Botany: Chapter Goals
Botany: Chapter Goals
CHAPTER 4
Botany
The majority of the text for this chapter is adapted from lecture notes for
a University of Illinois course, Systematics of Plants, taught by Kenneth
R. Robertson and Stephen R. Downie, and from the booklet Observing,
Photographing and Collecting Plants written by Robertson. Information
on plant growth and development is adapted from University of Illinois
Extensions Master Gardener manual. Additional editing and text were
contributed by Sandra L. Mason.
Chapter Goals
After completing this chapter, volunteers should be able to:
r Describe the basic characteristics of a plant.
r Illustrate the correct way to designate scientific names.
r Identify and explain functions of major plant parts: roots,
stems, leaves, and flowers.
r Become familiar with a variety of leaf, flower, and fruit
types to assist in identifying plants.
r Successfully use a dichotomous key.
r Describe plant processes: photosynthesis, transpiration,
and respiration.
r Understand pollination and become familiar with different
pollination mechanisms and methods of seed dispersal.
r Describe seed germination.
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BOTANY
Botany is the study of plants. What is a plant? The answer is not as
simple as you might think.
Most familiar plants:
l Are green, contain chlorophyll, and manufacture their
food through the process of photosynthesis.
l Are immobile and rooted to the ground.
l Have neither a nervous system nor an excretory system.
l Have a cell wall composed largely of cellulose.
l Can continue to grow almost indefinitely by cell division.
However, some plants, including dodder, Indian pipes, beech drops,
and cancer root, lack chlorophyll and parasitize other plants. Other
plants, such as Venus flytrap and pitcher plants, trap and digest
insects. These are examples of specialized flowering plants.
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l Food
l Fiber/Fabrication
l Fuel
l Pharmaceuticals
l Fermentation
l Flowers/Forests/Fancification
l Fragrance
Food We obviously eat plants but the animals we may also
eat rely on plants for their food. Plants also make our food taste
better. What would our food taste like without spices such as pepper,
garlic, nutmeg, mustard, cinnamon, parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme,
vanilla, cocoa, and many others, all of which are plant products?
How many of us can do without sugar from sugar cane and sugar
beets, coffee or chocolate? For centuries people have appreciated
the development of beer, bread, wine and cheese with the help of
plants.
Fiber and fabrication Before the development of synthetic
products such as nylon, orlon, and plastics, people were dependent
upon plants for fibers and building materials. Wood products
were, and still are, a major source of construction materials.
Nearly all of the written and printed matter produced through
history has depended on the use of paper products derived from plant
fibers or wood. Fibers from the cotton, flax, and hemp plants and
wool from animals grazing on plants were the major textiles used
for cloth. Even synthetics are in most cases plant products since
most are made from petroleum or coal, which are remnants of plants
from millions of years ago. Before synthetic rubber was developed
during World War II, the United States and the world rolled on tires
made of latex from the sap of the rubber tree. Latex is still widely
used for surgical tubing and many other products that require its
unique properties.
Fuel Wood was once an important fuel, and still is in some parts
of the world. All fossil fuels (coal, gas and petroleum) are the product
of photosynthesis that took place several hundred million years ago.
The problem with using fossil fuels today is that this releases carbon
back into the atmosphere that has been stored as organic compounds
all this time. Plants are often mentioned in long-range plans to help
mitigate the energy crisis because they are a renewable resource,
unlike the fossil fuels. Biofuels and biodiesels from a variety of
plant sources such as soybeans, grains, vegetable oil, sugar cane,
and grasses may prove to be important alternatives to petroleum
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products.
PharmaceuticalsSome plant products such as alcohol (produced
by fermentation of sugar), tobacco, and drugs like heroin from the
poppy, cocaine from coca and marijuana from the hemp plant have
often been put to less than desirable uses by people. Many other drugs
derived from plants are widely used in medicine. A good example is
digitalis from the foxglove plant, often prescribed for patients with
heart ailments. Plants with medicinal properties have been consumed
by people for centuries.
Plants provide beauty, shade from summer sun, wind protection,
animal habitat and lovely fragrance. Stop and look around you at
all the things that make up your everyday world. How many have
been derived from plants or plant products? How desirable would
the world be without trees, shrubs, flowers, and grass that color and
soften our world and ease the tensions of everyday life? Plants are
worth knowing and appreciating for they are indispensable to us in
every way. Although people have reached the moon, they have not
yet found a substitute for a living plant.
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Angiosperms
The angiosperms or flowering plants produce flowers and seeds, the
latter developing within fruits. Nearly all crop, food, and ornamental
plants are angiosperms. There are two major groups of flowering
plants, primarily distinguished by the number of seed leaves
(cotyledons). Here are their characteristics:
Monocots
Dicots
Figure 1
Gymnosperms
The gymnosperms or conifers produce naked seeds that are not
enclosed by fruits, but develop on the surface of cone scales. They
are woody trees and shrubs, and many species produce aromatic
oils and resins, which give their leaves and wood pungent odors.
The leaves of most conifers are evergreen, remaining on the plant
during winter, but those of a few species, such as bald cypress,
tamarack and larch, are deciduous, dropping their leaves in the fall.
Most gymnosperms have elongated slender leaves called needles,
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Algae
The algae include both the smallest and simplest of green plants
as well as the giant kelps, which are among the largest of plants.
Algae can be green, red, brown, yellowish, or purple, depending
on the pigments in their cells. The green algae are grass green in
color, may be one-celled, colonial, or filamentous, and are among
the most widely distributed of all the algae, with species usually
inhabiting fresh water and forming large colonies on the surface.
They are important as a source of food for fish and other aquatic
animals. Sometimes they become so abundant that they pollute
waters, give off vile odors, choke streams, and clog filters in water
purifying facilities.
The yellow-green and golden-brown algae are found most often in
cold brooks, mountain streams, and springs. The related diatoms
are important food for fish, and are so abundant in marine waters
that they are called the grass of the sea. The empty, beautifully
ornamented siliceous walls of dead diatoms settle in marine waters
and often accumulate, forming diatomaceous earth, which is used
as a mild abrasive in polishes, cleansers, and toothpaste, and in
insulation.
The blue-green algae have blue and red pigments as well as
chlorophyll and are found in a variety of habitats, with most species
in fresh water, although a few are marine and some thrive in damp
and shaded places, such as on the surfaces of soil, rocks, and flower
pots. Some blue-green algae have the ability to fix atmospheric
nitrogen into organic compounds. The brown algae, which include
the giant kelps, have yellow, orange, or brown pigments and are
almost entirely marine. They prefer cool water and are especially
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abundant in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans and along the coasts
of the North Atlantic and North Pacific. Brown algae are important
food for fish, are used in cattle feed, and are eaten by many people in
Asia. Some brown algae are harvested for their abundant gelatinous
compounds, which are used in ice cream, laxatives, and cosmetics.
The red algae have a unique reddish pigment and are mostly marine,
although a few species occur in fresh water.
Fungi
Fungi are a group of organisms that lack chlorophyll, roots, stems,
leaves, and flowers. Once considered plants, they are now classified
in their own group. Fungi reproduce by means of spores, are usually
filamentous, have definite cell walls, and live a saprophytic or
parasitic existence. As saprophytes they share with bacteria the
role of decaying the remains of dead organisms, and as parasites
they cause diseases in plants and animals. The large fleshy fungi,
such as mushrooms, toadstools, bracket fungi, and puffballs, are
familiar to everyone who has walked the Illinois countryside. Other
fungi include the morels, truffles, earthstars, and birds nest fungi.
Most fungi are microscopic and not visible to the naked eye, such
as molds, mildews, yeasts, rusts, and smuts. Mushrooms produce
a fruiting body that consists of a stalk surmounted by a broad,
umbrella-shaped cap. The reproductive spores are produced on the
sides of gills located on the underside of the cap. The mushroom is
only one part of the body of the fungus: think of a mushroom as the
apple on the tree. The remainder consists of an extensive mass of
threadlike filaments (hyphae) that grow hidden in the soil or other
substrate.
Technically, there is no difference between a mushroom and a
toadstool. By tradition, the term mushroom refers to edible
species, some highly prized for their delicious flavors and aromas.
The term toadstool is used for poisonous species, which produce
toxic compounds that can cause illness or death. Since both edible
and poisonous species can occur together and can resemble each
other, there is great danger of amateurs confusing safe and toxic
species. Only people who are thoroughly familiar with the technical
identification of mushrooms should collect and eat wild species.
The bracket fungi resemble mushrooms but differ in having pores
instead of gills and are often asymmetrical and hang, bracket-like,
on dead or living tree trunks. The puffballs produce round or pearshaped fruiting bodies with a conspicuous outer covering, liberating
spores at maturity through a pore or break at the top of the ball.
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Some puffballs can reach the size of a basketball. They are found on
decomposing wood and bark, decaying leaves, and animal wastes.
Mushrooms can be found throughout most of the year, but the
largest number appear with the cool moist weather of autumn. This
diversity will last until temperatures fall below freezing. Warm
spring temperatures combined with moist weather bring out the
second largest number of fleshy fungi, including many gilled and
pore fungi, morels, and puffballs. In late spring and summer, the
number of fleshy fungi drops to a low point. A cool spell in August,
accompanied by showers, will bring out large numbers of puffballs
and pore fungi. However, the return of hot weather will quickly
reduce the numbers to a few scattered specimens.
Fungi, besides being tasty additions to pizza, are important additions
to our medicines and food. Many antibiotics, including penicillin,
streptomycin, terramycin, aureomycin, and chloromycetin, were
originally produced by fungi. Yeasts carry out the process of
fermentation, which makes possible bread, alcoholic beverages, and
vinegar. Fungi are also important in the ripening of certain kinds of
cheese, such as Roquefort, Camembert, Brie, and Stilton.
Lichens
Lichen is a unique organism composed of a microscopic green or
blue-green alga and a colorless fungus. The alga and fungus live
together in a mutually beneficial association termed symbiosis. The
plant body that is formed has no resemblance to either the algal or
fungal component. The algal partner provides food energy through
photosynthesis and the fungal partner lives on this food, makes
up the bulk of the plant body, protects the alga from desiccation,
absorbs mineral elements and water, and synthesizes many essential
organic compounds. Lichens have a cosmopolitan distribution and
are found on a great variety of substrates, such as rock, trees, wood,
and soil, from the Arctic (where they are dominant in the tundra)
to the Antarctic, from sea level to alpine habitats, in deserts, and in
freshwater and marine environments. People are often concerned
when they see lichen on the bark of tree trunks. The lichen neither
harms nor helps the tree. Some lichen communities last for centuries
in the Arctic and Antarctic, but if the environment is disturbed, they
are eventually replaced by mosses, liverworts, and plants. Lichens
are very sensitive to air pollution, and different species are affected
by different concentrations of specific air pollutants. Thus, it is
frequently possible to estimate the level of air pollution in an area by
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Threatened &
Extirpated
Endangered
Extinct
Group
Species
506
Club mosses
12
Horsetails
12
Ferns
75
13
Conifers
14
Flowering Plants
1,955
329
53
Total
2,574
355
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Plant Classification
With at least 500,000 different kinds of plants in the world, it is
necessary to organize this diversity into a classification scheme to
be able to communicate with others. There are a variety of ways
plants can be classified, such as alphabetically (hibiscus, hickory,
hollyhock, hydrangea); by growth habit (herb, shrub, tree, or vine);
by habitat (aquatic, terrestrial, aerial); or by shared characteristics
(white flowers, opposite leaves, edible fruits). However, the
classification system that has been most useful to botanists is one
that groups related plants together into a series of hierarchical
categories, so that very closely allied plants are placed together in
the system, plants that are somewhat related are grouped near each
other, while plants that have very little in common are placed far
from each other.
The classification scheme used for plants has the following
categories:
Division
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Subspecies
Variety
Form
[Cultivar]
The basic unit of classification is a species. It is impossible to precisely
define a species so that the definition would apply to all plants and
be agreed upon by all botanists. In general, however, a species is a
population or a series of populations whose individuals are distinct
and distinguishable from individuals of other such populations,
this distinctiveness is self-perpetuating through succeeding
generations, and the population(s) is usually reproductively isolated
from populations of other species. To the layperson a species is a
particular kind of plant or, put another way, all individual plants that
look more-or-less alike constitute a species. The word species is
both singular and plural.
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Plant Names
Since ancient time, people have given names to plants that are of
special interest, such as food plants, fiber-producing plants, poisonous
plants, and ornamental plants. There are two kinds of names given
to plants: common names and scientific names. The two names are
complementary and each has a definite purpose.
Common Names
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also referred to as the species. These names are always in Latin or, if
derived from other languages, treated as if they were Latin. Scientific
names are underlined when handwritten and italicized or underlined
in print. The first letter of the generic name is always capitalized;
that of the specific epithet may always be left uncapitalized, although
it can be capitalized if the name commemorates a person or an old
generic name.
The generic name refers to a general kind of plant while the specific
epithet indicates a particular kind of plant. Thus, the genus Rosa is
used for all kinds of roses, while Rosa setigera is the prairie rose.
When the generic name is frequently repeated, it is customary to
abbreviate it by the first letter. Accordingly, Rosa carolina is the
pasture rose, R. centifolia is the cabbage rose, and R. canina is the
dog rose. These examples show that the use of two words for the
name of a particular kind of plant is not restricted to scientific names,
but that we frequently do this in English with one word modifying the
other.
Following the name of the species is the name of the person who gave
the plant that name. This is a bibliographic aid to help locate additional
information about the name. Many plants in the eastern United States
were first named by Linnaeus, for instance, Rosa carolina Linnaeus,
the pasture rose. Certain people described so many plants that their
name is abbreviated, such as Rosa carolina L., R. canina L., and R.
setigera Michx. (for Michaux). Some floras give lists of author abbre
viations.
Sometimes a species may have two or more recognizable variants.
As previously mentioned, if these are discovered in wild plants,
they are called subspecies, varieties, or formsdepending on the
magnitude of the variationsand are given an additional Latin name.
For example, the pasture rose R. carolina has two variants, one with
the leaves smooth and the other with the leaves quite hairy beneath.
The first one is called R. carolina var. carolina and the second, R.
carolina var. villosa. Author citations are used with these names
when the name of the variant is different from that of the species, as
in R. carolina L. var. villosa (Best) Rehder. When variants occur only
in cultivated plants, they are given cultivar names, which may be in
languages other than Latin, and they do not carry an author citation
with them. The cultivar name is placed in single quotation marks after
the specific name, or, in some cases, after the generic name. Cultivar
names are capitalized, but not italicized. For example, the name of the
Bradford pear is Pyrus calleryana Bradford. It is never correct to
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and juniper, Juniperus. All of these words are easy for most people
to pronounce because they are familiar with them. Other scientific
names may take a little practice.
Actually, most Latin or Latinized words are easier to pronounce
than unknown English words. Finally, there is no need for someone
to be afraid of mispronouncing scientific names because there
are several different systems for pronouncing Latin - traditional
English pronunciation as used by most botanists and horticulturalists
in English-speaking countries, re-formed academic attempts to
approximate the pronunciation of educated Romans, and Latin as
used in the Catholic religion.
In this country most letters of the alphabet are pronounced the
same in Latin as in English, including the consonants b, c (hard
and soft), d, f, g (hard and soft), h, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s (always as
in so, not like z), t, v, and z. The letters j, u, and w were not in the
classical Latin alphabet; when they appear in Latinized words, they
are usually pronounced as in English except that j sometimes has
the sound of y in yellow. The letter x at the beginning of a word has
the sound of z; for example, Xanthium is zn-th-m and Xyris is
z-rs. Elsewhere, x is pronounced as in English, such as Larix is
lr-iks and Oxalis is ks--lis. All vowels may be either long or
short, as in English.
A Latin word has as many syllables as it has vowels or diphthongs
(two vowels pronounced as one sound). The diphthongs commonly
used in botanical names, and their pronunciations, are: ae ( as ea
in meat), au (as aw in awful), and eu (as in neutral and as oo
in tool). Some examples are: Actaea (k-t-), laevis (l-vis),
Aureolaria (w-r--lr-i-), caudatus (kw-d-ts), Eleusine
(l--si-n), and Deutzia (dt-z-).
Every vowel or diphthong is pronounced, and there are no silent
letters at the end of a word. Thus, Ribes is r-bs, not ribs or rbs;
Androsace is n-dr-s-s; Leucothoe is l-c-th-; gerardii
is jr-r-d-; illinoense is il-li-n-in-s; Rosaceae is rs--s-;
Liatris is l--tris; Illiama is il-l--m; and Aloe is -l-, not
l-.
When a word begins with any of the following combinations of two
consonants, the first letter is silent: cn, gn, mn, ps, and pt. Thus,
Cnicus is n-ks; Gnaphalium is n-f-l-m; Mnium is n-m;
Psoralea is s-r-l-; and Pteridium is t-ri-d-m.
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Plant Identification
4-17
Keys
By the use of keys, plants that have particular structural features are
separated from all plants that lack such features, and the process of
identification is made simpler. A key consists of a series of paired
contrasting or contradictory statements: each pair of statements is
called a couplet. The first couplet of a key is compared with the plant
to be identified. One of the statements will not apply to the plant
while the other one will, and leads to another set of couplets. This
process of choosing one statement of a couplet and rejecting the
other is repeated until only one possibility remains, which gives the
name of the plant. This process is called keying out a plant.
Most books have a number of separate keys. One key is used to
determine the plant family (if it is not known), another to identify
the plant to genus, and a third key to identify the species. With
experience, common families and genera are readily recognized,
which makes the identification to species much more rapid. Often,
however, all is not so simple, and the user may not have all the
information needed to select the proper statement, or the choices are
not clear-cut. Nevertheless, time has proven the usefulness of keys.
With experience, keys become relatively easy to use, and you will
be able to take pride in your ability to use them.
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1. Leaves alternate.
2. Leaves simple.
3. Leaves fan-shaped with a notch at the tip.....Ginkgo.
3. Leaves not fan-shaped, lacking a notch at the tip.
4. Leaves entire........................................... Magnolia.
4. Leaves lobed or toothed.
5. Leaves lobed ......................................Quercus.
5. Leaves toothed........................................Ulmus.
2. Leaves compound.
6. Leaflets small................................................. Gleditsia.
6. Leaflets large................................................ Cladrastis.
1. Leaves opposite or whorled.
7. Leaves whorled................................................ Catalpa.
7. Leaves opposite.
8. Leaves simple.
9. Leaves palmately lobed............................ Acer.
9. Leaves entire.........................................Cornus.
8. Leaves compound.
10. Leaves palmately compound.......... Aesculus.
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Plant Parts
Figure 2
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many different habitats and producing a myriad of different characteristics. This chapter includes some of the more common attributes.
Roots
l Usually the portion of the plant that absorbs water and
minerals.
l Mostly underground.
l Principal organ of attachment.
l Lacks nodes and buds.
There are two general types of roots primary, which develop
from the primary root of the seedling into either a taproot or a fibrous
root system, and adventitious, which are roots that originate from
any part of the plant other than the root system. A taproot is a central
main root that descends vertically and is generally larger than any
branching root. Fibrous roots are thin thread-like roots arising from
a taproot or from stem tissue. Sometimes roots are greatly enlarged
for food storage for the next growing season or may be a means of
asexual reproduction. Examples of enlarged roots are carrots, beets,
sweet potatoes, and dahlias. (See Figure 3).
Stems
l Main support of a plant containing conductive tissue for
transferring water, carbohydrates, and nutrients from one
organ to another.
l Leaf- and flower-bearing main axis of a plant.
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l Aerial or underground.
l Divided into nodes and internodes.
Corm
Stem Characteristics
Rhizome
Tubers
Stolon
Rhizome
Runner
Figure 4
Twig Illustration
Horse Chestnut in Spring
Terminal
Bud
Axillary
Bud
Last
Years
Growth
Leaf Scar
Bud Scale
Scar
Node
Internode
Lenticels
Figure 5
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Leaves
l Lateral appendages on a stem.
l Usually serve as the primary photosynthetic surface of
the plant.
l Can be extremely modified in morphology.
Leaf Persistence
Leaves on woody perennials may be deciduous or evergreen.
Deciduous means leaves are shed during unfavorable conditions
(such as at the end of each growing season). Plants that are evergreen
bear green foliage all year. They do lose older leaves over time, but
not all at one time.
Leaf Complexity
Leaves are either simple or compound. Simple leaves are composed
of: a leaf blade that is the expanded portion of a leaf, and a petiole
that is the stalk of a leaf which attaches it to the stem. (See Figure
6).
Figure 6
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it.
F. Palmately lobed lobes all arising from one point at the
base of the leaf.
Leaf Tips (See Figure 8)
Many of the same terms are used to describe tips and bases.
A. Aristatetapered to a narrow elongated apex with bristlelike structure.
B. Acuminatesharp, ending in a long-tapering point with
concave sides.
C. Acutesharp, ending in a point with straight sides to the
apex (<90 degrees).
D. Mucronatea small, abrupt point.
E. Obtuseblunt, rounded (>90 degrees).
F. Retuseshallow notch in rounded or obtuse apex.
G. Emarginatewith a shallow notch at apex.
Leaf Bases (See Figure 9)
A. Attenuatelong slender taper; more gradual than
acuminate.
B. Cuneatewedge-shaped; triangular with narrow part at
point of attachment.
C. Obtuse blunt, rounded (>90 degrees).
D. Truncateends abruptly; almost at right angles to main
axis as if cut or squared off.
E. Obliqueunequal sized lobes at base.
F. Cordateheart-shaped (equal rounded lobes at the base).
G. Sagittateshaped like an arrowhead; triangular-ovate with
two straight or slightly concave basal lobes.
H. Perfoliateleaf or petiole completely surrounds stem.
I. Hastateshaped like an arrowhead, but with divergent
lobes at the base.
J. Peltateumbrella-like; the petiole is attached to the blade
inside of the margin; often orbicular in shape.
K. Sheathingleaf base wraps around the stem.
Leaf Attachment
Leaves may be attached to a stem in several different ways. Petiolate
describes a leaf attached with a petiole. Subsessile refers to a very
short petiole. Sessile leaves lack a petiole.
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Leaf Venation
Leaf venation can be another good clue when identifying plants.
Pinnate venation consists of a central mid-vein with many secondary
veins emerging on both sides to form a feather-like pattern. With
palmate all primary veins arise at the same point at the base of the
leaf, characteristic of maple leaves, Acer spp. Parallel veins lie more
or less parallel to the leaf margins, which is common in dogwoods,
Cornus spp. (See Figure 7).
Figure 7
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Botany
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Surface Features
Leaves continue their amazing diversity with special surface
features. Glabrous leaves have a smooth surface. Pubescent leaves
are covered with hairs (also called trichomes). Stellate describes a
leaf surface with hairs that branch at or near their base. The hairs
appear star-shaped from above when viewed through magnification.
Glandular leaves possess hairs that bear glands which release sticky
beads of fluid when broken. The hairs may be stalked or sessile.
There are many more types of surface features. (See Figure 10).
Figure 10
Special Features
Plants may possess additional modifications. A tendril is an
elongated, twining segment of a leaf, stem, or flower inflorescence
by which a vine clings to its support. A thorn is a woody, sharppointed, modified stem. A spine is a sharp-pointed modified leaf
or leaf part. Stipular spines are borne in pairs and are lateral to a
leaf (or leaf scar). A prickle is a sharp pointed outgrowth from the
epidermis. Rose thorns are really rose prickles. (See Figure 11).
tendrills
spines
thorns
Figure 11
Flowers
l The reproductive part of a plant.
l Mature into fruits that contain seed.
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stipular
spines
prickles
Carpel
Carpe l
STAMEN
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Flower Completeness
Not all flowers have a full complement of parts. Completeness refers
to individual flowers. Flowers with all four floral series present
(calyx, corolla, stamens, and carpels) are referred to as complete.
If one or more floral series are absent, the flowers are described
as incomplete. Flowers with both functional androecium (male)
and gynoecium (female) parts are called perfect. Either calyx or
corolla is missing in perfect flowers. Imperfect flowers lack either a
functional androecium (male) or a functional gynoecium (female).
Staminatea male flower; one that has a functional male part, but
lacks a functional female part.
Carpellatea female flower; one that has a functional female part,
but lacks a functional male part.
Figure 13
Plant Condition
Additional terminology describes the entire plant in relation to the
completeness of its flowers. Synoecious plants have flowers that
are all perfect. Monoecious plants possess both staminate (male)
and carpellate (female) flowers on the same plant. When staminate
and carpellate flowers occur on different plants the plant is called
dioecious. (See Figure 13).
Flower Parties
A flower inflorescence is simply the arrangement of flowers on a
floral axis; basically a cluster of flowers. A variety of inflorescences
are illustrated in Figure 17. You may be familiar with additional
inflorescences that are not pictured, such as the spathe and spadix of
Jack-in-the- pulpit and catkins of birch trees.
Parts of an Inflorescence
Pedunclethe stalk of an inflorescence or a solitary flower.
Pedicelthe stalk of one flower in an inflorescence.
Rachisthe primary axis of an elongated inflorescence.
Bractsa modified or much-reduced leaf associated with an
inflorescence or flower. These may differ substantially from foliage
leaves.
Involucrea series of bracts immediately subtending a flower or
inflorescence.
Figure 14
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Positions of Inflorescence
Where the cluster of flowers is held on the plant varies among plants
and type of inflorescence.
Axillaryin the axil of a leaf or bract.
Whorledoccurring in whorls at a single node.
Master Naturalist Program
2006
RAY FLOWER
DISK FLOWER
RECEPTACLE
PHYLLARIES
CHAFF
STIGMAS
ANTHERS
PETALS
OVARY
PAPPUS
CHAFF
OVARY
DISK FLOWER
RAY FLOWER
Figure 15
Botany
4-33
Figure 16. Inflorescences: A, simple cyme; B, compound cyme; C, panicle; D, raceme; E, spike; F,
corymb; G, simple umbel; H, compound umbel; and I, head.
Fruits
A fruit is the ripened ovary of a flower, and a seed is the matured
ovule. Simple fruits, such as grapes, cherries, and tomatoes,
develop from a single ovary. Fruits are highly diverse, but can be
classified by the number of ovaries involved in their formation, their
consistency and structure, and whether they are dehiscent (splitting
open at maturity) or indehiscent (remaining entire at maturity).
Many of these fruit types are shown in Figure 17.
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Example: milkweed.
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Figure 17
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4-37
Two critical stages in the life cycle of a flowering plant are pollination
and dispersal. Pollination is the transfer of pollen from anther to
stigma, generally most successful on a different plant of the same
species. Most flowering plants have different types of mechanisms
to promote the transfer of pollen from an anther in one flower to a
stigma in a different flower.
Dispersal is the movement of seeds away from the parent plant.
Plants often solicit the aid of animals to accomplish both of these.
Much of the flower diversity that has been discussed thus far is
due to adaptations for pollination by different mechanisms. The
vast majority of flowering plant species are pollinated by insects;
in fact, it seems that flowering plants and many major groups of
insects co-evolved. Animals other than insects can also be important
pollinators, such as bats, birds (especially hummingbirds), and even
a few mammals.
For flowers requiring pollinators, it doesnt pay to hide. To attract
biological pollinators, flowers must advertise, offer rewards, provide
access and have the correct structure for pollen transfer. Color and/
or nectar guides are excellent neon signs to advertise for pollinators.
Scent may also be used for advertisement. Not all flower scents
smell wonderful to us. Flowers pollinated by flies may stink of rotten
meat. Flowers also offer rewards such as pollen, nectar, other food
from special structures, breeding sites, and in a few cases, warmth.
Flower adaptations for pollinator access include a place to land or to
hover. Flowers must also be held in the right position for pollinators
to find them. Flowers must possess the correct structure that allows
transfer of pollen from plant to pollinator and pollinator to the next
flower.
Table 2 describes the main types of pollination mechanisms.
However, please keep in mind that there are always exceptions;
plants and animals that visit flowers have minds of their own!
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Table 22
Table
Mode of
Pollination
Visitation &
Anthesis (1)
Flower Morphology
Color
Beetles
Odor
Strong, fruity or aminoid; no nectar;
food primarily pollen or food bodies
Actinomorphic; deep corolla Purple, brown (like meat); no Strong, like rotting meat; really awful
tube with appendages forming nectar guides or nectar
smell
traps
Mostly day
Variable, but often dull or light; Little to (too) much odor; nectar
nectar guides present
present or absent; accessible; food
often pollen
Bees
Day
Butterflies
Day
Hawkmoths
Night or dusk
Actinomorphic; narrow
tubular corolla; anthers often
versatile; flowers horizontal
or hanging down
Fly-gnats
Birds
Day
Actinomorphic; stiff, wide Often bright red; no nectar No odor; abundant nectar; ovary
tubular with hanging stamens guides
protected
Bats
Night
Large, sturdy, wide, somewhat White, cream, or drab; no Strong at night, often smelling like
zygomorphic; accessible
nectar guides
fermenting yeast; abundant nectar; food
bodies, and/or pollen
Mice
Night
Sturdy, often snout shaped White, cream, dull red, or Yeasty odor; abundant nectar and/or
corolla; many stamens or drab; no nectar guides
pollen
dense heads of flowers;
accessible near the ground
Wind
Day
None
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4-39
Seed Dispersal
Why is dispersal important?
l Avoid competition with parent and siblings.
l Colonize new habitats.
l Avoid pathogens and predators.
l Minimize inbreeding.
Plants often solicit the aid of animals, as well as abiotic forces such
as wind to accomplish dispersal. Insects are much less important
for dispersal than for pollination, but ants are often involved in
dispersal. Birds, mammals, reptiles, and even fish are much more
important for dispersal than for pollination. Wind is important in
both pollination and dispersal. Water is of minor importance in
pollination and somewhat greater in dispersal. Just like some plants
carry out self pollination, some plants have mechanisms for self
dispersal.
Units of Dispersal
Different plant parts become modified for dispersal. Fruits, parts of
fruit, or other structures such as sepals, bracts or even the whole
plant may be involved in dispersal. The term diaspore is used for the
unit of dispersal, no matter what it is morphologically.
Wind Dispersal
If you think of all the ways things blow in the wind, there are
probably seeds which take advantage of that way. Some seeds,
such as in orchids, are dust-like or tiny, as in Indian paintbrush.
Samaras have wings to take them away from their parents, as in
maple and trumpet creeper. How many of us have blown the plumed
seeds of milkweed and dandelion? Anemones and cattails are wooly
to help move their seeds around. The bladdernut is well named, for
it balloon diaspores. Some entire plants, such as tumbleweed, break
off and blow around.
Water Dispersal
Water dispersal may include splash cups in lousewort, or the use of
sea currents, as in coconut. Streams may move some plants from
different bodies of water, as in water lily.
Animal Dispersal
Animal involvement in dispersal may be passive, as in the use of
awns, hooks, and barbs that attach to animals and to our pant legs.
Bidens, beggars tick fruits; Geum, white avens fruits; and Arctium
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minus, burdock fruits are excellent examples of fruits that hitch a ride.
Some plants may use simple adhesion with a sticky, mucilaginous
coating around seeds when they are wet.
Animal dispersal may also be active. Birds and squirrels carry seeds
such as acorns to other areas to cache for later meals. Ants will cache
some seeds to eat the elaiosomes (fruit or seed outgrowths which
contain oil). Animals also eat fruit and defecate the seeds into new
territory.
Mechanical Dispersal
Some plants with ballistic fruits, such as wood cranesbill and touchme-not, literally explode their seeds away from the mother plant.
Other plants as with shooting star and poppy rely on movement from
animals and wind to shake the fruit to expel the seeds. Hygroscopic
fruits curl and uncurl with changes of humidity and in the process
plant themselves.
Methods of dispersal are often tied to plants of certain habitats. Wind
dispersal is typical of prairie/grasslands, mountains, forest trees, and
weedy areas. Using external attachment to animals is useful in forest
plants that grow relatively low to the ground. Ingestion by animals
is another good dispersal mechanism for forest plants. It makes
sense that plants that grow in wetlands and along streams would
utilize water to disperse their seeds. Plants with ballistic fruits such
as some parasitic plants, some forest plants, and some weedy plants
may be in various habitats.
Seed Germination
All the adaptations we have discussed lead toward seed deposition
into a suitable place for growth. Obviously not all seeds will be
successful at producing a new plant. Most plants rely on producing
large quantities of seed, so at least some will develop.
A seed is a ripened ovule containing an embryo within a seed coat,
often with additional storage tissues. In other words, a baby in a
box with its lunch. The seed has all it needs to develop a new plant
given the correct environmental conditions.
Once seeds are dispersed they may germinate immediately, if
conditions are correct for that species and provided the seeds
are viable. Or they may not germinate even when environmental
conditions are appropriate. Many seeds have a dormancy mechanism
Botany
4-41
Figure 18
2006
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Respiration
Carbohydrates made during photosynthesis are valuable to the plant
when they are converted into energy. This energy is used to build
new tissues and to help the plant grow. The chemical process by
which sugars and starches produced by photosynthesis are converted
to energy is called oxidation. Controlled oxidation in a living cell is
known as respiration.
Respiration is essentially the reverse of photosynthesis. Unlike
photosynthesis, respiration occurs at night as well as during the
day. Respiration occurs in all life forms, including animals, and
in all living cells. The release of accumulated carbon dioxide and
the uptake of oxygen occur at the cellular level. In animals, blood
carries both carbon dioxide and oxygen to and from the atmosphere
by means of lungs or gills. In plants, these gases simply diffuse
into intercellular spaces within the leaf and then pass through the
stomates.
The differences between photosynthesis and respiration are
summarized in Table 3.
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Table
Respiration
Table 3.
3. Photosynthesis
Photosynthesisandand
Compare
andContrast
Respiration
Compare and
Contrast
Photosynthesis
Respiration
Occurs only in plants
Occurs in all living cells (plants
and animals)
Produces food
Uses food for plant energy
Energy is stored
Energy is released
Occurs in chloroplasts within Occurs in all cells
cell
Oxygen is released
Oxygen is used
Water is used
Water is produced
Carbon dioxide is used
Carbon dioxide is produced
Occurs in sunlight
Occurs in dark as well as light
Transpiration
Transpiration is the process by which a plant loses water, primarily
from leaf stomata. It is a necessary process that uses approximately
90 percent of the water that enters through the plants roots. The
other 10 percent of water is used in chemical reactions such as
photosynthesis and in plant tissues (creating turgor pressure).
Transpiration is necessary for mineral transport from the soil to
plant parts, for cooling leaf and stem tissues through evaporation,
for moving sugars and plant chemicals, and for maintaining turgor
pressure. The amount of water lost from the plant depends on several
environmental factors such as temperature, humidity, and wind or
air movement. In general, as temperature or air movement increases,
transpiration increases. As humidity decreases, transpiration
increases.
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4-45
Vascular System
Xylem
The xylem elements form the plant pipeline for the distribution of
water and some solutes from the soil to the shoot. Near root tips,
epidermal cells withdraw water from the soil by the process of
osmosis. During osmosis, water molecules tend to equalize their
concentration on both sides of cell membranes. Epidermal root
cells, in which salts, sugars, and other substances are concentrated,
contain lesser amounts of water than does the soil solution. Thus
water diffuses into the root cells. Similarly, equalization applies to
the substances dissolved within the cells. They attempt to diffuse out
of the cell into the soil solution. However, selectively permeable cell
membranes prohibit the dissolved substances from diffusing out.
This preferential diffusion of water across the membrane results in
an internal (turgor) pressure. The cell walls counteracting the internal
pressure discharge water into spaces between internal cells. Finally,
osmosis redirects the water into and up the cells of the xylem. Of
the several types of cells in the xylem, the vessels and tracheids
form the main channels of water movement. Both of the cell types
lack living contents and have hollow interiors that serve as pipes for
water conduction. The pressure that develops in the xylem tissues is
called root pressure.
Although root pressure is adequate to push water to the leaves
of low-growing plants, it is insufficient to move water to the top
of tall trees. To accomplish this movement, an additional pulling
force is generated in the leaves. The leaf mesophyll cells with high
concentrations of photosynthesized sugars withdraw water from the
xylem. Water evaporates from the mesophyll cells, saturating the
intercellular spaces with water vapor. This vapor may ultimately
escape the leaf through open stomata by transpiration. Thus there
exists a continuous column of liquid water in the xylem from the
roots through the stems to the leaves. The evaporative loss of water
from the leaves results in a transpirational pull and in a continuous
flow of water upward through the xylem. Movement of water and
solutes in the xylem is in one direction only upward.
Phloem
While xylem elements form the plants pipeline for distribution of
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water and solutes from the soil to the shoot, another tubular system,
the phloem, acts as the system through which sugar made in the
leaves is distributed to all parts of the plant.
The inner bark consists of phloem tissue composed of thin-walled,
elongated living cells (sieve tubes) joined end to end. The sieve
tubes contain not only sugar but lesser amounts of amino acids,
hormones, and mineral elements. While xylem content generally
flows exclusively from the roots to the leaves, phloem contents
move either upward or downward from the source of products of
photosynthesis to any point, termed sink, at which the substances
are utilized.
Sugars are needed to support growth in roots, shoot tips, and young
leaves. Transport is also to roots and shoots for storage, or to seeds
and fruits to be transformed into materials for growth of the next
generation. In some species, special organs of food storage such as
tubers, rhizomes, bulbs, corms, or tuberous roots may serve as sinks.
When the sugar reaches such organs, it is usually converted to an
insoluble storage product such as starch, thus preventing the buildup
of high concentrations of osmotically active solutes. At some later
time the insoluble storage product may be reconverted to sugars
and exported to a new sink. In general, each sink is supplied by its
nearest available source. The direction of movement in the phloem
is not fixed, as it tends to be in the xylem.
A wide diversity of substances circulates around the plant through a
combination of xylem and phloem routes. Mineral ions, for example,
are initially absorbed from the soil and transported to the shoot
through the xylem. As leaves age, some mobile elements are released
and move in the sugar transport stream of the phloem to a new sink.
In times of deficiency, these elements can be redistributed to the
growing shoot, which will then remain relatively healthy while the
older leaves display deficiency symptoms. Nitrogen degraded from
amino acid, and magnesium from chlorophyll, show this mobility.
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Meristems
These two phases of growth occur in well-defined areas within the
plant called meristems (perpetually embryonic tissue). Grasses also
have intercalary meristems within their internodes which produce
growth both above and below the meristem.
At the tip of each stem and root, an apical meristem contributes
to the length of these organs. This type of growth, which originates
relatively close to apical meristems, is known as primary growth.
The unlimited or prolonged growth of shoot apical meristems is
described as indeterminate growth. When growth is restricted by
the production of a leaf or flower, growth is said to be determinate.
Indeterminate tomatoes keep on growing and producing new flowers
and fruit until killed by freezing temperatures. Determinate plants, on
the other hand, reach a certain size, set fruit, and then stop bearing.
Secondary growth which results in a thickening of stems, branches,
and roots originates from two lateral meristems: the vascular
cambium and the cork cambium. Most monocots and certain
herbaceous dicots exhibit little secondary growth. Growth in plants
ceases with the maturation of the primary tissues. Woody plants,
however, at the start of each growing season exhibit a resumption of
primary growth, and additional tissues are added through reactivation
of the lateral meristems.
In woody stems, cork is formed to the outside by a cork cambium
which may also form tissue to the inside (phelloderm). The cork,
cork cambium, and phelloderm make up the periderm. At maturity,
cells of the phelloderm are living and resemble cortical parenchyma
cells. Gaseous exchange to tissues internal to the periderm is
accomplished through the lenticels.
Bark
The term bark refers to all tissues outside of the vascular cambium.
It includes not only periderm but also secondary phloem. After the
first periderm, subsequently formed periderms originate deeper and
deeper in the bark. All of the tissues outside of the innermost cork
cambium and all of the periderms together with any cortical and
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phloem tissues included among them make up the outer bark. This
outer bark consists entirely of dead tissues. The living part of the
bark is from this innermost cork cambium inward to the vascular
cambium. This is called the inner bark (See Figure 19).
Figure 19
Development involves the differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs
and does not necessarily involve increase either in size or weight.
During transition to flowering, the vegetative apex undergoes a
sequence of physiological and structural changes and is transformed
into a reproductive apex. Flowering, therefore, may be considered
as a stage in the development of a shoot apex.
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