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Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

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Page 1: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Botany for Master Gardeners

Kim ConwayTexas AgriLife Extension

Page 2: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Naming Plants

Carl Linneaus (1707-1778)

Binomial nomenclature

Based on flower parts– Family– Genus– Species

Page 3: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Plant Categories

Angiosperms– Monocots– Dicots

Gymnosperms– Conifers

Page 4: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Life Cycles

AnnualsBiennialsPerennials

– herbaceous– woody

Page 5: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Plant Parts & Functions

Sexual– flower

Asexual– leaves– stems– roots

Page 6: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Roots

Primary RootsTaprootLateral RootsFibrous

Page 7: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Roots

KneesButtressed

Aerial

Page 8: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Tuberous Roots

No Nodes

Page 9: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Root Structure

endodermisepidermis

phloem

root hair

pericycle

endodermis

casparian strip

meristem

rootcap

Page 10: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Dic

ot

Root

Dic

ot

Root

Page 11: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Mon

oco

t R

oot

Mon

oco

t R

oot

Page 12: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Stems

SupportVascular SystemBuds

– Leaf Bud– Flower Bud– Terminal– Lateral/Axillary– Adventitious

Leaves

Page 13: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Meristems

Primary Growth – apical meristem or apex

Secondary Growth– Vascular cambium or cambium

Page 14: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Primary Growth - Monocot

epidermis

vascular bundle

phloem

xylem

bundle sheath

Page 15: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Mon

oco

t S

tem

Mon

oco

t S

tem

Page 16: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Primary Growth – dicot or gymnosperm

epidermis

phloem

xylem

pith

cortex

Page 17: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Dic

ot

Ste

mD

icot

Ste

m

Page 18: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Secondary Growth - dicots

periderm

phloem

cambium

xylem

ray

crushed cortex and past year’s phloem

32 1 pith

Page 19: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Modified Stems - Crowns & Stolons

Page 20: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Modified Stems - Spurs

Page 21: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Modified Stems

Bulb

Tuber

Rhizome

Bulb

Corm

Page 22: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Types of Leaves

Scale leavesSeed leavesSpinesThornsTendrilsBrachtsNeedlesSimple

Page 23: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaves

Absorb

sunlight

for photosynthesis

Page 24: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaf LayersLeaf Layers

Page 25: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension
Page 26: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension
Page 27: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Stomates

Page 28: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaf Venation

PinnatePinnatePalmatePalmateParallelParallel

Page 29: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Double Pinnate CompoundDouble Pinnate CompoundPalmate CompoundPalmate CompoundSimpleSimpleLeaf TypesLeaf Types

Pinnate CompoundPinnate Compound

Page 30: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaf Shapes

Linear

Elliptical

Ovate

Lanceolate

Cordate

Page 31: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaf

Typ

es

Leaf

Typ

es

Page 32: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leaf Margins

EntireSinuateCrenateDentateSerrate IncisedLobedCleft

Page 33: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Leave Arrangement

alternate oppositewhorled

whorled

Page 34: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Sexual Plant Parts & Functions

(Flowers)

Page 35: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Parts of the Flower

Petal

Anther

Filament

Sepal

OvuleReceptacle

StigmaStyle

Ovary }Stamen{Pistil

Page 36: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Types of Flowering Plants

Monoecious = 1 House– Corn– Pecan

Dioecious = 2 Houses– Holly– Junipers

Page 37: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Flowers

Complete = Pistil, Stamen, Petal, Sepals

Incomplete = Missing One Perfect = Pistil & Stamen

Page 38: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension
Page 39: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

How Seeds Form

PollinationPollen tubeFertilization

Pollen Germination

Growth of Pollen Tube toward Ovule

Page 40: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Types of Flowers

Solitary - one flower per stemInflorescence - a cluster of flowers

– racemous - indeterminate (flower from the bottom up)

Page 41: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Spike - flowers attached to peduncle - gladiolus

Page 42: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Raceme - individual flowers attached by tiny stems to the peduncle– Bluebonnet

Page 43: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Catkin – Mulberry– birch

Page 44: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Corymb – yarrow

Page 45: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Umbel – – dill, – onion– queen

anne’s lace

Page 46: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Racemous Flowers

Head –– sunflower – daisy

Page 47: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Flower Types

cyme - determinate - flower from the top down - top florets open first– dischasium cyme - baby’s breath– helicoid cyme - freesia– scorpioid - tomato (alternate)

Page 48: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Types of Inflorescence

Page 49: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Fruit

Fruit consists of the fertilized and mature ovules (seeds) and the ovary wall.

Page 50: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Parts of the Fruit

seed

dry fruit(corn) fleshy fruit (peach)

exocarp

mesocarp

endocarp

pericarp

Page 51: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Types of Fruit

Berry

Pepo

Pome

Hesperidium

drupe

pod

aggregate

multiple

Page 52: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Parts of the Seed

testa (seed coat)

hilum

micropyle

dicot seed (bean)

plumule

epicotyl

cotyledon

hypocotyl

radicle

embryo

Page 53: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

Seed Germination

WaterLightHeatOxygen

Page 54: Botany for Master Gardeners Kim Conway Texas AgriLife Extension

The End