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Northwest Indian College

Welcome to Northwest Plants. Northwest Indian College. ENVS 201 Spring Quarter 2012. Plant Parts. reproductive organs & structures:. vegetative organs:. flowers. stems. fruits. roots. seeds. leaves. Today: Leaves. Leaf Features & Functions. primary photosynthetic organs

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Northwest Indian College

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  1. Welcome to Northwest Plants Northwest Indian College • ENVS 201 Spring Quarter 2012

  2. Plant Parts reproductive organs & structures: vegetative organs: flowers stems fruits roots seeds leaves

  3. Today: Leaves

  4. Leaf Features & Functions • primary photosynthetic organs • may store food (in some species) • may shade neighboring competitor species • etc.

  5. Leaf Components • blade (lamina) • petiole (or leaf stalk) • stomata & guard cells • trichomes (hairs; e.g., stinging nettle and sundew)

  6. bean (Phaseolus) leaf (a simple leaf)

  7. lilac (Syringa) leaf, lower surface (showing stomata and guard cells)

  8. lilac (Syringa) trichome

  9. Leaf Types • simple (a single blade; e.g., bean), or • compound (more than one blade; several leaflets make up the compound leaf)

  10. Compound Leaves • pinnate (or pinnately compound; with odd or even number of leaflets; like a feather) • bipinnate (or bipinnately, or twice pinnately compound) • palmate (or palmately compound; like the palm of a hand) • ternate (or ternately compound; in 3s)

  11. ash (Fraxinus) leaf (odd pinnately compound)

  12. honey locust (Gleditsia) leaf (bipinnately compound)

  13. horsechestnut (Aesculus) leaf (palmately compound)

  14. clover (Trifolium) leaf (ternate)

  15. Leaf Arrangement on Stem • alternate (one leaf per node) • opposite (two leaves per node) • whorled (three or more leaves per node)

  16. paper birch (Betula), alternate leaf arrangement

  17. highbush cranberry (Viburnum), opposite leaf arrangement

  18. tobacco tree (Catalpa), whorled leaf arrangement

  19. Leaf Venation • reticulate (or netted, or netlike); may be palmate (e.g., maple) or pinnate (e.g., poplar) • parallel (e.g., grasses) • dichotomously branched (e.g., ferns and ginkgo or maidenhair tree)

  20. cleared leaf showing reticulate venation

  21. maple (Acer) leaf (palmate venation)

  22. chokecherry (Prunus) leaves (pinnate venation)

  23. corn (Zea) leaves (parallel venation)

  24. ginkgo (Ginkgo) leaf (dichotomously branched venation)

  25. deer fern (Blechnum): a. free (some dichotomous) venation in sterile pinna, b. netted venation of fertile pinna

  26. Leaf Shapes • circular (circle-shaped) • heart (heart-shaped) • lanceolate (long and tapering) • linear (long, narrow, parallel sides) • etc.

  27. Leaf Margins • entire (smooth) • wavy • serrate (with sharp teeth) • doubly serrate (larger teeth with smaller teeth) • lobed (with lobes) • etc.

  28. Leaf Tips • acute (tapering to a straight point) • obtuse (non-pointed, rounded) • aristate (with a stiff bristle tip) • cuspidate (with an abrupt, short, sharp rigid tip) • etc.

  29. Leaf Bases • truncate (cut off squarely) • sagittate (arrow-shaped) • stipulate (with stipules) • sessile (no petiole) • etc.

  30. Leaf Surfaces • “top” (adaxial) • “bottom” (abaxial)

  31. Surface Features • glabrous (smooth) • pubescent (with trichomes, hairy) • glandular (with glandular trichomes) • glaucous (with a waxy, whitish to bluish coating) • etc.

  32. Ecological Adaptations • xerophytes (plants adapted to arid conditions, with accompanying leaf adaptations; e.g., spines in cacti) • mesophytes (typical plants with typical leaves) • hydrophytes (plants adapted to aquatic conditions, with accompanying leaf adaptations; e.g., leaf dimorphism)

  33. Other Stuctures & Modifications • bracts (leaflike structures) • tendrils (modified leaflets; also stipules, petioles or stems) • spines (usually a modified leaf, leaf portion or stipule; e.g., cacti; Opuntia also has glochids) • various modifications (e.g., insectivorous plants)

  34. bunchberry (Cornus) bracts (white)

  35. pea (Lathyrus) tendril (modified leaflet)

  36. cactus (Opuntia) spines and glochids (small detachable hair-like spines) in areoles (highly specialized branches of cacti)

  37. Venus’ flytrap (Dionaea) traps (with prey)

  38. sundew (Drosera) (with sticky hairs)

  39. butterwort (Pinguicula)

  40. pitcher plant (Sarracenia)

  41. bladderwort (Utricularia) with bladders

  42. Questions & Comments?

  43. Leaves are cool.

  44. Hy’shqe!

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