endosperm |
= albumen |
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
A genetically triploid (3n chromosomes) nutritive tissue in a seed; containing stored carbohydrate and/or oil utilized by the embryo prior to and especially upon germination; derived from fusion of the two polar nuclei (n + n chromosomes) of the embryo sac with a sperm nucleus from the pollen tube (n chromosomes). See also perisperm. |
vestiture |
|
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
See vesture. |
vesture var. vestiture |
= indumentum |
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
The trichomes and/or exuded substance that overlie a surface proper, regarded collectively. See also coating, pubescence. |
albumen |
= endosperm |
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
A genetically triploid (3n chromosomes) nutritive tissue in a seed; containing stored carbohydrate and/or oil utilized by the embryo prior to and especially upon germination; derived from fusion of the two polar nuclei (n + n chromosomes) of the embryo sac with a sperm nucleus from the pollen tube (n chromosomes). See also perisperm. |
perisperm |
|
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
A genetically diploid (2n chromosomes) nutritive tissue in a seed; containing stored carbohydrate and/or oil utilized by the embryo prior to and especially upon germination; derived from the nucellus. See also endosperm (albumen). |
indument |
|
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
See indumentum. |
indumentum pl. indumenta var. indument |
= vesture |
STRUCTURE / SUBSTANCE |
|
The trichomes and/or exuded substance that overlie a surface proper, regarded collectively. See also coating, pubescence. |
sporangium pl. sporangia |
= spore case |
STRUCTURE |
|
A spore-producing organ; basically capsular, often supported by a slender stalk (sporangiophore), often operculate (lidded). In Bryophyta and Polypodiophyta, a distinct portion of the sporangial wall effects regular dehiscence at maturity. Sporangia or their equivalents are also present, but of little or no descriptive significance, in seed plants. |
taproot |
< primary root |
STRUCTURE |
|
A primary root that remains dominant through the life of the plant as the main axis of a vertically oriented system that penetrates the substrate to a considerable depth. |
seed |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
A mature or ripened ovule containing an embryonic sporophyte and a nutritive tissue (endosperm or perisperm) with stored food that sustains the initial growth of the embryo upon germination, except when such food reserve is stored instead in the cotyledon(s) of the embryo itself, these enclosed by one or two integuments (the testa), the whole serving as a propagule. A fertile seed (one containing a viable embryo) normally results from sexual fertilization of an egg by a sperm; however, fertile seeds are sometimes produced asexually by apomictic processes (e.g., parthenogenesis). |
spermatozoid |
= antherozoid; < sperm |
STRUCTURE |
|
A motile male gamete, produced within an antheridium. |
tuberoid (root-stem) |
= dropper |
STRUCTURE |
|
An axial outgrowth that descends from a bulb and eventually forms a new bulb; esp. in Orchidaceae. |
rosette |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
A set of leaves that are strongly congested and disposed in radial symmetry about the main stem at or very near its base, seeming to arise at the same level and often overlapping laterally; esp. the overwintering leaves of perennial herbs. |
connective |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
The tissue between and joining the laterally opposed thecae of an anther, connecting them with the distal end of the staminal filament when the latter is present. |
inflorescence 2 |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
The basic architectural unit of the flower-producing portion of a plant; comprising one or more flowers, their associated supporting axes (peduncles, main axes, branches and pedicels), if any, and the appendages thereto (bracts, bractlets or bracteoles or prophylls, involucres, involucels, and glumes), if any; delimited by the insertion or gradation of a single peduncle, peduncle cluster, pedicel, pedicel cluster, or sessile flower, as the case may be, directly upon or into some proximal vegetative structure not of one of these types; depending upon the type(s) of flowers included, may be bisexual (all flowers bisexual), staminate (all flowers staminate), pistillate (all flowers pistillate), sterile (all flowers sterile), or mixed (two or more types of flowers present); most appropriately described using nominative terms. |
mesocarp |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
The middle tissue layer of the pericarp of a fruit. |
sucker |
> turion |
STRUCTURE |
|
A shoot arising adventitiously from a root or stem below or at ground level. |
short-shoot |
= spur |
STRUCTURE |
|
A first- or higher-order woody stem branch having relatively unelongated internodes, thus proximate nodes, and limited duration of growth, usually branching little if at all; often a main locus of flower production; usually more or less perpendicular to the axis that bears it and resembling a spur projecting from it; sometimes becoming more or less spinose after elongation ceases; esp. in Rosaceae. |
bracteole 1 |
= bractlet; < bract |
STRUCTURE |
|
A diminutive bract, or a bract that is smaller than others present. |
phylloclade |
= cladode, cladophyll |
STRUCTURE |
|
A stem segment that functions as a leaf; often more or less compressed. |
follicetum pl. folliceta |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
An aggregate of follicles produced from a single flower with multiple simple pistils. |
primocane |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
A biennial or perennial stem before it has begun flowering, when the latter does not occur until at least its second season of growth; esp. in Rubus (Rosaceae). |
aerial root |
> climbing root |
STRUCTURE |
|
A root, adventitious or not, that originates and functions entirely above ground during the normal life cycle of the plant. |
knee 2 |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
An emergent portion of an otherwise normally submerged secondary root of a wetland tree, resembling a bent human knee. |
pappus pl. pappi |
|
STRUCTURE |
|
A set of one or more awns (aristae, bristles, setae) or scales at the summit of an inferior ovary just beneath or outside the free portion of the corolla; persisting in the fruit (cypsela) and often aiding wind or animal dispersal; in Asteraceae (Compositae). Considered by some to be an evolutionarily modified upper calyx portion, the lower portion having been incorporated into the floral tube casing adnate to the ovary wall; considered by others to be an outgrowth from the ovary wall. |