1: Plant Morphology (3/31) Flashcards

1
Q

Herbs

A

Plants whose above-ground growth is mostly herbaceous (non-woody) and therefore dies back at the end of the growing season

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2
Q

Woody perennials

A

Produce woody stems that persist for multiple years

Can be shrubs or trees

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3
Q

Leaf axil

A

The angle between the leaf base and the stem

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4
Q

Bud

A

Very young shoot tissue that may become a branch or an inflorescence

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5
Q

Bud scales

A

The small, brownish, overlapping structures that cover the over-wintering buds of woody plants and are modified leaves

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6
Q

Cauline leaves

A

Grow directly on the stem and are attached without a petiole (stalk)

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7
Q

Phyllotaxis

What does this word mean?

A

The arrangement of leaves on a plant stem

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8
Q

Alternate leaf arrangement

A

When a single leaf grows at each node along a stem, with leaves alternating sides as they progress up the stem

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9
Q

Opposite leaf arrangement

A

Where two leaves grow at the same node, directly across from each other

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10
Q

Whorled leaf arrangement

A

Three or more leaves grow at a single node

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11
Q

Fasciculate leaf arrangement

A

Leaves that are clustered together in small, tight bundles (fascicles) along a stem or branch

ex: conifers

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12
Q

Basal leaf arrangement

A

Leaves that grow in a rosette or cluster at the base of a plant

ex: dandelion and plantain

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13
Q

Difference between 2- and 4-ranked leaf arrangements

A

2-ranked: leaves are formed in two vertical rows on opposite sides of the stem, forming a flattened, 2-dimensional appearance
4-ranked: leaves are arranged in four vertical rows around the stem, with each successive pair of leaves rotated 90° from the previous pair

2-ranked: grasses and corn
4-ranked: basil

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14
Q

Adaxial

A

Upper surface of the leaf (or ventral)

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15
Q

Abaxial

A

Lower surface of the leaf (dorsal)

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16
Q

Stipule

A

A small leaflike appendage to a leaf (like at the base of the petiole)

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17
Q

Leaf venation

What are the 3 different types and what distinguishes them?

A

Pinnate
Parallel
Palmate

Pinnate: A single central midrib runs down the leaf, with smaller veins branching off like a feather
Parallel: Veins run parallel to each other from the base to the tip
Palmate: Several main veins spread out from a single point, resembling fingers on a hand

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18
Q

Leaf blade division

What are the options for how a leaf can be divided?

A

Entire

Palmate, pinnate, teeth

Entire: no lobes or teeth
Pinnate: sinuses reach inward toward the single vein
Palmate: sinuses reach inward in between two veins (maple leaves)

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19
Q

Palmate and pinnate differences for veins

A

Palmate: Several main veins originating from a single point
Pinnate: Single main vein

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20
Q

Peduncle

A

The stalk of an entire inflorescence

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21
Q

Pedicel

A

The stalk of a single flower within an inflorescence of more than one flower. If the flower lacks pedicels it’s sessile

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22
Q

Solitary flower

A

An inflorescence consisting of one flower, either terminal (on end of stem) or axillary (on axil of leaf)

23
Q

Scape

A

A peduncle arising from ground-level (often from a rosette of basal leaves) either terminating in a solitary flower or a flower cluster

24
Q

Bract

A

Modified (reduced) leafs that occur in the inflorescence

25
Involucre
Cluster of bracts
26
Determinate (cymose) inflorescence
The main axis, as well as each branch of the inflorescence, terminates in a flower, halting main axis growth; oldest flowers are at the top or in the middle
27
Indeterminate (racemose) inflorescence
The main axis and branches continue to grow; oldest flowers are at the bottom or outside
28
Helicoid inflorescence
Inflorescence branches on alternating sides
29
Scorpioid inflorescence
Inflorescence branches on one side
30
Indeterminate umbel
A flower cluster where multiple flower stalks (pedicels) radiate out from a single point. Oldest flowers are towards the outside of the inflorescence
31
Determinate umbel
A flower cluster where multiple flower stalks (pedicels) radiate out from a single point. Oldest flowers are towards the center of the inflorescence
32
Head inflorescence
Where multiple flowers are arranged on a short, dense spike, giving the appearance of a single flower ex: sunflower
33
Glomerule inflorescence
Characterized by a dense, head-like cluster of sessile or subsessile (very small pedicel) flowers
34
Fascicle inflorescence
Characterized by a dense, head-like cluster of flowers with pedicels
35
Rachis
The central axis around which leaflets are arranged on a compound leaf
36
Stem succulents ## Footnote What modification do they have and what is its purpose?
Have stems that are modified for water storage
37
Rosettes
Stems that have very short internodes with many leaves clustered together
38
Stolon
A horizontal, above-ground stem that grows along the surface of the soil and can produce new plants (clones) at its nodes or tips
39
Rhizomes
Usually horizontal stems that travel beneath the ground
40
Corms
Very short, upright, underground storage stems
41
Tubers
Enlarged underground storage stems ## Footnote Ex: potatoes
42
Bulbs
Very short, upright, underground stems with very short nodes bearing fleshy storage leaves or buds ## Footnote Ex: onions and garlic
43
Primary root
The first root that develops on a seedling
44
Tap root system
The tap root and its lateral roots
45
Fibrous root system
Characterized by a dense network of thin, branching roots that arise from the stem rather than a taproot
46
Lamina
Leaf blade
47
Compound leaf
A leaf where there are several leaflets joined to a single stem
48
Palmately compound leaf
A compound leaf where all the leaflets attach to the same point
49
Pinnately compound leaf
A compound leaf where all the leaflets are arranged along the rachis
50
Odd-pinnate ## Footnote On a compound leaf
Has a terminal leaflet
51
Even-pinnate ## Footnote On a compound leaf
Lacks a terminal leaflet
52
How can you describe how many times a compound leaf is subdivided?
1-pinnate (once compound) 2-pinnate (twice compound) ...and so on
53
Palmately trifoliolate compound leaf
Compound leaf with three leaflets and no rachis
54
Pinnately trifoliolate compound leaf
Compound leaf with three leaflets and a rachis