic – one axis of symmetry running down the middle of the flower so the right and left halves reflect each other.
    • Zygomorphy – the type of symmetry that most irregular flowers have, where the upper half of the flower is unlike the lower half, but the left and right halves tend to be mirror images of each other.

Pollination and fertilization edit

  • Allogamy – cross pollination, when one plant pollinates another plant
  • Anemophilous – wind-pollinated.
  • Autogamy – self-pollination, when the flowers of the same plant pollinate each other, including a flower pollinating itself.
  • Cantharophilous – beetle-pollinated.
  • Chiropterophilous – bat-pollinated.
  • Cleistogamous – self-pollination of a flower that does not open.
  • Dichogamy – flowers that cannot pollinate themselves because pollen is produced at a time when the stigmas are not receptive to pollen.
  • Entomophilous – insect-pollinated.
  • Hydrophilous – water-pollinated; pollen is moved in water from one flower to the next.
  • Malacophilous – pollinated by snails and slugs.
  • Ornithophilous – pollinated by birds.
  • Pollination – the movement of pollen from the anther to the stigma.
  • Protandrous – when pollen is produced and shed before the carpels are mature.
  • Progynous – when the carpels mature before the stamens produce pollen.

Embryo development edit

  • Antipodal cell –
  • Chalazal –
  • Coleoptile – protective sheath on SAM.
  • Coleorhiza – protecting layer of a seed.
  • Cotyledon – "Seed leaves"; first leaves sprouted in a dicot, where there are two cotyledons in a seedling.
  • Diploid
  • Double fertilization
  • Embryo –
  • Embryo sac –
  • Endosperm –
  • Filiform apparatus –
  • Germination –
  • Plumule – the part of an embryo that give rise to the shoot system of a plant.
  • Polar nuclei –
  • Radicle – initial root-determined cells (Root apical meristem).
  • Scutellum –
  • Synergid –
  • Tegmen –
  • Testa – the seed coat; develops from the integuments after fertilization.[16]
    • Sarcotesta – a fleshy seed coat.
    • Sclerotesta – a hard seed coat.
  • Triploid –
  • Xenia – the effect of pollen on seeds and fruit.
  • Zygote –

Fruits and seeds edit

Fruits are the mature ovary of seed-bearing plants, and they include the contents of the ovary, which can be floral parts like the receptacle, involucre, calyx, and others that are fused to it. Fruits are often used to identify plant taxa, help to place the species in the correct family, or differentiate different groups within the same family.

Terms for fruits edit

  • Accessory structures – parts of fruits that do not form from the ovary.
  • Beak – normally the slender elongated end of a fruit, typically a persistent style-base.
  • Circumscissile – a type of fruit that dehisces, where the top of the fruit falls away like a lid or covering.
  • Dehiscent – a fruit that opens and releases its contents, normally in a regular and distinctive fashion.
  • Endocarp – includes the wall of the seed chamber, the inner part of the pericarp.
    • Pyrena – the hardened endocarp of a drupe.
  • Exocarp – the pericarp's outer part.
  • Fleshy – soft and juicy.
  • Indehiscent – fruits that do not have specialized structures for opening and releasing the seeds; they remain closed after the seeds ripen and are opened by animals, weathering, fire, or other external means.
  • Mesocarp – the middle layer of the pericarp.
  • Pericarp – the body of the fruit from its outside surface to the chamber where the seeds are, including the outside skin of the fruit and the inside lining of the seed chamber.
  • Suture – the seam along which the fruit opens; normally in most fruits it is where the carpel or carpels are fused together.
  • Valve – one of the segments of the capsule.

Fruit types edit

 
Scheme of a drupe
 
Scheme of a pome

Fruits are divided into different types, depending on how they form, where or how they open, and what parts they are composed of.

  • Achaenocarp – see achene.
  • Achene – dry indehiscent fruit that have one seed and are formed from a single carpel; the seed is distinct from the fruit wall.
  • Caryopsis – the pericarp and seed are fused together, the fruit of many grasses.[18]
  • Drupe – outer fleshy part that surrounds a shell with a seed inside.
  • Nut – a fruit formed from a pistil with multiple carpels and having a woody covering; e.g. hickory, pecan, and oak.
  • Nutlet – a small nut.
  • Pod (seedpod) – a dry dehiscent fruit containing many seeds.[16] Examples include follicles, dehiscent capsules, and many but not all legumes.
  • Pomeaccessory fruit from one or more carpels; specific to the apple and some related genera in the family Rosaceae.
  • Samara – winged achene, e.g. maples.
  • Utricle – a small inflated fruit with one seed that has thin walls. Fruits are usually one-seeded, as are some species of amaranth.

Seedless reproduction edit

Pteridophytes edit

  • Acrostichoid sorus – having sori covering the entire underside; e.g. Acrostichum.
  • Annulus – outer part of the sporangium
  • Elater
  • Indusium
  • Marginal –
  • Peltate –
  • Reniform –
  • Sporophyll
  • Sorus / Sori – a group or cluster of sporangia borne abaxially on a fern frond.[17]
  • Strobilus
  • Submarginal –

Bryophytes edit

Gametangium edit
  • Acrandrous – used for moss species that have antheridia at the top of the stem.
  • Acrocarpous – in mosses, bearing the sporophyte at the axis of the main shoot.
  • Acrogynous – in liverworts, the female sex organs terminate the main shoot.
  • Anacrogynous – in liverworts, female sex organs are produced by a lateral cell, and thus the growth of the main shoot is indeterminate.
  • Androcyte –
  • Androecium – collective term for all the male parts of an organism.
  • Androgynous – monoicous, and producing both types of sex organs together.
  • Antheridiophore – a specialised branch that bears the antheridia in the Marchantiales.
  • Antherozoid –
  • Archegoniophore – a specialised branch that bears the archaegonia in the Marchantiales.
  • Autoicous – produces male and female sex organs on the same plant but on separate inflorescences.
  • Bract – leaf is present below the flower.
  • Cladautoicous – male and female inflorescences are on separate branches of the same plant.
  • Dioicous – having two forms of gametophyte, one form bearing antheridia and one form bearing archegonia.
  • Gonioautoicous – male is bud-like in the axil of a female branch.
  • Incubous – describing the arrangement of leaves of a liverwort; contrast with succubous.
  • Inflorescence – cluster of flower
  • Involucre – a tube of thallus tissue that protects the archegonia.
  • Monoicous – having a single form of gametophyte bearing both antheridia and archegonia, either together or on separate branches.
  • Paraphyses – sterile hairs surrounding the archegonia and antheridia.
  • Perianth – a protective tube that surrounds the archegonia, characterising the Jungermannialean liverworts.
  • Perichaetium – the cluster of leaves with the enclosed female sex organs.
  • Perigonium – the cluster of leaves with the enclosed male sex organs.
  • Pseudautoicous – dwarf male plants growing on living leaves of female plants.
  • Pseudomonoicous –
  • Pseudoperianth – an involucre that resembles a perianth, but is made of thallus tissue, and usually forms after the sporophyte develops.
  • Rhizautoicous – male inflorescence attached to the female stem by rhizoids.
  • Succubous – describing the arrangement of leaves of a liverwort; contrast with incubous.
  • Synoicous – male and female sex organs are on the same gametophyte, but are not clustered.
Sporangium edit
 
Mouth of a sporophyte, showing the teeth of the peristome. (It is diplolepidous, with a closed endostome and opened exostome)
 
Dehisced capsule of a sporophyte, with the operculum remaining attached via the columella
  • Amphithecium – the external cell layers of the developing sporangium of a bryophyte. (Note: this term is also used in the mycology of lichens.)
  • Anisosporous – anisospore production is a rare condition in dioecious bryophytes; meiosis produces two small spores that develop into male gametophytes and two larger spores that develop into female gametophytes; contrast Isosporous.
  • Annulus – in mosses, cells with thick walls along the rim of the sporangium and where the peristome teeth are attached.
  • Apophysis – a swelling, typically referring to the base of the sporangium.
  • Archesporium – cells of the sporangium from which spores develop.
  • Arthrodontous – a form of peristome teeth which are unequally thickened, tapering to a point.
  • Articulate – generally, meaning jointed.
  • Astomous – having a capsule which bursts irregularly, lacking a stoma.
  • Calyptra – an enlarged archegonial venter that protects the capsule containing the embryonic sporophyte.
  • Capsule – generally synonymous with the sporangium, it specifically refers to the structure which contains the spores. Sometimes referred to as an "urn"
  • Cleistocarpous – having a capsule which lacks an operculum, often closed.
  • Columella – an axis of sterile tissue which passes through the center of the spore-case of mosses.
  • Dehisce – meaning to split along a natural line, refers to the split in the capsule where the operculum detaches.
  • Diplolepidous – a type of peristome found in Bryidae, in which there are two rings of teeth - the inner endostome and outer exostome.
  • Divisural line –
  • Elater – structures derived from the sporangium of liverworts that aid in spore dispersal
  • Endostome – The inner ring of peristome teeth in diplolepidous peristomes.
  • Endothecium – the internal cell layers of the developing sporangium of a bryophyte.
  • Epiphragm – a circular membrane connected to the tips of peristome teeth in some types of sporangia, partially closing the capsule opening
  • Exostome – the outer ring of peristome teeth in diplolepidous peristomes.
  • Exothecium – the outermost layer of the amphithecium, the epidermis of the capsule wall.
  • Foot – the basal connection between the sporophyte and gametophyte.
  • Gymnostomous – lacking a peristome.
  • Haplolepidous – having a peristome with one row of arthrodontous teeth.
  • Hypophysis – a swelling, typically referring to the base of the sporangium.
  • Immersed – meaning submerged or below the surface.
  • Indehiscent – remaining closed at maturity; spores are dispersed as the capsule bursts, rather than through the stoma
  • Inoperculate – lacking an operculum.
  • Isosporous – unlike anisosporous species, whether monoecious or dioecious, all spores are the same size.
  • Mother cells - cells which produce spores.
  • Nematodontous – a form of peristome teeth which are equally thickened.
  • Nurse cells – Sterile mother cells which nourish developing spores.
  • Operculate – referring to the operculum.
  • Operculum – the "lid" of the sporangia. At maturity, it falls off and the stoma and peristome are revealed, allowing for spore dispersal
  • Peristome – the tooth-like structure surrounding the stoma, the opening into the capsule
  • Pseudoelater – structures derived from the sporangium of hornworts that aid in spore dispersal.
  • Seta – the area of the sporophyte between the capsule and foot (base).
  • Stegocarpous – referring to a capsule with a differentiated and dehiscent operculum.
  • Stoma – the "mouth" of the sporangia, from which spores are dispersed when the sporangia is mature.
  • Tapetum – tissue which nourishes spores.
  • Trabecula – a length of sterile tissue which divides the capsule.
  • Urn - synonymous with the "capsule."
  • Valve – each half of a sporangium which is divided.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Rudall 2007.
  2. ^ a b Radford et al. 1974.
  3. ^ a b Bell 1991.
  4. ^ Judd et al. 2007, Chapter 4. Structural and Biochemical Characters.
  5. ^ Dickinson 1999.
  6. ^ a b c Simpson 2011, Flowers p. 364.
  7. ^ a b Simpson 2011, Flower parts p. 364.
  8. ^ a b c d e Simpson 2011, Flower parts p. 365.
  9. ^ Simpson 2011, Flower sex and plant sex p. 365.
  10. ^ FEIS 2015.
  11. ^ College Botany, VOL-1, By HC Gangulee, KS Das, CT Dutta, revised by S Sen, published by New Central Book Agency Kolkata
  12. ^ a b c d e A textbook of BOTANY, Vol-2, by Bhattacharya, Hait and Ghosh, NCBA Kolkata
  13. ^ a b c d e BOTANY For Degree Students, 6th edition, by AC Datta, Revised by TC Datta, Oxford University Press
  14. ^ Slee et al. 2006.
  15. ^ Simpson 2011, Style position p. 378
  16. ^ a b c Hickey & King 2000.
  17. ^ a b c d Hart 2011.
  18. ^ Wickens 2001, Cereals p. 155.

Bibliography edit

General edit

  • Wickens, G.E. (2001). Economic Botany: Principles And Practices. Dordrecht: Kluwer. ISBN 978-1-4020-2228-9. Retrieved 19 January 2015.

Systematics edit

  • Radford, A. E; Dickinson, W. C.; Massey, J. R.; Bell, C. R. (1974). Vascular Plant Systematics. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-045309-1.
  • Jones, Samuel B. (1986). Plant Systematics. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-032796-2.
  • Simpson, Michael G. (2011). Plant Systematics. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-08-051404-8.
    • Glossary p. 547
  • Singh, Gurcharan (2004). Plant Systematics: An Integrated Approach (3 ed.). Science Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57808-351-0. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  • Judd, Walter S.; Campbell, Christopher S.; Kellogg, Elizabeth A.; Stevens, Peter F.; Donoghue, Michael J. (2007). Plant systematics: a phylogenetic approach. (1st ed. 1999, 2nd 2002) (3 ed.). Sinauer Associates. ISBN 978-0-87893-407-2. Retrieved 29 January 2014.

Anatomy and morphology edit

  • Bell, A. D. (1991). Plant Form, an Illustrated Guide to Flowering Plant Morphology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-854279-7. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  • Weberling, Focko (1992). Morphology of Flowers and Inflorescences (trans. Richard J. Pankhurst). CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-43832-2. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  • Rudall, Paula J. (2007). Anatomy of flowering plants : an introduction to structure and development (3 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-521-69245-8. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
    • also available here
  • Dickinson, Tim (1999). "Comparative morphology: heterotopy and "cruddophytes"". Dickinson Lab, Botany Department, University of Toronto. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  • González, A.M.; Arbo, M.M. (2016). "Botánica Morfológica: Morfología de Plantas Vasculares" (in Spanish). Corrientes, Argentina: Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias, Universidad Nacional del Nordeste. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  • "Fruit Anatomy". Department of Plant Sciences, College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences, UC Davis. 2016. Retrieved 22 June 2016.

Glossaries edit

  • Chiang, Fernando; Mario Sousa, S; Mario Sousa, P. "Glosario Inglés-Español, Español-Inglés para Flora Mesoamericana". Missouri Botanical Gardens. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  • "Fire Effects Information System Glossary". Fire Effects Information System (FEIS). USDA Forest Service. 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  • Slee, AV; Brooker, MIH; Duffy, SM; West, JG (2006). "Glossary". Euclid: Eucalypts of Australia. Victoria, Australia: CSIRO. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  • Hickey, Michael; King, Clive (2000). The Cambridge Illustrated Glossary of Botanical Terms. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79401-5. Retrieved 19 January 2015.

Dictionaries edit

glossary, plant, morphology, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, june, 2016, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, spanish, article, machine, translation, . You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish June 2016 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Terminologia descriptiva de las plantas see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Terminologia descriptiva de las plantas to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This page provides a glossary of plant morphology Botanists and other biologists who study plant morphology use a number of different terms to classify and identify plant organs and parts that can be observed using no more than a handheld magnifying lens This page provides help in understanding the numerous other pages describing plants by their various taxa The accompanying page Plant morphology provides an overview of the science of the external form of plants There is also an alphabetical list Glossary of botanical terms In contrast this page deals with botanical terms in a systematic manner with some illustrations and organized by plant anatomy and function in plant physiology 1 This glossary primarily includes terms that deal with vascular plants ferns gymnosperms and angiosperms particularly flowering plants angiosperms Non vascular plants bryophytes with their different evolutionary background tend to have separate terminology Although plant morphology the external form is integrated with plant anatomy the internal form the former became the basis of the taxonomic description of plants that exists today due to the few tools required to observe 2 3 Many of these terms date back to the earliest herbalists and botanists including Theophrastus Thus they usually have Greek or Latin roots These terms have been modified and added to over the years and different authorities may not always use them the same way 2 3 This page has two parts The first deals with general plant terms and the second with specific plant structures or parts Contents 1 General plant terms 1 1 Plant habit 1 2 Duration 2 Plant structures 2 1 Introduction 2 1 1 Life cycle 2 1 2 Morphology 2 1 2 1 Vegetative structures 2 1 2 2 Floral structure 2 1 2 3 Reproductive structures 2 1 2 4 Fertilisation and embryogenesis 2 2 Vegetative morphology 2 2 1 Roots 2 2 1 1 Root structure terms 2 2 1 2 Terms classifying roots and their modifications 2 2 2 Stems 2 2 3 Buds 2 2 4 Leaves 2 3 Epidermis and periderm texture 2 4 Floral morphology 2 4 1 Basic flower parts 2 4 1 1 Androecium 2 4 1 2 Gynoecium 2 4 1 3 Other 2 4 2 Inflorescences 2 4 3 Insertion of floral parts 2 5 Specialized terms 2 5 1 Union of flower parts 2 5 2 Flower sexuality and presence of floral parts 2 5 3 Flower symmetry 2 6 Pollination and fertilization 2 6 1 Embryo development 2 7 Fruits and seeds 2 7 1 Terms for fruits 2 7 2 Fruit types 2 8 Seedless reproduction 2 8 1 Pteridophytes 2 8 2 Bryophytes 2 8 2 1 Gametangium 2 8 2 2 Sporangium 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 General 5 2 Systematics 5 3 Anatomy and morphology 5 4 Glossaries 5 5 DictionariesGeneral plant terms editAbaxial located on the side facing away from the axis Adaxial located on the side facing towards the axis Dehiscent opening at maturity Gall outgrowth on the surface caused by invasion by other lifeforms such as parasites Indehiscent not opening at maturity Reticulate web like or network like Striated marked by a series of lines grooves or ridges Tesselate marked by a pattern of polygons usually rectangles Wing plant any flat surfaced structure emerging from the side or summit of an organ seeds stems Plant habit edit Plant habit refers to the overall shape of a plant and it describes a number of components such as stem length and development branching pattern and texture While many plants fit neatly into some main categories such as grasses vines shrubs or trees others can be more difficult to categorise The habit of a plant provides important information about its ecology that is how it has adapted to its environment Each habit indicates a different adaptive strategy Habit is also associated with the development of the plant As such it may change as the plant grows and is more properly called its growth habit In addition to shape habit indicates plant structure for instance whether the plant is herbaceous or woody Each plant commences its growth as a herbaceous plant Plants that remain herbaceous are shorter and seasonal dying back at the end of their growth season Woody plants such as trees shrubs and woody vines lianas will gradually acquire woody lignaceous tissues which provide strength and protection for the vascular system 4 and they tend to be tall and relatively long lived The formation of woody tissue is an example of secondary growth a change in existing tissues in contrast to primary growth that creates new tissues such as the elongating tip of a plant shoot The process of wood formation lignification is commonest in the Spermatophytes seed bearing plants and has evolved independently a number of times The roots may also lignify aiding in the role of supporting and anchoring tall plants and may be part of a descriptor of the plant s habit Plant habit can also refer to whether the plant possesses any specialised systems for the storage of carbohydrates or water allowing the plant to renew its growth after an unfavourable period Where the amount of water stored is relatively high the plant is referred to as a succulent Such specialised plant parts may arise from the stems or roots Examples include plants growing in unfavourable climates very dry climates where storage is intermittent depending on climatic conditions and those adapted to surviving fires and regrowing from the soil afterwards Some types of plant habit include Herbaceous plants also called herbs or forbs a plant whose structures above the surface of the soil vegetative or reproductive die back at the end of the annual growing season and never become woody While these structures are annual in nature the plant itself may be annual biannual or perennial Herbaceous plants that survive for more than one season possess underground storage organs and thus are referred to as geophytes Terms used in describing plant habit include nbsp An acaulescent species of Streptocarpus has only one leaf and appears to have no stemAcaulescent the leaves and inflorescence rise from the ground and appear to have no stem They are also known as rosette forms some of the many conditions that result from very short internodes i e close distances between nodes on the plant stem See also radical where leaves arise apparently without stems Acid plant plants with acid saps normally due to the production of ammonium salts malic and oxalic acid Actinomorphic parts of plants that are radially symmetrical in arrangement Arborescent growing into a tree like habit normally with a single woody stem Ascending growing uprightly in an upward direction Assurgent growth ascending Branching dividing into multiple smaller segments Caducous falling away early Caulescent with a well developed stem above ground Caulirosulate arranged in rose like clusters at the end of the stem to describe leaves or bracts Cespitose forming dense tufts normally applied to small plants typically growing into mats tufts or clumps Creeping growing along the ground and producing roots at intervals along the surface Deciduous falling away after its function is completed Decumbent growth starts off prostrate and the ends turn upright Deflexed bending downward Determinate growth Growing for a limited time floral formation and leaves see also Indeterminate Dimorphic of two different forms Ecad a plant assumed to be adapted to a specific habitat Ecotone the boundary that separates two plant communities generally of major rank trees in woods and grasses in savanna for example Ectogenesis variation in plants due to conditions outside of the plants Ectoparasite a parasitic plant that has most of its mass outside of the host the body and reproductive organs of the plant live outside of the host Epigeal living on the surface of the ground See also terms for seeds Epigean occurring on the ground Epigeic plants with stolons on the ground Epigeous on the ground Used for leaf fungus that live on the surface of the leaf Epiphloedal growing on the bark of trees Epiphloedic an organism that grows on the bark of trees Epiphyllous growing on the leaves For example Helwingia japonica has epiphyllous flowers ones that form on the leaves 5 Epiphyte growing on another organism but not parasitic Not growing on the ground Epiphytic having the nature of an epiphyte Equinoctial a plant that has flowers that open and close at definite times during the day Erect having an essentially upright vertical habit or position Escape a plant originally under cultivation that has become wild a garden plant growing in natural areas Evergreen remaining green in the winter or during the normal dormancy period for other plants Eupotamous living in rivers and streams Euryhaline normally living in salt water but tolerant of variable salinity Eurythermous tolerant of a wide range of temperatures Exclusive species confined to specific location Exotic not native to the area or region Exsiccatus a dried plant most often used for specimens in a herbarium Indeterminate growth Inflorescence and leaves growing for an indeterminate time until stopped by other factors such as frost see also Determinate Lax non upright growth not strictly upright or hangs down from the point of origin Lithophyte Growing on rocks Endolithic growing in crevices of rocks Epilithic growing on the surface of rocks Mallee a term applied to certain Australian species which grow with multiple stems springing from an underground lignotuber Parasitic using another plant as a source of nourishment Precocious flowering before the leaves emerge Procumbent growing prostrate or trailing but not rooting at the nodes Prostrate lying flat on the ground leaves stems or even flowers in some species Repent creeping Rosette cluster of leaves with very short internodes that are crowded together normally on the surface of the soil but sometimes higher on the stem Rostellate like a rosette cf rostellum Rosulate arranged into a rosette Runner an elongated slender branch that roots at the nodes or tip Stolon A branch that forms near the base of the plant grows horizontally and roots and produces new plants at the nodes or apex Stoloniferous plants producing stolons Semi erect Not growing perfectly straight Suffrutescent somewhat shrubby or shrubby at the base Upright Growing upward Virgate wand like slender erect growing stem with many leaves or very short branches Woody forming secondary growth laterally around the plant so as to form wood Duration edit Duration of individual plant lives are described using these terms Acme the time when the plant or population has its maximum vigor Annual plants that live reproduce and die in one growing season Biennial plants that need two growing seasons to complete their life cycle normally completing vegetative growth the first year and flowering the second year Herbs see herbaceous Herbaceous plants with shoot systems that die back to the ground each year both annual and non woody perennial plants Herbaceous perennial non woody plants that live for more than two years with the shoot system dying back to soil level each year Woody perennial true shrubs and trees and some vines with shoot systems that remain alive above the soil level from one year to the next Monocarpic plants that live for a number of years then after flowering and seed setting die Plant structures editIntroduction edit Life cycles nbsp Alternating generations Haploid gametophyte top diploid sporophyte bottom nbsp Bryophytes nbsp Pteridophyte nbsp Angiosperms Only the sporophyte is visible the gametophytes being the pollen and ovule Plant structures or organs fulfil specific functions and those functions determine the structures that perform them Among terrestrial land plants the vascular and non vascular plants Bryophytes evolved independently in terms of their adaptation to terrestrial life and are treated separately here see Bryophytes 6 Life cycle edit Common structural elements are present in the embryonic part of the life cycle which is the diploid multicellular phase The embryo develops into the sporophyte which at maturity produces haploid spores which germinate to produce the gametophyte the haploid multicellular phase The haploid gametophyte then produces gametes which may fuse to form a diploid zygote and finally an embryo This phenomenon of alternating diploid and haploid multicellular phases is common to the embryophytes land plants and is referred to as the alternation of generations A major difference between vascular and non vascular plants is that in the latter the haploid gametophyte is the more visible and longer lived stage In vascular plants the diploid sporophyte has evolved as the dominant and visible phase of the life cycle In seed plants and some other groups of vascular plants the gametophyte phases are strongly reduced in size and contained within the pollen and ovules The female gametophyte is entirely contained within the sporophyte s tissues while the male gametophyte in its pollen grain is released and transferred by wind or animal vectors to fertilize the ovules 1 Morphology edit Amongst the vascular plants the structures and functions of the Pteridophyta ferns which reproduce seedlessly are also sufficiently different to justify separate treatment as here see Pteridophytes The remainder of the vascular plant sections address the higher plants Spermatophytes or Seed Plants i e Gymnosperms and Angiosperms or flowering plants In the higher plants the terrestrial sporophyte has evolved specialised parts In essence they have a lower underground component and an upper aerial component The underground part develops roots that seek water and nourishment from the soil while the upper component or shoot grows toward the light and develops a plant stem leaves and specialised reproductive structures sporangia In angiosperms the sporangia are located in the stamen anthers microsporangia and ovules megasporangia The specialised sporangia bearing stem is the flower In angiosperms if the female sporangium is fertilised it becomes the fruit a mechanism for dispersing the seeds produced from the embryo 6 Vegetative structures edit Thus the terrestrial sporophyte has two growth centres the stem growing upwards while the roots grow downwards New growth occurs at the tips apices of both the shoot and roots where the undifferentiated cells of the meristem divide Branching occurs to form new apical meristems Growth of the stem is indeterminate in pattern not pre determined to stop at a particular point 1 The functions of the stem are to raise and support the leaves and reproductive organs above the level of the soil to facilitate absorption of light for photosynthesis gas exchange water exchange transpiration pollination and seed dispersal The stem also serves as a conduit from roots to overhead structures for water and other growth enhancing substances These conduits consist of specialised tissues known as vascular bundles which give the name vascular plants to the angiosperms The point of insertion on the stem of leaves or buds is a node and the space between two successive nodes an internode The leaves which emerge from the shoot are specialised structures that carry out photosynthesis and gas oxygen and carbon dioxide and water exchange They are sheathed by an outer layer or epidermis that is coated with a waxy waterproof protective layer which is punctuated by specialised pores known as stomata which regulate gas and water exchange The leaves also possess vascular bundles which are generally visible as veins whose patterns are called venation Leaves tend to have a shorter life span than the stems or branches that bear them and when they fall an area at the attachment zone called the abscission zone leaves a scar on the stem In the angle adaxial between the leaf and the stem is the axil Here can be found buds axillary buds which are miniature and often dormant branches with their own apical meristem They are often covered by leaves Floral structure edit Floral structure nbsp Location of main floral parts in angiosperms nbsp 1 Pedicel 2 Receptacle 3 Nectary 4 Sepal 5 Petal 6 Filament 7 Anther 8 Stigma 9 Style 10 Ovary 11 Ovule 12 Bract The flower which is one of the defining features of angiosperms is essentially a stem whose leaf primordia become specialised following which the apical meristem stops growing a determinate growth pattern in contrast to vegetative stems 1 6 The flower stem is known as a pedicel and those flowers with such a stem are called pedicellate while those without are called sessile 7 In the angiosperms the flowers are arranged on a flower stem as an inflorescence Just beneath subtended the flower there may be a modified and usually reduced leaf called a bract A secondary smaller bract is a bracteole bractlet prophyll prophyllum often on the side of the pedicel and generally paired A series of bracts subtending the calyx see below is an epicalyx Angiosperms are dealt with in more detail here these structures are very different in gymnosperms 7 In angiosperms the specialised leaves that play a part in reproduction are arranged around the stem in an ordered fashion from the base to the apex of the flower The floral parts are arranged at the end of a stem without any internodes The receptacle also called the floral axis or thalamus is generally very small Some flower parts are solitary while others may form a tight spiral or whorl around the flower stem First at the base are those non reproductive structures involved in protecting the flower when it is still a bud the sepals then are those parts that play a role in attracting pollinators and are typically coloured the petals which together with the sepals make up the perianth perigon perigonium If the perianth is differentiated the outer whorl of sepals forms the calyx and the inner whorl of petals the corolla If the perianth is not differentiated into sepals and petals they are collectively known as tepals In some flowers a tube or cup like hypanthium floral tube is formed above or around the ovary and bears the sepals petals and stamens There may also be a nectary producing nectar Nectaries may develop on or in the perianth receptacle androecium stamens or gynoecium In some flowers nectar may be produced on nectariferous disks Disks may arise from the receptacle and are doughnut or disk shaped They may also surround the stamens extrastaminal be at the stamen bases staminal or be inside the stamina intrastaminal 8 Reproductive structures edit Main article Plant reproductive morphology Finally the actual reproductive parts form the innermost layers of the flower These leaf primordia become specialised as sporophylls leaves that form areas called sporangia which produce spores and cavitate internally The sporangia on the sporophytes of pteridophytes are visible but those of gymnosperms and angiosperms are not In the angiosperms there are two types Some form male organs stamens the male sporangia microsporangia producing microspores Others form female organs carpels the female sporangia megasporangia producing a single large megaspore 8 These in turn produce the male gametophytes and female gametophytesThese two components are the androecium and gynoecium respectively The Androecium literally men s house is a collective term for the male organs stamens or microsporophylls While sometimes leaflike laminar more commonly they consist of a long thread like column the filament surmounted by a pollen bearing anther The anther usually consists of two fused thecae A theca is two microspoorangia The gynoecium women s house is the collective term for the female organs carpels A carpel is a modified megasporophyll consisting of two or more ovules which develop conduplicatively folded along the line The carpels may be single or collected together to form an ovary and contain the ovules Another term pistil refers to the ovary as its expanded base the style a column arising from the ovary and an expanded tip the stigma 8 Within the stamen the microsporangium forms grains of pollen surrounded by a protective microspore which form the male gametophyte Within the carpel the megasporangium form the ovules with its protective layers integument in the megaspore and the female gametophyte Unlike the male gametophyte which is transported in the pollen the female gametophyte remains within the ovule 8 Most flowers have both male and female organs and hence are considered bisexual perfect which is thought to be the ancestral state However others have either one or the other and are therefore unisexual or imperfect In which case they may be either male staminate or female pistillate Plants may bear either all bisexual flowers hermaphroditic both male and female flowers monoecious or only one sex dioecious in which case separate plants are either male or female flower bearing Where both bisexual and unisexual flowers exist on the same plant it is called polygamous Polygamous plants may have bisexual and staminate flowers andromonoecious bisexual and pistillate flowers gynomonoecious or both trimonoecious Other combinations include the presence of bisexual flowers on some individual plants and staminate on others androdioecious or bisexual and pistillate gynodioecious Finally trioecious plants have bisexual staminate or pistillate flowers on different individuals Arrangements other than hermaphroditic help to ensure outcrossing 9 Fertilisation and embryogenesis edit The development of the embryo and gametophytes is called embryology The study of pollens which persist in soil for many years is called palynology Reproduction occurs when male and female gametophytes interact This generally requires an external agent such as wind or insects to carry the pollen from the stamen to the vicinity of the ovule This process is called pollination In gymnosperms literally naked seed pollen comes into direct contact with the exposed ovule In angiosperms the ovule is enclosed in the carpel requiring a specialised structure the stigma to receive the pollen On the surface of the stigma the pollen germinates that is the male gametophyte penetrates the pollen wall into the stigma and a pollen tube an extension of the pollen grain extends towards the carpel carrying with it the sperm cells male gametes until they encounter the ovule where they gain access through a pore in the ovule s integument micropyle allowing fertilisation to occur Once the ovule has been fertilised a new sporophyte protected and nurtured by the female gametophyte develops and becomes an embryo When development stops the embryo becomes dormant as a seed Within the embryo are the primordial shoot and root In angiosperms as the seed develops after fertilisation so does the surrounding carpel its walls thickening or hardening developing colours or nutrients that attract animals or birds This new entity with its dormant seeds is the fruit whose functions are protecting the seed and dispersing it In some cases androecium and gynaecium may be fused The resulting structure is a gynandrium gynostegium gynostemium or column which is supported by an androgynosphore 8 Vegetative morphology edit Ptyxis the way in which an individual leaf is folded within an unopened bud Vernation the arrangement of leaves in an unopened bud Roots edit Plants with regard to identification and classification are not often characterized by their roots which are important in determining plant duration However in some groups including the grasses roots are important for proper identification Adventitious roots that form from other than the hypocotyl or from other roots Roots forming on the stem are adventitious Aerial roots growing in the air Root crown the place where the roots and stem meet which may or may not be clearly visible 10 Fibrous describes roots that are thread like and normally tough Fleshy describes roots that are relatively thick and soft normally made up of storage tissue Roots are typically long and thick but not thickly rounded in shape Haustorial specialized roots that invade other plants and absorb nutrients from those plants Lignotuber root tissue that allows plants to regenerate after fire or other damage Primary root that develop from the radicle of the embryo and is normally the first root to emerge from the seed as it germinates Root Hairs very small roots often one cell wide that do most of the water and nutrient absorption Secondary roots forming off of the primary root often called branch roots Taproot a primary root that more or less enlarges and grows downward into the soil Tuberous roots that are thick and soft with storage tissue and are typically thick and round in shape Root structure terms edit Epiblema Outermost epidermal layer of rootlets Normally 1 cell layer thick uniseriate Normally do not have a cuticle and permit water conduction Quiescent centre a small region inside the root s apical region that has a slower division rate Root Cap a cover or cap like structure that protects the tip of root Multiple root caps several layers of root caps on a single root apex seen in Pandanus sp Root Pocket a cap like structure on the root apex of some aquatic plants which unlike root caps doesn t reappear if removed somehow Root hair fine cellular appendages from cells of epiblema They are unicellular which means one root hair and corresponding cell of epiblema comprise only 1 cell By contrast stem and leaf hairs can be unicellular or multicellular Root hairs of older portions of roots are destroyed over time and only at a certain region near a growing apex called the root hair region are root hairs seen Although microscopic root hairs can be observed by the unaided eye in chili and Brassica seedlings Terms classifying roots and their modifications edit Tap Root System Storage roots Conical root Storage root that is broad at its base upper portion and gradually tapers to its apex lower portion e g Carrot Fusiform root Storage root that is swollen in the centre and tapers towards both apex and base e g radish Raphanus sativus Napiform root Root whose upper basal portion is heavily swollen but whose lower apical portion is narrow and tapering e g beet turnip Tuberous or tubercular tap root In its narrow sense a tap root that is thick and fleshy due to storage but that does not conform to the fusiform conical napiform shape Mirabilis jalapa In its broader sense a tap root that is thick and fleshy due to storage i e when tuberation take place in a tap root Pneumatophores respiratory roots Part of tap root system as respiratory roots found in many mangrove trees They arise from the thick mature branches of tap root systems and grow upwards The inner tissue of respiratory roots is full of hollow airy tube like dead cells giving it a spongy texture The outer surface of pneumatophores contains tiny pores or openings which are called pneumathodes e g Heritiera fomes Rhizophora mucronata Pneumatophores can be unbranched or sparingly branched Vivipary This is a feature of many mangrove trees where the seed germinates when the seed and fruit remain joined to the mother plant until the radicle and hypocotyl grow reach the ground and establish there 11 See also seeds and germination related sections and articles Adventitious root systems Fibrous root Originate from the base of a young stem and replace the primary root and also from the stem nodes and sometimes internodes and emanate as a parallel cluster or bunch from around the node The adventitious roots of monocots are usually of this type Replacement of a tap root system by a fibrous root is seen in onions tuberose Polyanthes tuberosa grasses etc Fibrous roots from normal stem nodes are seen in grasses like maize sugarcane bamboo etc Fibrous roots from nodes help in the survival of the plant and thus in vegetative reproduction when the plant s base is damaged or cut inside the stem axis Many dicots too release adventitious toots from stem nodes especially those that can regenerate vegetatively Hibiscus rosa sinensis Coleus etc and those that have a week stem with creeping habit Centella asiatica Bacopa monnieri etc These roots are called adventitious not fibrous roots Adventitious storage roots similar function as storage taproots Tuberous roots or root tubers Narrow sense those storage roots that do not conform to a specific shape such as fasciculated nodulose moniliform annulated etc e g sweet potato Ipomoea batatas whose edible part is a root of this type Broader sense adventitious roots swollen due to their storage function Fasciculated root When several tubercular roots grow as a parallel bunch or bundle Seen in Dahlia sp Ruellia tuberosa Asparagus racemosus etc Orchis maculata have a pair of bulbous storage roots Nodulose root Not to be confused with root nodules Storage pattern is a root axis swollen near the apical portion thus forming a bulbous or tuberous structure at or near the root tip It is commonly seen associated with a rhizomatous stem It is seen in Costus speciosus 12 Curcuma amada 12 13 Curcuma domestica Asparagus sprengeri Arrowroot Maranta etc 13 and some species of Calathea 13 Moniliform or Beaded root When more than one swelling or nodule like structures occur at intervals along the root axis Such an alternating swollen and constricted pattern is seen in Cyperus sp Dioscorea alata 12 Vitis trifolia Portulaca sp Basella sp Momordica sp and some grasses 13 Annulated root Like moniliform roots annulated roots also contain alternating swollen and constricted regions but here the length of constricted regions is so short that the root appears as a stack of discs It is seen in Cephalis ipecacuanha Rubiaceae Floating or Aquatic respiratory root The upright spongy structures helps the plant to float 12 13 Seen in Jussiaea repens Epiphytic root This type of root seen in epiphytic orchids The thick root hangs from the plant s base directly into air The root is covered with a special usually 4 to 5 cell layer thick 12 spongy tissue called Velamen which helps the plant to absorb moisture from the atmosphere Epiphytic orchid have another sort of root called clinging roots that help the orchid plant cling to the substratum host Since a similar function is seen in many other plants adventitious roots it is being mentioned in more general terms in the mechanical advancements section Parasitic root or Haustoria Assimilatory or Photosynthetic roots Mechanical advancements Prop roots In some dome shaped deliquescent trees from the mature horizontal boughs stem branches some quite thick millimeters to centimeters roots come down After growing and reaching the ground they establish more elaborate root branches as well as show massive secondary thickening Thus they start to resemble the main trunk Besides carrying the weight of horizontal boughs when the main trunk is destroyed due to ageing or accident the established prop roots support the remaining plant body thus helping in vegetative reproduction E g Ficus benghalensis The Great Banyan Tree at IBG Kolkata is an example how prop roots help in vegetative reproduction Stilt roots From upright erect trunks some hard thick almost straight roots come out obliquely and penetrate the ground Thus they act like a camera tripod They increase balance and support as well as when these roots penetrates the ground they increase soil grip Root Buttress or Plank Buttress or Buttress Root Climbing roots Clinging roots Contractile roots or Pull roots Haptera root like projections found in macroalgae or lichens that anchor the organism to a rocky substrate Protective functions Root thorns Reproductive roots These roots contain root buds and actively take part in shoot regeneration and thus in vegetative reproduction This is an unusual feature because roots normally do not contain buds Gallery Roots specialized for mechanical function nbsp Prop roots in Ficus benghalensis in Indian Botanic Garden nbsp Ficus benghalensis prop roots nbsp Stilt roots in Pandanus sp nbsp Stilt roots in Socratea exorrhiza palm nbsp Stilt roots in mangrove plants Stems edit nbsp Parts of plant stem nbsp Euonymus alata an example of alate stems nbsp Saraca cauliflora an example of cauliflora nbsp Sciadopitys verticillata an example of a verticillate plantAccessory buds an embryonic shoot occurring above or to the side of an axillary bud also known as supernumerary bud Acrocarpous produced at the end of a branch Acutangular a stem that has several longitudinally running ridges with sharp edges Adventitious buds a bud that arises at points on the plant other than at the stem apex or leaf axil Alate having wing like structures usually on the seeds or stems as in Euonymus alata Alternate buds are staggered on opposite sides of the branch Bark the outer layers of woody plants cork phloem and vascular cambium Branches Bud an immature stem tip typically an embryonic shoot either producing a stem leaves or flowers Bulb an underground stem normally with a short basal surface and with thick fleshy leaves Bundle scar a small mark on a leaf scar indicating a point where a vein from the leaf was once connected to the stem Caudex the hard base produced by herbaceous perennials which serves in overwintering the plant Caulescent with a distinctive stem Cauliflora with the flowers and fruit on the stem or trunk as in Saraca cauliflora Cladode a flattened stem that performs the function of a leaf an example is the pad of the opuntia cactus Cladophyll a flattened stem that is leaf like and green used for photosynthesis Normally such plants have no or greatly reduced leaves Climbing typically long stems that cling to other objects Corm a compact upright orientated stem that is bulb like with hard or fleshy texture and normally covered by papery thin dry leaves Most often produced under the soil surface Cuticle a waterproof waxy membrane covering leaves and primary shoots Decumbent stems that lie on the ground but whose ends turn upward Dormant a state of no or reduced growth Earlywood the portion of the annual growth ring that is formed early in the season Epidermis a layer of cells that cover all primary tissue separating it from the outside environment Erect growing upright Flower bud a bud from which only flowers develop Fruticose woody stemmed with a shrub like habit Branching near the soil with woody based stems Guard cell one of the paired epidermal cells that control the opening and closing of a stoma in plant tissue Heartwood the older nonliving central wood of a tree or woody plant usually darker and harder than the younger sapwood Also called duramen Herbaceous non woody and dying to the ground at the end of the growing season Annual plants die while perennials regrow from parts on the soil surface or below ground the next growing season Internode space between nodes Latent buds axillary buds whose development is inhibited sometimes for many years due to the influence of apical and other buds Also known as dormant buds Lateral buds a bud located on the side of the stem usually in a leaf axil Late wood the portion of the annual ring that is formed after the formation of earlywood has ceased Leaf the photosynthetic organ of a plant that is attached to a stem generally at specific intervals Leaf axils the space created between a leaf and its branch This is especially pronounced on monocots like the bromeliads Leaf buds buds that produces leafy shoots Leaf scar the mark left on a branch from the previous location of a bud or leaf Lenticel One of the small corky pores or narrow lines on the surface of the stems of woody plants that allow for the interchange of gases between the interior tissue and the surrounding air Node where leaves and buds are attached to the stem Opposite buds that are arranged in pairs on opposite sides of the branch Orthotropic growth growth in the vertical direction Pith the spongy tissue at the center of a stem Chambered pith a form of pith in which the parenchyma collapses or is torn during development leaving the sclerenchyma plates to alternate with hollow zones Diaphragmed pith pith in which plates or nests of sclerenchyma may be interspersed with the parenchyma Plagiotropic growth growth inclined away from the vertical inclined towards the horizontal Pore Prickle an extension of the cortex and epidermis that ends with a sharp point Prostrate growing flat on the soil surface Rhizome a horizontally orientated prostrate stem with reduced scale like leaves normally growing under ground but also on the soil surface Also produced by some species that grow in trees or water Rootstock the underground part of a plant normally referring to a caudex or rhizome Runner an above ground stem usually rooting and producing new plants at the nodes Sapwood Scandent a stem that climbs Spine an adapted leaf that is usually hard and sharp and is used for protection and occasionally shading of the plant Stem vascular tissue that provides support for the plant Stolon a horizontally growing stem similar to a rhizome produced near the base of the plant They spread out above or along the soil surface Roots and new plants develop at the nodes or ends Stoloniferous a plant that produces stolons Stoma a small pore on the surface of the leaves used for gas exchange with the environment while preventing water loss Suberose having a corky texture Tendril a thigmotropic organ which attaches a climbing plant to a support a portion of a stem or leaf modified to serve as a holdfast for other objects Terminal at the end of a stalk or stem Terminal scale bud scar Thorn Tiller a shoot of a grass plant Tuber an enlarged stem or root that stores nutrients Turgid swollen Twigs Vascular bundles a strand of woody fibers and associated tissues Verticillate Verticil Verticillatus leaves or flowers arranged in whorls said of a collection of three or more leaves or flowers that arise from the same point Buds edit Accessory bud an embryonic shoot occurring above or to the side of an axillary bud also known as supernumerary bud Adventitious bud a bud that arises at a point on the plant other than at the stem apex or a leaf axil Axillary an embryonic shoot which lies at the junction of the stem and petiole of a plant Dormant see Latent bud Epicormic vegetative buds that lie dormant beneath the bark shooting after crown disturbance 14 Flower bud Lateral Latent bud an axillary bud whose development is inhibited sometimes for many years due to the influence of apical and other buds Also known as a dormant bud Leaf bud a bud that produces a leafy shoot Mixed buds that have both embryonic flowers and leaves Naked Pseudoterminal Reproductive buds with embryonic flowers Scaly Terminal bud at the tip or end of the stem Vegetative buds containing embryonic leaves Leaves edit See also Glossary of leaf morphology nbsp Leaf morphology Shape margin and venation Leaf Parts A complete leaf is composed of a blade petiole and stipules but in many plants one or more might be lacking or highly modified Blade see lamina Lamina the flat and laterally expanded portion of a leaf blade Leaflet a separate blade among others of a compound leaf Ligule a projection from the top of the sheath on the adaxial side of the sheath blade joint in grasses Midrib the central vein of the leaf blade Midvein the central vein of a leaflet Petiole a leaf stalk supporting a blade and attaching to a stem at a node Petiolule the leaf stalk of a leaflet Pulvinus the swollen base of a petiole or petiolule usually involved in leaf movements and leaf orientation Rachilla a secondary axis of a multiply compound leaf Rachis main axis of a pinnately compound leaf Sheath the proximal portion of a grass leaf usually surrounding the stem Stipels paired scales spines glands or blade like structures at the base of a petiolule Stipules paired scales spines glands or blade like structures at the base of a petiole Stipuloid resembling stipules Duration of leaves Deciduous leaves are shed after the growing season Evergreen leaves are retained throughout the year sometimes for several years Fugacious lasting for a short time soon falling away from the parent plant Marcescent dead leaves calyx or petals are persistent and retained Persistent see Marcescence Venation Acrodromous the veins run parallel to the leaf edge and fuse at the leaf tip Actinodromous the main veins of a leaf radiate from the tip of the petiole Brochidodromous the veins turn away from the leaf edge to join the next higher vein Campylodromous secondary veins diverge at the base of the lamina and rejoin at the tip Craspedodromous secondary veins run straight to the leaf edge and end there Furcate forked dividing into two divergent branches Reticulate veins interconnected to form a network Net veined Vein the externally visible vascular bundles found on leaves petals and other parts Veinlet a small vein Leaf Arrangement or Phyllotaxy Whorl three or more leaves or branches or pedicels arising from the same node Leaf Type Abruptly pinnate a compound leaf without a terminal leaflet Leaf Blade Shape Main article Leaf shape Acicular acicularis slender and pointed needle like Acuminate acuminata tapering to a long point Aristate aristata ending in a stiff bristle like point Bipinnate bipinnata each leaflet also pinnate Cordate cordata heart shaped stem attaches to cleft Cuneate cuneata triangular stem attaches to point Deltoid deltoidea triangular stem attaches to side Digitate digitata divided into finger like lobes Elliptic elliptica oval with a short or no point Falcate falcata sickle shaped Flabellate flabellata semi circular or fan like Hastate hastata shaped like a spear point with flaring pointed lobes at the base Lance shaped lanceolate lanceolata long wider in the middle Linear linearis long and very narrow Lobed lobata with several points Obcordate obcordata heart shaped stem attaches to tapering point Oblanceolate oblanceolata top wider than bottom Oblong oblongus having an elongated form with slightly parallel sides Obovate obovata teardrop shaped stem attaches to tapering point Obtuse obtusus with a blunt tip Orbicular orbicularis circular Ovate ovata Oval egg shaped with a tapering point Palmate palmata divided into many lobes Pedate pedata palmate with cleft lobes Peltate peltata rounded stem underneath Perfoliate perfoliata stem through the leaves Pinnate pinnata two rows of leaflets odd pinnate pinnate with a terminal leaflet paripinnate even pinnate pinnate lacking a terminal leaflet Pinnatisect pinnatifida cut but not to the midrib it would be pinnate then Reniform reniformis kidney shaped Rhomboid rhomboidalis diamond shaped Round rotundifolia circular Sagittate sagittata arrowhead shaped Spatulate spathulate spathulata spoon shaped Spear shaped hastata pointed with barbs Subulate subulata awl shaped with a tapering point Sword shaped ensiformis long thin pointed Trifoliate ternate or trifoliolate trifoliata divided into three leaflets Tripinnate tripinnata pinnately compound in which each leaflet is itself bipinnate Truncate truncata with a squared off end Unifoliate unifoliata with a single leaf Leaf Base Shape Semiamplexicaul the leaf base wraps around the stem but not completely Leaf Blade Apex Acuminate narrowing to a point a term used for other structures too Acute with a sharp rather abrupt ending point Acutifolius with acute leaves Attenuate tapering gradually to a narrow end Leaf Blade Margins Crenulate with shallow small rounded teeth Epidermis and periderm texture edit Acanceous prickly Acantha a prickle or spine Acanthocarpus fruits are spiny Acanthocladous branches are spiny Aculeate having a covering of prickles or needle like growth Aculeolate having spine like processes Aden a gland Adenoid gland like Adenophore a stalk that supports a gland Adenophyllous leaves with glands Arachnoid having entangled hairs that resemble cobwebs Bloom waxy coating that covers some plants Canescent with gray pubescence Ciliate with a fringe of marginal hairs Coriaceouse with a tough or leathery texture Fimbriate finely cut into fringes the edge of a frilly petal or leaf Floccose Glabrate Glabrous smooth without any pubescences at all Glandular Glandular punctate covered across the surface with glands Hirsute with long shaggy hairs often stiff or bristly to the touch Lanate with thick wool like hairs Verrucose with a warty surface having low rounded bumps Villose covered with fine long hairs that are not matted Villosity villous indument Floral morphology edit Accrescent growing larger after anthesis normally referring to the calyx Anthesis the period when the flower is fully open and functional ending when the stigma or stamens wither Basic flower parts edit Androecium edit Androecium the stamens collectively Basifixed attached by the base Connective the part of the stamen joining the anther cells Diadelphous united by filaments to form two groups Didynamous having four stamens in two pairs of unequal length Epipetalous borne on the corolla often used in reference to stamens attached to the corolla Exserted sticking out past the corolla the stamens protrude past the margin of the corolla lip Extrose opening towards the outside of the flower Gynandrium combined male and female structure Gynostegium adnation of stamens and the style and stigma Orchidaceae Included Introrse opening on the inside of the corolla the stamens are contained within the margins of the petals Monodelphous stamen filaments united as a tube Poricidal anthers opening through terminal pores Staminode a sterile stamen Staminodial 1 concerning a sterile stamen 2 flowers with sterile stamens Synandrous anthers are connected Araceae Syngenesious anthers are united as a tube the filaments are free Asteraceae Tetradynamous having six stamens four of which are longer than the others Translator a structure uniting the pollinia in Asclepiadaceae and Orchidaceae Trinucleate pollen containing three nuclei when shed Valvular anthers opening through valves or small flaps e g Berberis Versatile anthers pivoting freely on the filament Pollen Stamen Anther the distal end of the stamen where pollen is produced normally composed of two parts called anther sacs and pollen sacs thecae Filament the stalk of a stamen Gynoecium edit Main article Gynoecium Style position nbsp Terminal apical nbsp Lateral nbsp Gynobasic Gynoecium the whorl of carpels may comprise one syncarpous or more apocarpous pistils each pistil consisting of an ovary style and stigma Apocarpus the gynoecium consists of more than one pistil Cell Compound pistil Funicle the stalk that connects the ovule to the placenta Funiculus Loculus the cavities located within a carpel ovary or anther Locule multicarpellate Placenta Placentation Axile Basal Free central Pariental Septum Simple pistil Syncarpous the gynoecium consists of one pistil Unicarpellate Stigma Sessile absent style Style position is relative to the body of the ovary 15 Terminal or apical arising at the apex of the ovary commonest Subapical arising from the side of the ovary just below the apex Lateral arising from the side of the ovary lower than subapical Gynobasic arising from the base of the ovary Ovary Ovules Pistil Other edit nbsp Bracts Taraxacum officinale nbsp BractsAcephalous without a head used to describe a flower style without a well developed stigma Bract the leaf or scale like appendages that are located just below a flower a flower stalk or an inflorescence they usually are reduced in size and sometimes showily or brightly colored Calyx the whorl of sepals at the base of a flower the outer whorl of the perianth Carpel the ovule producing reproductive organ of a flower consisting of the stigma style and ovary Claw a noticeably narrowed or attenuated organ base typically a petal e g Viola Connate when the same parts of a flower are fused to each other petals in a gamopetalous flower e g Petunia Corolla the whorl of petals of a flower Corona an additional structure between the petals and the stamens Disk an enlargement or outgrowth from the receptacle of the flower located at the center of the flowers of various plants The term is also used for the central area of the head in composites where tubular flowers are attached Epicalyx a series of bracts below the calyx Floral axis Floral envelope the perianth 16 Flower Fruit a structure containing all the seeds produced by a single flower Hypanthium Nectar a fluid produced by nectaries that is high in sugar content used to attract pollinators Nectary a gland that secrets nectar most often found in flowers but also produced on other parts of plants Nectar disk when the floral disk contains nectar secreting glands often modified as its main function in some flowers Pedicel the stem or stalk that holds a single flower in an inflorescence Peduncle the part of a stem that bears the entire inflorescence normally having no leaves or the leaves having been reduced to bracts When the flower is solitary it is the stem or stalk holding the flower Peduncular referring to or having a peduncle Pedunculate having a peduncle Perianth Achlamydeous without a perianth Petal Rachis Receptacle the end of the pedicel that joins to the flower were the different parts of the flower are joined together also called the torus In Asteraceae the top of the pedicel upon which the flowers are joined Seed Sepal Antipetalous when the stamens number the same as and are arranged opposite the corolla segments e g Primula Antisepalouse when the stamens number the same as and are arranged opposite the calyx segments Connective the part of the stamen joining the anther cells Tepal Inflorescences edit nbsp Pedicellate attachment nbsp Sessile attachment nbsp Verticillaster Lamium albumCapitulum the flowers are arranged into a head composed of many separate unstalked flowers the single flowers being packed close together and called florets which is the typical arrangement in Asteraceae Compound Umbel an umbel where each stalk of the main umbel produces another smaller umbel of flowers Corymb a grouping of flowers where all the flowers are at the same level the flower stalks of different lengths forming a flat topped flower cluster Cyme is a cluster of flowers where the end of each growing point produces a flower New growth comes from side shoots and the oldest and first flowers to bloom are at the top Single one flower per stem or flowers greatly spread apart so as to appear to not arise from the same branch Spike flowers arising from the main stem are without individual flower stalks The flowers attach directly to the stem Solitary same as single with one flower per stem Raceme a flower spike with flowers that have stalks of equal length The stem tip continues to grow and produces more flowers with the bottom flowers opening first and blooming progressing up the stem Panicle a raceme with branches each branch having a smaller raceme of flowers The terminal bud of each branch continues to grow producing more side shoots and flowers Pedicel stem holding a one flower in an inflorescence Peduncle stem holding an inflorescence or a single flower Umbel where the flower head has all flower stalks rising from the same point and of equal length the flower head seeming hemispherical like an open umbrella Verticillaster a whorled collection of flowers around a stem the flowers produced in rings at intervals up the stem As the stem tip continues to grow more whorls of flowers are produced Typical in Lamiaceae Verticil flowers arranged in whorls at the nodes Insertion of floral parts edit Epigynous flowers are present above the ovary Half inferior Hypogynous flowers are present below the ovary Inferior Insertion Stamens Ovary Perigynous Superior Specialized terms edit Wing a lateral petal of the flowers of species in Fabaceae and Polygalaceae Valvate meeting along the margins but not overlapping Union of flower parts edit Adelphous androecium with the stamen filaments partly or completely fused together Flower sexuality and presence of floral parts edit Achlamydeous a flower without a perianth Apetalous a flower without petals Accrescent said of the calyx when it is persistent and enlarges as the fruit grows and ripens sometimes applied to other structures Androgynous used for the inflorescence of Carex when a spike has both staminate and pistillate flowers the pistillate flowers are normally at the base of the spike Bisexual Complete of a flower having all the possible parts represented sepals petals stamens and pistils 17 Gynodioecy describes a plant species or population that has some plants that are female and some plants that are hermaphrodites Homogamous when the flower s anthers and stigma are ripe at the same time Imperfect of a flower or inflorescence being unisexual and having organs of only a single sex 17 Naked uncovered stripped of leaves or lacking other covering such as sepals or petals 17 Perfect possessing both stamens and ovary male and female parts Flower symmetry edit Actinomorphic having a radial symmetry as in regular flowers Actinomorphy when the flower parts are arranged with radial symmetry Radial symmetric when bisected through any angle circular Unisexual Zygomorphic one axis of symmetry running down the middle of the flower so the right and left halves reflect each other Zygomorphy the type of symmetry that most irregular flowers have where the upper half of the flower is unlike the lower half but the left and right halves tend to be mirror images of each other Pollination and fertilization edit Allogamy cross pollination when one plant pollinates another plant Anemophilous wind pollinated Autogamy self pollination when the flowers of the same plant pollinate each other including a flower pollinating itself Cantharophilous beetle pollinated Chiropterophilous bat pollinated Cleistogamous self pollination of a flower that does not open Dichogamy flowers that cannot pollinate themselves because pollen is produced at a time when the stigmas are not receptive to pollen Entomophilous insect pollinated Hydrophilous water pollinated pollen is moved in water from one flower to the next Malacophilous pollinated by snails and slugs Ornithophilous pollinated by birds Pollination the movement of pollen from the anther to the stigma Protandrous when pollen is produced and shed before the carpels are mature Progynous when the carpels mature before the stamens produce pollen Embryo development edit Antipodal cell Chalazal Coleoptile protective sheath on SAM Coleorhiza protecting layer of a seed Cotyledon Seed leaves first leaves sprouted in a dicot where there are two cotyledons in a seedling Diploid Double fertilization Embryo Embryo sac Endosperm Filiform apparatus Germination Plumule the part of an embryo that give rise to the shoot system of a plant Polar nuclei Radicle initial root determined cells Root apical meristem Scutellum Synergid Tegmen Testa the seed coat develops from the integuments after fertilization 16 Sarcotesta a fleshy seed coat Sclerotesta a hard seed coat Triploid Xenia the effect of pollen on seeds and fruit Zygote Fruits and seeds edit Fruits are the mature ovary of seed bearing plants and they include the contents of the ovary which can be floral parts like the receptacle involucre calyx and others that are fused to it Fruits are often used to identify plant taxa help to place the species in the correct family or differentiate different groups within the same family Terms for fruits edit Accessory structures parts of fruits that do not form from the ovary Beak normally the slender elongated end of a fruit typically a persistent style base Circumscissile a type of fruit that dehisces where the top of the fruit falls away like a lid or covering Dehiscent a fruit that opens and releases its contents normally in a regular and distinctive fashion Endocarp includes the wall of the seed chamber the inner part of the pericarp Pyrena the hardened endocarp of a drupe Exocarp the pericarp s outer part Fleshy soft and juicy Indehiscent fruits that do not have specialized structures for opening and releasing the seeds they remain closed after the seeds ripen and are opened by animals weathering fire or other external means Mesocarp the middle layer of the pericarp Pericarp the body of the fruit from its outside surface to the chamber where the seeds are including the outside skin of the fruit and the inside lining of the seed chamber Suture the seam along which the fruit opens normally in most fruits it is where the carpel or carpels are fused together Valve one of the segments of the capsule Fruit types edit nbsp Scheme of a drupe nbsp Scheme of a pomeFruits are divided into different types depending on how they form where or how they open and what parts they are composed of Achaenocarp see achene Achene dry indehiscent fruit that have one seed and are formed from a single carpel the seed is distinct from the fruit wall Caryopsis the pericarp and seed are fused together the fruit of many grasses 18 Drupe outer fleshy part that surrounds a shell with a seed inside Nut a fruit formed from a pistil with multiple carpels and having a woody covering e g hickory pecan and oak Nutlet a small nut Pod seedpod a dry dehiscent fruit containing many seeds 16 Examples include follicles dehiscent capsules and many but not all legumes Pome accessory fruit from one or more carpels specific to the apple and some related genera in the family Rosaceae Samara winged achene e g maples Utricle a small inflated fruit with one seed that has thin walls Fruits are usually one seeded as are some species of amaranth Seedless reproduction edit Pteridophytes edit Acrostichoid sorus having sori covering the entire underside e g Acrostichum Annulus outer part of the sporangium Elater Indusium Marginal Peltate Reniform Sporophyll Sorus Sori a group or cluster of sporangia borne abaxially on a fern frond 17 Strobilus Submarginal Bryophytes edit Gametangium edit Acrandrous used for moss species that have antheridia at the top of the stem Acrocarpous in mosses bearing the sporophyte at the axis of the main shoot Acrogynous in liverworts the female sex organs terminate the main shoot Anacrogynous in liverworts female sex organs are produced by a lateral cell and thus the growth of the main shoot is indeterminate Androcyte Androecium collective term for all the male parts of an organism Androgynous monoicous and producing both types of sex organs together Antheridiophore a specialised branch that bears the antheridia in the Marchantiales Antherozoid Archegoniophore a specialised branch that bears the archaegonia in the Marchantiales Autoicous produces male and female sex organs on the same plant but on separate inflorescences Bract leaf is present below the flower Cladautoicous male and female inflorescences are on separate branches of the same plant Dioicous having two forms of gametophyte one form bearing antheridia and one form bearing archegonia Gonioautoicous male is bud like in the axil of a female branch Incubous describing the arrangement of leaves of a liverwort contrast with succubous Inflorescence cluster of flower Involucre a tube of thallus tissue that protects the archegonia Monoicous having a single form of gametophyte bearing both antheridia and archegonia either together or on separate branches Paraphyses sterile hairs surrounding the archegonia and antheridia Perianth a protective tube that surrounds the archegonia characterising the Jungermannialean liverworts Perichaetium the cluster of leaves with the enclosed female sex organs Perigonium the cluster of leaves with the enclosed male sex organs Pseudautoicous dwarf male plants growing on living leaves of female plants Pseudomonoicous Pseudoperianth an involucre that resembles a perianth but is made of thallus tissue and usually forms after the sporophyte develops Rhizautoicous male inflorescence attached to the female stem by rhizoids Succubous describing the arrangement of leaves of a liverwort contrast with incubous Synoicous male and female sex organs are on the same gametophyte but are not clustered Sporangium edit nbsp Mouth of a sporophyte showing the teeth of the peristome It is diplolepidous with a closed endostome and opened exostome nbsp Dehisced capsule of a sporophyte with the operculum remaining attached via the columellaAmphithecium the external cell layers of the developing sporangium of a bryophyte Note this term is also used in the mycology of lichens Anisosporous anisospore production is a rare condition in dioecious bryophytes meiosis produces two small spores that develop into male gametophytes and two larger spores that develop into female gametophytes contrast Isosporous Annulus in mosses cells with thick walls along the rim of the sporangium and where the peristome teeth are attached Apophysis a swelling typically referring to the base of the sporangium Archesporium cells of the sporangium from which spores develop Arthrodontous a form of peristome teeth which are unequally thickened tapering to a point Articulate generally meaning jointed Astomous having a capsule which bursts irregularly lacking a stoma Calyptra an enlarged archegonial venter that protects the capsule containing the embryonic sporophyte Capsule generally synonymous with the sporangium it specifically refers to the structure which contains the spores Sometimes referred to as an urn Cleistocarpous having a capsule which lacks an operculum often closed Columella an axis of sterile tissue which passes through the center of the spore case of mosses Dehisce meaning to split along a natural line refers to the split in the capsule where the operculum detaches Diplolepidous a type of peristome found in Bryidae in which there are two rings of teeth the inner endostome and outer exostome Divisural line Elater structures derived from the sporangium of liverworts that aid in spore dispersal Endostome The inner ring of peristome teeth in diplolepidous peristomes Endothecium the internal cell layers of the developing sporangium of a bryophyte Epiphragm a circular membrane connected to the tips of peristome teeth in some types of sporangia partially closing the capsule opening Exostome the outer ring of peristome teeth in diplolepidous peristomes Exothecium the outermost layer of the amphithecium the epidermis of the capsule wall Foot the basal connection between the sporophyte and gametophyte Gymnostomous lacking a peristome Haplolepidous having a peristome with one row of arthrodontous teeth Hypophysis a swelling typically referring to the base of the sporangium Immersed meaning submerged or below the surface Indehiscent remaining closed at maturity spores are dispersed as the capsule bursts rather than through the stoma Inoperculate lacking an operculum Isosporous unlike anisosporous species whether monoecious or dioecious all spores are the same size Mother cells cells which produce spores Nematodontous a form of peristome teeth which are equally thickened Nurse cells Sterile mother cells which nourish developing spores Operculate referring to the operculum Operculum the lid of the sporangia At maturity it falls off and the stoma and peristome are revealed allowing for spore dispersal Peristome the tooth like structure surrounding the stoma the opening into the capsule Pseudoelater structures derived from the sporangium of hornworts that aid in spore dispersal Seta the area of the sporophyte between the capsule and foot base Stegocarpous referring to a capsule with a differentiated and dehiscent operculum Stoma the mouth of the sporangia from which spores are dispersed when the sporangia is mature Tapetum tissue which nourishes spores Trabecula a length of sterile tissue which divides the capsule Urn synonymous with the capsule Valve each half of a sporangium which is divided See also editGlossary of botanical terms Glossary of leaf shapesReferences edit a b c d Rudall 2007 a b Radford et al 1974 a b Bell 1991 Judd et al 2007 Chapter 4 Structural and Biochemical Characters Dickinson 1999 a b c Simpson 2011 Flowers p 364 a b Simpson 2011 Flower parts p 364 a b c d e Simpson 2011 Flower parts p 365 Simpson 2011 Flower sex and plant sex p 365 FEIS 2015 College Botany VOL 1 By HC Gangulee KS Das CT Dutta revised by S Sen published by New Central Book Agency Kolkata a b c d e A textbook of BOTANY Vol 2 by Bhattacharya Hait and Ghosh NCBA Kolkata a b c d e BOTANY For Degree Students 6th edition by AC Datta Revised by TC Datta Oxford University Press Slee et al 2006 Simpson 2011 Style position p 378 a b c Hickey amp King 2000 a b c d Hart 2011 Wickens 2001 Cereals p 155 Bibliography editGeneral edit Wickens G E 2001 Economic Botany Principles And Practices Dordrecht Kluwer ISBN 978 1 4020 2228 9 Retrieved 19 January 2015 Systematics edit Radford A E Dickinson W C Massey J R Bell C R 1974 Vascular Plant Systematics New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 045309 1 Jones Samuel B 1986 Plant Systematics McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 032796 2 Simpson Michael G 2011 Plant Systematics Academic Press ISBN 978 0 08 051404 8 Glossary p 547 Singh Gurcharan 2004 Plant Systematics An Integrated Approach 3 ed Science Publishers ISBN 978 1 57808 351 0 Retrieved 23 January 2014 Judd Walter S Campbell Christopher S Kellogg Elizabeth A Stevens Peter F Donoghue Michael J 2007 Plant systematics a phylogenetic approach 1st ed 1999 2nd 2002 3 ed Sinauer Associates ISBN 978 0 87893 407 2 Retrieved 29 January 2014 Anatomy and morphology edit Bell A D 1991 Plant Form an Illustrated Guide to Flowering Plant Morphology Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854279 7 Retrieved 11 January 2015 Weberling Focko 1992 Morphology of Flowers and Inflorescences trans Richard J Pankhurst CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 43832 2 Retrieved 8 February 2014 Rudall Paula J 2007 Anatomy of flowering plants an introduction to structure and development 3 ed Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 978 0 521 69245 8 Retrieved 18 January 2015 also available here Dickinson Tim 1999 Comparative morphology heterotopy and cruddophytes Dickinson Lab Botany Department University of Toronto Retrieved 19 January 2015 Gonzalez A M Arbo M M 2016 Botanica Morfologica Morfologia de Plantas Vasculares in Spanish Corrientes Argentina Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias Universidad Nacional del Nordeste Retrieved 22 June 2016 Fruit Anatomy Department of Plant Sciences College of Agricultural amp Environmental Sciences UC Davis 2016 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Glossaries edit Chiang Fernando Mario Sousa S Mario Sousa P Glosario Ingles Espanol Espanol Ingles para Flora Mesoamericana Missouri Botanical Gardens Retrieved 11 January 2015 Fire Effects Information System Glossary Fire Effects Information System FEIS USDA Forest Service 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2015 Slee AV Brooker MIH Duffy SM West JG 2006 Glossary Euclid Eucalypts of Australia Victoria Australia CSIRO Retrieved 19 January 2015 Hickey Michael King Clive 2000 The Cambridge Illustrated Glossary of Botanical Terms Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79401 5 Retrieved 19 January 2015 Dictionaries edit Font Quer P 1953 Diccionario de Botanica Ed Labor Barcelona 1 Hart G T 2011 Plants in literature and life a wide ranging dictionary of botanical terms Victoria BC Friesen Press ISBN 978 1 77067 441 7 Archived from the original on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 18 January 2015 Usher George 1996 The Wordsworth Dictionary of Botany Ware Hertfordshire Wordsworth Reference ISBN 978 1 85326 374 3 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Botanical diagrams Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glossary of plant morphology amp oldid 1164625303 Pollination and fertilization, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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