Botany- Root, specialized stems, flower, fruit, and inflorescences
Epigynous
(Perianth attached above ovary) inferior ovary. ovary adnate with perianth (i.e. ovary cannot be separated as a separate structure within perianth.) The calyx, corola and stamens all appear to attach to the top of the ovary.
Perigynous
(Perianth attached below ovary, but looks above) Superior ovary. Perianth fused = "hypanthium". Petals, sepals, and stamens all appear to attach above the ovary. Sometimes it is half hypogynous and haf epigynous.
Protoxylem
1st xylem cells to differentiate and become functional (in zone of elongation)
Incomplete flower
A flower lacking sepals, petals, stamens, or carpels.
Complete flower
A flower that has all four basic floral organs: sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels.
Petal
A modified leaf of a flowering plant. Petals are the often colorful parts of a flower that advertise it to insects and other pollinators. 꽃잎!
Procambium
A primary meristem of roots and shoots that forms the vascular tissue. immature metaxylem.
Lateral root
A root that arises from the outermost layer of the pericycle of an established root.
Tap
A single primary root from which smaller roots branch off of.
Fleshy tap
A single, enlarged storage root; wider than the base of the stem.
Corm
A swollen section of an underground stem, with stored food (solid, not in scales), surrounded by a few dead leaf bases. Numerous, small corms may develop on top of the old corm from axillary buds.
Imperfect flower
A unisexual flower missing either stamens or carpels.
Casparian Strip
A waterproof strip of tissue that surrounds cells in the vascular cylinder and prevents water from leaking back out of the plant's roots.
Prop (Adventitious Roots)
Adventitious root for support
Adhesive
Adventitous root for cling, attacching.
Pome
Apple
Plumed achene
Dandelion seed
Achene
Developed from an ovary, not just an ovule. e.g. sunflower seed.
Synconium
Developed from many flowers. e.g. pineapples
Schizocarp
Entire fruit separates into two or more seed-containing sections which are attached to a common axis.
Aggregate
Fruitlets are dry; or, fleshy drupelets on the outside of a common receptacle. e.g. raspberry.
Saprophytic
Gets nourishment by digesting dead organic matter in the soil.
Cortex
Ground tissue that is between the vascular tissue and dermal tissue in a root or dicot stem.
Metaxylem
It is the later formed xylem in the primary xylem which consists of large tracheids and vessels.
Hersperidium
Outer layer a leathery "rind" which can usually be peeled from the inner flesh. e.g. orange
Pepo
Outer layer a thick and hard "rind" blending with inner flesh. cannot peel it. e.g. melon and cucumber.
Berry
Outer layer a tough, thin "skin" which can be peeled from the inner flesh. e.g. Tomato
Umbel
Pedicels are all originated from single point.
Hypogynous
Perianth (petals and sepals) attached below the ovary. Superior ovary. Perianth not all fused. the corolla may form a tube around the ovary but the sepals are still separate and attached below the ovary.
Inferior ovary
Petals are above the ovary
Superior ovary
Petals are below the ovary
Monoecious plant
Plant that produces both staminate and pistillate flowers. (imperfect flowers)
Follicle
Pod splits open along one side only
Dioecious plant
Produces staminate and pistillate flowers on separate plants.
Regular flower
Radial symmetry
Reticulated xylem vessels
Reticulated (like web) xylem vessels
Parasitic
Roots called "haustoria" get nourishment from the phloem of the host plant.
Stolon (or Runner)
Runners are prostrate, creeping stems which cna take root at their nodes as weel as send up new shoots, spreading the plant asexually ("vegetative reproductive"). A kind of adventitous root to spread.
Capsule by pores
Seed not attached to a central axis or septum, but are in chambers inside.
Sillicle
Short and dry fruit. central septum is inside with seeds attached.
Amyloplast
Stores starch
Receptacle
The base of a flower; the site of attachment of the floral organs to the stem.
Locule
The chamber or opening inside the ovary where the ovules are found
Cortical parenchyma
The cortex region is filled with parenchyma cells, most of which contain amyloplasts filled with starch. endodermis + cortex + hypodermis (exodermis) + epidermis
Pistil
The female reproductive part of a flower.
Style
The narrow elongated part of the pistil between the ovary and the stigma.
Accessary
Tiny seed-like fruitlets on outside of enlarged fleshy receptacle.
Xylem vessels
Tube that carries water in a plant.
Panicle
a compound raceme
Corymb
a flattop appearance.
Tuber
a fleshy underground stem or root serving for reproductive and food storage.
Involucre
a highly conspicuous bract or bract pair or ring of bracts at the base of an inflorescence
Rhizome
a horizontal, underground stem that produces new leaves, shoots, and roots. A kind of adventitous root to spread.
Legume
a lot of seed in pod which splits into 2 halves. e.g. pea
Sepal
a part of Calyx.
Bulb
a short, underground section of stem surrounded by layers of fleshy leaves ("scale") that store food. Outer leaves are dry and papery. Sometimes this swollen structure is divided into "bulblets" or "cloves" which can be separated.
Ovary
a structure containing egg cells; the base of a pistil in a flower.
Ovule
a structure that contains an egg cell.
Samara
a winged often one-seed indehiscent fruit as of the ash or elm or maple
"Knees"
aeration roots. A type of specialized roots which gets oxygen for roots submerged in water (called "elbows" or "knees")
Region of cell elongation
between apical meristem and maturation. only few millimeters in length. The elongation of cells in this region results in most of the increase in length.
Pappus
calyx composed of scales or bristles or featherlike hairs in plants of the Compositae such as thistles and dandelions.
Corolla
collective term for "petals"
Gynoecium
collective term for all the carples of a flower all female reproductive structures. "the house of women"
Grain
dry seedlike fruit produced by the cereal grasses: e.g. wheat, barley, Indian corn. [seed cannot be separated from fruit wall.]
Drupe
fleshy fruit with a stony seed. e.g. Peach
Cambium
formative one-cell-thick layer of tissue between xylem and phloem in most vascular plants that is responsible for secondary growth
Perfect flower
has both male/female reproductive parts.
Pericycle
in plants, the layer of cells just within the endodermis that gives rise to lateral roots.
Cyme
like corymb. but the terminal flowers bloom first.
Papilionaceous
literally, like a butterfly. Zygomorphic. Characteristic of the pea family (Fabaceae).
Silique
long, dry fruit. central septum is inside with seeds attached.
Calyx
made by combining all sepals. protect flower bud.
Region of cell division
meritematic region. protected by rootcap. important since this is the only place of cell division in roots.
Bracts
modified leaves with bright color that serve the same function of petals in attracting pollinators.
Region of maturation
most of the cells of the primary tissues mature. root haris are also produced in this region. (sometimes roothair zone)
Secondary xylem
new xylem cells formed on the surface of the vascular cambium that faces the center of the stem
Irregular flower
not symmetrical or bilateral symmetry.
Fibrous (Diffuse)
numerous roots branch from a central point. No one primary root; all roots approximately the same size.
Solitary
on or two flowers
Axile/Parietal
ovules in center in between septa dividing the ovary; multiple locules; indicates a syncarpous gynoecium.
Endodermis
single layer of cells that form a waterproof seal around a root's vascular tissue; controls the flow of water and dissolved ions into the root. The innermost layer of the cortex in plant roots; a cylinder one cell thick that forms the boundary between the cortex and the vascular cylinder.
Ray flower
small flower with a flat strap-shaped corolla usually occupying the peripheral rings of a composite flower.
Filament
stalk that supports the anther.
Disk flower
the actinomorphic, tubular flowers in Asteraceae; contrasted with flattened, zygomorphic ray flowers. In many asteraceae, the disk flowers occur in the center of the inflorescence, the ray flowers around the margins
Stamen
the male reproductive organ of a flower.
Anther
the part of the stamen that contains pollen.
Xylem
the vascular tissue through which water and nutrients move in some plants
Nut
usually large hard-shelled seed. (require special tools to open)
Phloem
vascular tissue responsible for the transport of nutrients and the carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis
Capsule by sutures
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