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Practical Botany

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Page 1: Practical Botany

Practical Botany

Page 2: Practical Botany

Learning Objectives

Learn the structures and characteristics of plants.

Understand how plants are named or classified.

Understand the growth processes of plants.

Learn practical applications of botanical knowledge.

Page 3: Practical Botany

The Cell -the basic unit of life

Plant Cell

Page 4: Practical Botany

Vegetative: Roots Stems Buds Leaves

Reproductive: Flowers Fruit Seeds

Major plant parts

Page 5: Practical Botany

Roots Anchor the plant

Absorb water and nutrients

Store sugars from photosynthesis

Need oxygen to break down sugars for growth

Page 6: Practical Botany

Modified Roots

Sweet potatoes Beets

Page 7: Practical Botany

Transport water and nutrients

Site of flower and leaf attachment

Support structure

Stems

Page 8: Practical Botany

Underground Modified Stems

BULBS – ONION, TULIP TUBERS - POTATOModified leavesModified stem

Many bulbs are modified stems

Page 9: Practical Botany

Vegetative bud

Flower bud

Mixed bud

Buds – axillary vs. terminal

Page 10: Practical Botany

Leaves

Page 11: Practical Botany

Simple vs. Compound Leaf*

Page 12: Practical Botany

Arrangement of leaves on a stem

Page 13: Practical Botany

Whorled leaf arrangement

Catalpa Bedstraw (Galium)

Page 14: Practical Botany

Broadleaf flower anatomy

Attract pollinators

Contain reproductive structures

Fruits arise from the mature ovaries

Dioecious vs. monoecious

Pistil

Perfect flower

Page 15: Practical Botany

Monoecious vs. Dioecious

MONOECIOUS DIOECIOUS

Alder Persimmon

Page 16: Practical Botany

Some types of inflorescences

Page 17: Practical Botany

Fruits are enlarged ovaries left after other flower parts drop

Fleshy Drupe (peach) Pome (apple) Berry Achene (strawberry)

Dry Nuts Pods – beans and peas

Fruits – function in seed distribution

Page 18: Practical Botany

Water uptake (imbibition) causes seed to swell

Germination requires: Oxygen Proper temperature

(70-80°F)

Seeds

Page 19: Practical Botany

Naming/Classifying Horticultural Plants

Page 20: Practical Botany

Plant families

Plants within a family have similar characteristics

Helps to narrow the field when identifying plants

Kingdom

Division

Class

Order

Family

Genus

Species

Page 21: Practical Botany

Scientific classification

Genus – close genetically

Species – easily interbreed

Binomialnomenclature

Page 22: Practical Botany

Varieties and Cultivars

Variety – naturally occurring Ex. Brassica oleraceae var. botrytis

(common name: broccoli)

Cultivar – product of plant breeding Ex. Acer platanoides ‘Crimson Sentry’

(common name: Crimson Sentry Norway maple)

Page 23: Practical Botany

Why use scientific names?

Universal

Unambiguous

Everybody knows what you’re talking about.

Chinese elm(Ulmus parvifolia)

Page 24: Practical Botany

Spore-bearing (ferns, mosses, hornworts)

Seed-bearing

Angiosperms

Seed leaves called cotyledons

Other ways plants are classified

Gymnosperms (naked seeds – cone-bearing)

Angiosperms (enclosed seeds – flowering plants)

Monocots (one seed leaf)

Dicots (two seed leaves)

Page 25: Practical Botany

Vascular plants

Most horticultural plants are vascular plants: Stems Leaves Roots Conducting tissues

Page 26: Practical Botany

Non-vascular plants

Bryophytes Liverworts Mosses Hornworts

Marchantia polymorpha

Common weed in nursery production

Page 27: Practical Botany

Monocots vs. Dicots*

Page 28: Practical Botany

Monocots vs. Dicots*

dicotmonocot

Page 29: Practical Botany

Why do we care?

Monocots = grasslike plants

Dicots = broadleaf plants

Selective herbicides

Page 30: Practical Botany

Classification by lifecycle* Annuals – complete their lifecycle in one

growing season

Biennials – require two growing seasons to flower; often sold and cultivated as annuals

Perennials – live for more than two growing seasons Herbaceous perennials Woody perennials

Page 31: Practical Botany

Annuals go through an entire lifecycle in one season

True annuals vs. frost-tender perennials True annuals live through only one lifecycle

regardless of climate Frost-tender perennials are native in climates

with warm winters – they are cultivated as annuals in our cold-winter climate

Winter annuals are grown in mild-winter climates and are planted in fall for winter bloom

Annuals

Page 32: Practical Botany

Require two years to complete their lifecycle

First season growth results in a small rosette of leaves near the soil surface

Second season growth: Stem elongation Flowering Seed formation

Biennials

Digitalis - Foxglove

Page 33: Practical Botany

Plants that live and flower more than two growing seasons Trees and shrubs are woody perennials - go

through a dormant phase each winter Bulbs (ex. Tulips) – leaves yellow and die back

after flowering – sugars are transported to and stored in the bulb for flowering the next growing season

Perennial garden flowers – plants die back to the ground and enter a dormant phase over winter – grow back from the root crown in spring

Grasses – grow from the crown

Perennials

Page 34: Practical Botany

Plant Growth

Page 35: Practical Botany

Cambium (a meristem found only in woody plants)*

Page 36: Practical Botany

Phloem –practical aspectsGIRDLING DISRUPTS PHLOEM TRANSPORT

SYSTEMIC HERBICIDES MOVE THROUGH THE PHLOEM

Page 37: Practical Botany

Photosynthesis

Plants use light + CO2 and water to make sugar.

Sugars are used by the plant for growth or stored.

Page 38: Practical Botany

Translocation

Water and soil nutrients are transported up through xylem.

Sugars are transported through phloem.

Page 39: Practical Botany

Occurs through the phloem tissue

Primary sink = Roots – CHO storage

2nd sink - Developing flowers, fruits, and seeds

3rd sink are growing points called meristems

Source to sink movement

Electron micrograph of a growing point

Page 40: Practical Botany

Root hairs absorb water and nutrients

Cell elongation pushes the root through the soil

Meristem produces new root cells

Roots Tips

Page 41: Practical Botany

Grasses

or spike

Page 42: Practical Botany

Roots need oxygen

Page 43: Practical Botany

Soil compaction

Page 44: Practical Botany

RootingDepthRoot

Hair

Stomate

2CO

Nutrients Absorption

Transpiration

Page 45: Practical Botany

Gas exchange occurs through leaf pores called stomata

CO2 is taken up and O2 is released

Water moving out through stomata keeps leaves cool

Enlarged leaf structure

Stomate

Page 46: Practical Botany

Increase Transpiration

Intense sunlight

Wind

High temperature

Low relative humidity

Page 47: Practical Botany

Plant Development

Page 48: Practical Botany

Stages of Plant Development

Seed germination – Start of life for many plants

Juvenility – Stage of life cycle when plants put on root and shoot growth

Maturity – Flowering and sexual reproduction occurs during this stage

Dormancy - way for plants to survive unfavorable conditions

Senescence – Aging of the plant or its parts

Page 49: Practical Botany

Development ruled by hormones

Auxins (IAA, IBA) – control growth of stems, roots

Cytokinins – work with auxins

Abscisic Acid (ABA) – affects bud growth, and seed, bud dormancy

Gibberellins (GA) – important in seed germination

Ethylene – affects fruit ripening

Page 50: Practical Botany

Germination

MONOCOTYLEDON DICOTYLEDON

Page 51: Practical Botany

Traits of Juvenility

HEDERA HELIX (ENGLISH IVY)

STAYS IN JUVENILE STAGE FOR 10 YEARS!

Leaf form (Ivy)

Growth form (suckers or water sprouts)

Thorns (Locust tree)

Leaf retention (in young trees, ex. oaks)

Juvenile Mature

Page 52: Practical Botany

Juvenile plant parts are easier to propagate

Adventitious roots

Budding

Page 53: Practical Botany

Flowering

HAMNER AND BONNER (1920’S)

PHOTOPERIOD RESPONSE Induction

Cool temperature - vernalization

Night-length (long-day vs. short-day plants)

Initiation Vegetative meristems

change to flower meristems

Development Pollination Fertilization

Page 54: Practical Botany

Self-pollination vs. cross-pollination

Fertilization usually required for fruit development

Exception: Parthenocarpy (produces seedless fruit)

Fertilized ovary becomes the fruit

Pollination and Fertilization

Page 55: Practical Botany

Fruit ripening

Change in fruit color

Softening of the fruit

Change in flavor from sour to sweet

Plant hormone ethylene is involved

Ripening tomato fruit

Page 56: Practical Botany

Senescence

Senescence = aging

Annual plants begin senescence after flowering

Sometimes only part of a plant will senesce

Mediated by ethylene

Fall leaf color caused by senescence of chlorophyll (green) pigments allowing other pigments to show

Page 57: Practical Botany

Slowed or interrupted plant growth

Winter dormancy in cold-winter areas

Dry-season dormancy in Southwest and on coasts

Seeds usually enter a period of dormancy after plant senescence.

Breaking seed dormancy: Cold-moist

stratification Heat Scarification of seed

coat Gibberellins

Seed dormancy

Nicking seed coat 24 hours later

Page 58: Practical Botany

Auxins and Apical Dominance

Page 59: Practical Botany

Response to pruning*

Removing the apical bud release apical dormancy and results in growth of axillary buds below the cut.

Page 60: Practical Botany

Response to pruning*

The effect of heading cuts differs, depending on bud arrangement.

Page 61: Practical Botany

Questions?