Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
Leaves – Biology - UH PressbooksLeaves are the main sites for photosynthesis: the process by which plants synthesize food. Most leaves are usually green, due to the presence of chlorophyll ...
-
[2]
[PDF] Plant Structures: Leaves - Colorado Master GardenerLeaves, produced on stems, are the principle structure where photosynthesis takes place. Functions. • Capture light for photosynthesis (the manufacture of ...Missing: biology | Show results with:biology
-
[3]
Plant Cell Structure - Leaf Tissue OrganizationNov 13, 2015 · Leaves are the primary photosynthetic organs of plants, serving as key sites where energy from light is converted into chemical energy.Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
- [4]
-
[5]
Vegetative plant parts | OSU Extension ServiceThe principal function of leaves is to absorb sunlight to manufacture plant sugars. This process is called photosynthesis. Leaf surfaces are flattened to ...
-
[6]
[PDF] Plant structure, growth and development - WCJC FacultyWeb– Other function of leaves (leaf modifications). • Tendrils. • Spines. • Storage. • Bracts. • Reproductive leaves (asexual). Page 18. Leaf anatomy (external).Missing: roles | Show results with:roles
-
[7]
The origin and early evolution of vascular plant shoots and leavesDec 18, 2017 · This review discusses fossil, developmental and genetic evidence relating to the evolution of vascular plant shoots and leaves in a phylogenetic framework.
-
[8]
Leaf Morphogenesis: Insights From the Moss Physcomitrium patensSep 23, 2021 · Phyllids, the leaf-like organs of bryophytes such as mosses or leafy liverworts, display a simple morphology, with a small number of cells and ...
-
[9]
[PDF] Bryophyte Divisions - UNCWHydroids have no lignin. • Very slow translocation of water. • Limited distribution in plant. • Mosses can remain dry for a long time,.
-
[10]
Morphology of the LycophytaThe leaves of lycophytes are microphylls. The leaves of other plants are called megaphylls, and they will have multiple or branching veins. It is believed that ...
-
[11]
Seedless Vascular Plants - OpenEd CUNYMicrophylls are seen in club mosses. Microphylls probably preceded the development of megaphylls ("big leaves"), which are larger leaves with a pattern of ...
-
[12]
Seed Plants: Gymnosperms – Introductory BiologyCycads thrive in mild climates and are often mistaken for palms because of the shape of their large, compound leaves. They bear large cones, and unusually for ...
-
[13]
Structure–Function Relationships in Highly Modified Shoots of ...All cacti produce foliage leaves (microscopically small in most) and spines (modified leaves); some also produce glands (modified spines), most have large, thin ...
-
[14]
Dodder / Home and Landscape / UC Statewide IPM Program (UC IPM)Dodder, Cuscuta species, is a parasitic annual plant that infests many crops, ornamentals, native plants, and weeds. More than 150 species occur worldwide, ...
-
[15]
[PDF] Basic Botany - UF/IFAS ExtensionA simple leaf has a single blade; a compound leaf has two or more blades ... • Sessile: lacking a petiole (leaf stalk). • Clasping: petiole or leaf ...
-
[16]
Function | Forage Information System | Oregon State UniversityGrasses are herbaceous (nonwoody) plants with jointed stems, slender, sheathing leaves and flowers borne in spikelets. ... Monocot leaf blades have parallel ...
-
[17]
[PDF] The Shoot System II: The Form and Structure of LeavesLeaves Are Shaped to Capture Light. The Arrangement of Leaf Cells Depends on. Their Functions. Where Do New Leaves Come From? LEAF FORM AND SPECIALIZED LEAVES.Missing: biology | Show results with:biology
-
[18]
plants and their structure ii - An On-Line Biology BookJun 6, 2007 · Leaf phyllotaxy is the pattern exhibited (spiral, opposite, alternate, whorled) of leaf attachment to a stem.
-
[19]
LeavesThe cotyledons of many plants function as storage organs and become large and thick as they absorb the food reserves initially produced as endosperm. These ...
-
[20]
3.4.1: External Structure of Leaves - Biology LibreTextsJul 28, 2025 · Pairs of opposite leaves may face all in the same direction, or each pair can rotate at 90 (decussate). If there are three or more leaves ...
-
[21]
PLB 102 | Lab 1 - UC Davis Plant SciencesThe basic parts of a leaf are the base, the petiole (stalk), and the lamina (blade). The leaf base or petiole base sometimes has small leafy structures attached ...
-
[22]
Biophysical optimality of the golden angle in phyllotaxis - NatureOct 16, 2015 · This value is the golden angle 137.5° giving rise to the main sequence of phyllotaxis αn = 1/3, 2/5, 3/8, 5/13, 8/21, 13/34. The optimum is ...
-
[23]
Phyllotaxy and Fibonacci Sequence: Fascinating Leaf PatternsJun 14, 2025 · The angle between two consecutive leaves in such plants is about 137.5 degrees, which is the golden angle. This trend reduces overlap and ...
-
[24]
Illustrate alternate leaf arrangement and discuss its advantages in ...This pattern creates a spiral configuration along the stem, allowing for maximum exposure to sunlight and reducing the shading of lower leaves. ... Carotenoids ...
-
[25]
Implications of opposite phyllotaxis for light interception efficiency of ...Aug 9, 2025 · A smaller fraction of leaf surface area exposed to the sun at midday reduces light interception and thereby avoids excess irradiance ( ...
-
[26]
Phyllotaxis: is the golden angle optimal for light capture? - StraussJun 29, 2019 · Phyllotactic patterns are some of the most conspicuous in nature. To create these patterns plants must control the divergence angle between ...
-
[27]
Yellow rocket – Barbarea vulgaris - Plant & Pest DiagnosticsErect, hairless and up to 3 feet tall. Stems bolt from a basal rosette to flower and are numerous and branched at the top.
-
[28]
Leaf Structure & Evolution - Digital Atlas of Ancient LifeJun 2, 2020 · Decussate: A common arrangement of opposite leaves, where each leaf pair is perpendicular to the pair above and below it. Thus, leaves form four ...
-
[29]
Leaf Margins: Lobed - Botanic TerminologyMany of the Acer species, like the Hedge Maple shown here, have lobed leaves that provide distinctively identifiable characteristics in the field. ... Small lobes ...
-
[30]
[PDF] Variability of selected leaf traits in European beech (Fagus sylvatica ...Based on our data we can emphasize previous observations, that certain leaf morphological traits, like venation density and fluctuating asymmetry, have a big ...
-
[31]
Raphia regalis - Palmpedia - Palm Grower's GuideIf by largest you mean longest, then the world's largest leaf is the record breaking Raphia regalis whose huge leaves that can reach a record breaking 25.11 ...
-
[32]
Leaf (Chapter 4) - Anatomy of Flowering PlantsNov 2, 2020 · Others have terete (centric or cylindrical) leaves, or hairy leaves, or even rolled or folded (plicate) leaves (Figure 4.14). Thick and ...
-
[33]
Leaf Rolling - an overview | ScienceDirect TopicsLeaf rolling is a plant defense mechanism where leaves curl to reduce water loss, often due to moisture deficits, and can be a drought avoidance mechanism.
-
[34]
Comparative anatomy of leaf petioles in temperate trees and shrubsThe primary function of a petiole is to provide mechanical support to self-hold and adjust leaf position towards the sun, improving light-harvesting ability.
-
[35]
[PDF] Pulvinus-actuated leaf movements - University of WashingtonPulvinus-actuated leaf movements. Pulvini are swollen parts at the base of leaf stalks or petioles which move leaves. Since pulvini can also house mechano- and ...
-
[36]
3.1 Leaves – The Science of PlantsSome leaves have no petiole at all, and are termed sessile. In contrast to the blade-petiole structure, grasses have a sheath-type structure in which the ...
-
[37]
Citrus spp. - Virginia Tech Dendrology Fact SheetLeaf: Alternate, simple, evergreen, entire or toothed, the petioles often winged, aromatic when crushed, dark and shiny above, paler below.
-
[38]
Petiolar Glands in the PlumTrue functional glands are present in the plum in three posi- tions: on the leaf serrations, on the leaf base, and on the petiole.Missing: associations | Show results with:associations
-
[39]
Leaf venation: structure, function, development, evolution, ecology ...Apr 18, 2013 · The design and function of leaf venation are important to plant performance, with key implications for the distribution and productivity of ...
-
[40]
Heterophylly: Phenotypic Plasticity of Leaf Shape in Aquatic and ...Oct 16, 2019 · Many plant species have the ability to alter their leaf shape in response to their surrounding environment. This phenomenon is termed heterophylly.
-
[41]
Genetic Control of Heterochrony in Eucalyptus globulus - PMCA change in the timing or rate of developmental events throughout ontogeny is referred to as heterochrony, and it is a major evolutionary process in plants ...
-
[42]
Analyzing anatomy over three dimensions unpacks the differences ...In addition, a difference in cell shape was observed: while sun leaves palisade cells were shaped capsule-like, shade leaves had more funnel-shaped palisade ...
-
[43]
Ecophysiological Analysis of Leaf Shape - Plant PhysiologyThese leaves are called sun and shade leaves. Compared to shade leaves, sun leaves typically are thicker, have a smaller surface area, have a greater ...
-
[44]
Leaf plasticity across wet and dry seasons in Croton blanchetianus ...Jan 19, 2022 · Croton blanchetianus exhibits seasonal plasticity in leaf structure, presumably to optimize water use efficiency during seasons of water abundance and deficit.
-
[45]
Beyond the Concept of Winter-Summer Leaves of Mediterranean ...May 9, 2019 · The main feature of seasonal dimorphic species is the development of two well-defined leaf cohorts during a growing season, the so-called “ ...
-
[46]
30.4 Leaves – General Biology - UCF PressbooksA waxy layer known as the cuticle covers the leaves of all plant species. The cuticle reduces the rate of water loss from the leaf surface. Below the epidermis ...
-
[47]
Lecture 7 Epidermis - Daniel L. NickrentOct 10, 2022 · Epidermis usually one cell layer thick (Figure), but in some plants a multiple epidermis forms (also called multiseriate epidermis).Missing: variations | Show results with:variations
-
[48]
Cell biology of the leaf epidermis: Fate specification, morphogenesis ...While trichomes and about half of pavement cells develop directly from protodermal cells, stomata result from a multi-stage differentiation program, initiating ...
-
[49]
Leaf hydraulic conductance is linked to leaf symmetry in bifacial ...Leaves with stomata restricted to the lower surface are described as 'hypostomatic', and leaves with stomata distributed across both surfaces are 'amphistomatic ...
-
[50]
[PDF] Leaves And Leaf StructureStomatal Distribution and Leaf ... Amphistomatic leaves, with stomata on both ... hypostomatic leaves, with stomata predominantly on the lower epidermis, strike a.
-
[51]
Unraveling the Complexity of Plant Trichomes: Models, Mechanisms ...Jul 21, 2025 · In terms of their ability to synthesize and secrete metabolites, they can be broadly categorized into non-glandular trichomes (NGTs) and ...
-
[52]
[PDF] Ecophysiology of leaf trichomes - Digital KenyonJun 3, 2016 · Trichomes also play a role in water retention and repellence. 209 ... Levin DA (1973) The role of trichomes in plant defense. Quarterly ...
-
[53]
Trichomes related to an unusual method of water retention and ... - NIHThe non-glandular trichomes on the leaves of L. diamantinana help protect the young organ, particularly against desiccation, by deposition of highly hydrated ...Missing: defense | Show results with:defense
-
[54]
Lecture 20 - Leaves- Variation - Daniel L. NickrentOct 14, 2022 · Mesophyll cells plicate (with folds and ridges) protruding into the lumen of the cell. 6. No palisade parenchyma - only spongy. 7. Resin ...
-
[55]
5.1 Inside Leaves – The Science of PlantsChloroplasts are structures inside plant cells that contain chlorophyll and are the site of light capture during photosynthesis. These are analogous to cortex ...Missing: biology | Show results with:biology
-
[56]
Structural organization of the spongy mesophyll - PMCThe palisade mesophyll is generally located below the upper epidermis and is composed of cylindrically shaped cells oriented perpendicular to the leaf surface.
-
[57]
C4 Carbon Fixation - Soil Ecology WikiMay 10, 2023 · C4 plants exhibit a Kranz-type leaf anatomy involving two photosynthetic cells known as mesophyll cells and bundle sheath cells which differ ...
-
[58]
Lecture 20 Leaves - Basics and Development - Daniel L. NickrentOct 14, 2022 · A typical leaf has an expanded blade and petiole. It has dermal, vascular, and ground systems, with mesophyll and vascular bundles (veins). ...
-
[59]
Structure‐function analysis of the maize bulliform cell cuticle and its ...Oct 30, 2020 · Bulliform cells have a specialized cuticle, which is more water-permeable and may facilitate leaf rolling during dehydration. The cuticle has a ...
-
[60]
structure and function of extrafloral nectaries in Brassica junceaTransverse sections at the point of nectar secretion revealed a pocket-like structure whose opening was surrounded by modified stomatal guard cells.
-
[61]
Diversity of Leaf Glands and Their Putative Functions in ... - PubMedOct 31, 2023 · The extrafloral nectary, secretory cavity, and duct are associated with plant protection against phytophages, either by attracting patrol ants ...
-
[62]
The Optical Properties of Leaf Structural Elements and Their ... - NIHJul 15, 2021 · CaOx crystals on the other hand are distributed among all taxonomic levels of photosynthetic organisms, located in idioblastic cells called ...
-
[63]
Active suppression of a leaf meristem orchestrates determinate leaf ...In Arabidopsis, leaf morphogenesis is initiated at the flanks of the shoot apical meristem (SAM) where leaf primordia develop as flattened lamina with ...
-
[64]
The leaf meristem enigma: The relationship between the plate ...The plate meristem. The plate meristem is characterized by its wide distribution at the base of the leaf blade primordium (Donnelly et al., 1999).
-
[65]
Leaf development: a cellular perspective - PMC - PubMed CentralDifferences in leaf outgrowth are often interpreted as the result of cell division producing a certain number of cells and subsequent cell expansion determining ...
-
[66]
Abscission in plants: from mechanism to applications - PMC - NIHAug 9, 2024 · Abscission refers to the natural separation of plant structures from their parent plants, regulated by external environmental signals or internal factors such ...
-
[67]
Asymmetric leaves1mediates leaf patterning and stem cell function ...AS1 negatively regulates the homeobox genes KNAT1 and. KNAT2 and is, in turn, negatively regulated by the meristematic homeobox gene SHOOT MERISTEMLESS. This ...
-
[68]
The diverse roles of cytokinins in regulating leaf development - NatureJun 1, 2021 · Cytokinins promote cell division and increase cell expansion during the proliferation and expansion stages of leaf cell development, ...
-
[69]
Evolution of a SHOOTMERISTEMLESS transcription factor binding ...Dec 12, 2024 · Capsella fruit shape determination is based on dynamic changes in cell growth and cell division coupled with local maintenance of meristematic identity.
-
[70]
Photosynthesis - The Cell - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHThe reaction center chlorophyll then transfers its high-energy electron to an acceptor molecule in an electron transport chain.
-
[71]
The Light-Dependent Reactions of Photosynthesis - OpenEd CUNYThe electron transport chain moves protons across the thylakoid membrane into the lumen. At the same time, splitting of water adds protons to the lumen, and ...
-
[72]
Photosynthesis - PMC - PubMed Central - NIHOct 26, 2016 · The light reactions occur in the chloroplast thylakoid membrane and involve the splitting of water into oxygen, protons and electrons. The ...
-
[73]
how photosynthesis worksThese pigments transfer the energy of their excited electrons to a special Photosystem II chlorophyll molecule, P680, that absorbs light best in the red region ...
-
[74]
Dark Reactions of Photosynthesis - SERC (Carleton)The dark reactions of photosynthesis (Calvin Cycle) are presented in this learning experience to show where these processes take place in the plant as well ...
-
[75]
Photosynthesis in C3, C4 and CAM plants - Monash UniversityC3, C4 and CAM plants all undertake photosynthesis, but have adapted characteristics to undergo photosynthesis that suit different environments.Missing: dark | Show results with:dark
-
[76]
Photosynthesis - Carbon Reactions - Plant PhysiologyMar 23, 2009 · In C4 plants, the Calvin cycle activity occurs primarily in the bundle sheath cells, whereas PSII activity occurs in the mesophyll cells.
-
[77]
COP1 promotes ABA-induced stomatal closure by modulating the ...COP1 promotes ABA-induced stomatal closure by interacting with and ubiquitinating ABI/HAB and AHG3 phosphatases, triggering their degradation.
-
[78]
Intact leaf gas exchange provides a robust method for measuring the ...Apr 17, 2019 · Intact leaf gas exchange enables time-resolved evaluation of ABA effects on stomatal movements. To monitor abscisic acid (ABA) responses in ...
- [79]
-
[80]
[PDF] Modelling stomatal conductance in response to environmental factorsKey-words: ABA; CO2; humidity; light; temperature. OVERVIEW AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE. Stomata exert control over the fluxes of H2O vapour and CO2 between the ...
-
[81]
Photosynthetic Quantum Yield Dynamics: From Photosystems ... - NIHMaximum quantum yields for C3 leaves were found to be close to 0.093 mol CO2 fixed (Long et al., 1993) or 0.106 mol O2 evolved (Björkman and Demmig, 1987) per ...Missing: CO2 | Show results with:CO2
-
[82]
[PDF] Improving Photosynthetic Efficiency for Greater Yield - RIPE projectJun 7, 2018 · Maximum quantum efficiency of CO2 fixation, or the maximal fractional number of CO2 molecules that can be fixed with the absorption of one ...
-
[83]
[PDF] Photosynthesis: Physiological and Ecological ConsiderationsIn contrast, if C4 leaves are exposed to low O2 con- centrations, the quantum yields for CO2 fixation remain constant at about 0.05 mole of CO2 per mole of ...
-
[84]
Water ascent in trees and lianas: the cohesion-tension theory ... - NIHAug 4, 2016 · The cohesion-tension theory (C-T theory) by Boehm (1893) and Dixon and Joly (1894) postulates that the water ascent in trees is exclusively due ...
- [85]
-
[86]
[PDF] ASCENT OF SAPTranspiration Pull Theory): The theory was put forward by Dixon and Joly in 1894. It was further improved by Dixon in 1914. Therefore, the theory is also named ...
-
[87]
[PDF] Plant responses to rising vapor pressure deficit - Sperry LabFeb 4, 2020 · An abundance of evidence suggests that stomatal conductance declines under high VPD and transpiration increases in most species up until a given ...
-
[88]
Impacts of elevated temperature and vapour pressure deficit on leaf ...Apr 30, 2024 · A new, vapour-phase mechanism for stomatal responses to humidity and temperature. Plant, Cell & Environment 34: 162–178. Pearcy RWE, Mooney ...
-
[89]
[PDF] Plant Adaptations to Dry EnvironmentsXerophytes are plants which are adapted to live in dry conditions. Xeromorphic features are those which minimise water loss from the plant.
-
[90]
[PDF] Adaptations for transport in plants - WJECXerophyte – water is scarce,. e.g marram grass. Thick waxy cuticle reducing water loss by evaporation from epidermal tissue. Sunken stomata increasing humidity ...
-
[91]
[PDF] A Review: Field Crop Physiology - ARC Journals• Cooling: The evaporation of water molecules from the leaves has a cooling effect on plants, like sweating in animals. This is somewhat important in hot ...
-
[92]
[PDF] Wilt it be Productive? - USDA Climate HubsSep 6, 2023 · Transpiration helps to draw up minerals and water through the roots because, as water evaporates from the leaves, it is replaced by other water ...
-
[93]
[PDF] A comprehensive review of crop stress detection: destructive, non ...Sep 5, 2025 · Key impacts of stress on crops and plants due to drought include diminished cell turgor, stomatal closure, and suppressed photosynthetic ...
-
[94]
Plant biomechanics in an ecological contextOct 1, 2006 · In addition, leaves can be repeatedly exposed to dynamic bending and twisting loads from wind, snow, hail, falling debris, and animals, and ...Missing: tearing | Show results with:tearing
-
[95]
Elastic shell theory for plant cell wall stiffness reveals contributions ...Aug 1, 2022 · We conclude that tension resulting from turgor pressure regulates cell stiffness, which can be modified by a slight adjustment of turgor pressure in the order ...Missing: biomechanical | Show results with:biomechanical
-
[96]
Plant cell walls as mechanical signaling hubs for morphogenesisApr 11, 2022 · The intrinsic cause of mechanical stress in a plant cell is turgor pressure, which generates tensile stress in the cell wall. Plant cells and ...Missing: biomechanical | Show results with:biomechanical
-
[97]
Revisiting the relationship between turgor pressure and plant cell ...Dec 16, 2022 · Numerous theoretical and experimental studies suggest that turgor pressure can be both spatially inhomogeneous and actively modulated during morphogenesis.
-
[98]
Vein Distribution on the Deformation Behavior and Fracture ...Jun 30, 2020 · The greater the diameter and the more the number of veins parallel to the tensile direction, the higher the tensile force, tensile strength, and ...Missing: exposed | Show results with:exposed
-
[99]
Which leaf mechanical traits correlate with insect herbivory among ...Dec 28, 2015 · In particular, SLA was strongly correlated with punch strength and work (Table 3). All mechanical traits except work to tear and specific work ...
-
[100]
Leaf fracture properties - PROMETHEUS – ProtocolsThere are three methods widely used to measure leaf fracture properties; (1) Shearing tests, also called scissor, cutting and guillotine tests.<|separator|>
-
[101]
Characterising sclerophylly: Some mechanical properties of leaves ...Aug 9, 2025 · A common leaf characteristic of shrub species growing in Mediterranean-type climates is sclerophylly, a tough and leathery leaf form with ...
-
[102]
[PDF] Ecological variation in leaf biomechanics and its scaling with tissue ...The Mediterranean flora is considered a key example of functional convergence in sclerophylly (Cody & Mooney. 1978; Edwards, Read & Sanson 2000; Read & Sanson.
-
[103]
Chemical Plant Defense Against Herbivores - IntechOpenMar 8, 2017 · Plants also draw upon a complex arsenal of small-molecule chemical defenses including terpenoids, alkaloids, phenylpropanoids, glucosinolates, ...
-
[104]
Plant Protection by Tannins Depends on Defence-Related ...Mar 26, 2024 · Tannins protect plants from herbivores and pathogens with antidigestive and antimicrobial properties, and are regulated by phytohormones for ...
-
[105]
Leaf silicification provides herbivore defence regardless of the ...Mar 24, 2021 · Si deposition in silica cells and at the epidermal cell wall is well-suited for defence against localised, short-term attack by chewing insects ...Missing: spines | Show results with:spines
-
[106]
Plant structural traits and their role in anti-herbivore defenceKey structural traits like spinescence, pubescence, sclerophylly, and raphides protect plants from herbivores, providing important defense.
-
[107]
Nutritional benefits from domatia inhabitants in an ant–plant ...Jan 16, 2014 · Those protective ant–plant mutualisms, in which nutrient flux also occurs between ants ... leaf domatia provide free access to generalists ants.
-
[108]
Nonhost resistance to rust pathogens – a continuation of continuaThe rust fungi (order: Pucciniales) are a group of widely distributed fungal plant pathogens, which can infect representatives of all vascular plant groups.
-
[109]
The Hypersensitive Response to Plant Viruses - MDPIPlant proteins with domains rich in leucine repeats play important roles in detecting pathogens and triggering defense reactions.
-
[110]
Leaf litter chemistry and its effects on soil microorganisms in different ...May 18, 2023 · The leaf litter chemical traits explained up to 72% of soil microorganisms, where lignin was positively correlated with fungi and negatively correlated with ...
-
[111]
Stronger effect of litter quality than micro‐organisms on leaf and root ...Dec 25, 2021 · Litter decomposition is greatly influenced by litter type (i.e. leaf and root), litter quality, microbial community composition and soil ...
-
[112]
Ethylene Role in Plant Growth, Development and SenescenceThe equilibrium between ethylene and auxin is crucial for the regulation of leaf abscission. During leaf senescence, the auxin concentration declined and tissue ...
-
[113]
For a Colorful Life: Recent Advances in Anthocyanin Biosynthesis ...May 9, 2024 · Ethylene signaling, which also promotes fruit coloration, regulates key genes in the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway to adjust anthocyanin ...
-
[114]
What Makes Conifers Retain or Lose Their Needles?Apr 5, 2023 · Evergreen conifers hold onto their needles for the express purpose of survival during the harsh winter conditions and protection during the warming up in the ...
-
[115]
How Trees Survive in Winter | College of Natural Resources NewsFeb 15, 2024 · Their needles have a thick, waxy coating that retains more water than normal leaves. Because of this, most conifer trees maintain their needles ...Missing: retention | Show results with:retention
-
[116]
Winter Adaptations of TreesRetaining needles allows trees to extend the length of the photosynthetic season. It also potentially allows trees to take advantage of winter thaws and, ...
-
[117]
Photoperiod decelerates the advance of spring phenology of ... - OSTIMar 16, 2021 · Photoperiod regulates spring phenology by delaying early leaf‐out and advancing late leaf‐out caused by temperature variations. Based on these ...
-
[118]
Timing of photoperiodic competency causes phenological mismatch ...Plant phenology is expected to be sensitive to climate warming. In boreal trees, spring flush is primarily temperature driven, whereas height growth ...
-
[119]
Wetting mechanism and morphological adaptation; leaf rolling ... - NIHFeb 1, 2022 · Leaf rolling and erect leaf angle in plants prevent leaves from photo-damage, reduce transpiration by reducing leaf area, and boost water use ...
-
[120]
Corn Responses to Drought Stress - Purdue AgronomyOne of the early symptoms of drought stress is leaf rolling by the plants which occurs when leaf transpiration demand is no longer matched by soil moisture ...
-
[121]
Changes in the morphology traits, anatomical structure of the leaves ...Feb 20, 2023 · We show that the leaf thickness, the width, and the leaf length significantly increased at elevated salt concentrations after salt stress for 7 days.
-
[122]
Evaluating physiological responses of plants to salinity stress - NIHHowever, under salinity stress, leaf expansion, associated with changes in leaf anatomy (smaller and thicker leaves), is reduced, resulting in higher ...
-
[123]
The origin and early evolution of vascular plant shoots and leavesDec 18, 2017 · The telome theory of leaf evolution proposed that transformative evolutionary processes of unequal branching (overtopping), rearrangement of ...
-
[124]
Zimmermann's telome theory of megaphyll leaf evolutionAug 6, 2025 · Zimmermann's telome theory speculates that the leaves of seed plants evolved from a three-dimensional lateral shoot branch of early vascular land plants.
-
[125]
Distinct developmental mechanisms for leaves in vascular plantsOct 10, 2006 · Microphylls in lycophytes are hypothesized to have originated as lateral outgrowths of tissue that later became vascularized (the enation theory) ...
-
[126]
Megaphylls, microphylls and the evolution of leaf developmentOriginally coined to emphasize morphological differences, 'microphyll' and 'megaphyll' became synonymous with the idea that vascular plant leaves are not ...
-
[127]
Origins and Evolution of Stomatal Development - PMCFossilized plant cuticles indicate that early land plants could probably respond to changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration by altering stomatal size and ...
-
[128]
Stomata and sterome in early land plants - NatureOct 2, 1986 · Here we report on exceptionally preserved coalified fossils from the basal Devonian of Shropshire which show that Cooksonia also possessed stomata and thick ...
-
[129]
The early evolution of land plants, from fossils to genomics - JournalsApr 19, 2015 · The iconic Cooksonia in particular has served as a starting point in thinking about the evolution of basic organs and tissue systems (e.g. ...
-
[130]
A hidden cradle of plant evolution in Permian tropical lowlandsDec 21, 2018 · Conifer twigs from Jordan bear helically arranged, single-veined needles that are twisted near the base to become flattened into a single ...
-
[131]
Climate–vegetation models bring fossil forests back to life - PNASOct 26, 2021 · In Pennsylvanian times, fossils confirm that forests grew widely across the vast supercontinent of Pangaea, not just is the warm tropics ( ...
-
[132]
Rise to dominance of angiosperm pioneers in European Cretaceous ...This increase in angiosperm diversity happened during the Cretaceous period (ca. 145–65 Ma) and led to replacement and often extinction of gymnosperms and ferns ...
-
[133]
Rosid radiation and the rapid rise of angiosperm-dominated forests... compound leaves and simple leaves showing evidence for derivation from a compound-leaved ancestor” (ref. 39, p. 259). This interval partially coincides with ...
-
[134]
Evolution of Crassulacean acid metabolism in response to the ...Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a mode of photosynthesis that evolved in response to decreasing CO 2 levels in the atmosphere some 20 million years ago.Abstract · Background · CAM under stress · CAM under stress in the...
-
[135]
C4 photosynthesis and climate through the lens of optimality - PNASNov 6, 2018 · Under Oligocene/Miocene climate, northern Africa was arid, but the Tethys sea had not yet closed, and the northwest and the northeast were ...
-
[136]
Why Do Toothed Leaves Correlate with Cold Climates? Gas ...Why Do Toothed Leaves Correlate with Cold Climates? Gas Exchange at Leaf Margins Provides New Insights into a Classic Paleotemperature Proxy. Dana L. Royer and ...
-
[137]
(PDF) Leaf margin analysis: A new equation from humid to mesic ...Aug 5, 2025 · Leaf margin analysis (LMA) is a widely used method that applies present-day linear correlation between the proportion of woody ...
-
[138]
Glossary of Termscordate. Of a leaf or leaflike structure, having a base resembling the lobes of a heart. Many authors also describe heart-shaped structures as being cordate ...
-
[139]
UIPlants: Botanic TerminologyA large woody plant typically with a main trunk. Truncate Leaf base or apex is perpendicular to leaf petiole and relatively straight across. Trunk The main ...
-
[140]
[PDF] C:\Documents and Settings\harding\My Documents\COURSES ...Attenuate Gradually tapering ... Cordate Heart-shaped, usually refers to the base of leaves. ... Oblique Leaf base that is slanted, not equal on each side.
-
[141]
[PDF] Chapter 2. Vegetative morphology of plantsin many plants leaves have been transformed to perform other, ancillary functions. Many plants show in parts of their stem small, reduced leaves called ...Missing: reproduction | Show results with:reproduction
-
[142]
[PDF] Terminology Used in Plant Descriptions - University of Michigan Presshairs, while a tomentose surface is densely hairy. Hairs may have special shapes, such as hooked or stellate (star-shaped). Hairs which point down towards ...
-
[143]
The thermal ecology of flowers - PMC - NIHJun 17, 2019 · Thick leaf pubescence can heat leaves in cool, high-elevation environments by increasing the boundary layer of air adjacent to the leaf and ...
-
[144]
Wood ferns – Inanimate Life - Milne PublishingLeaves emerge in the spring as fiddleheads, exhibiting what is know as 'circinate vernation' i.e. they are coiled and unfurl from the base upwards. The leaves ...
-
[145]
[PDF] Plant and Animal Phenophase DefinitionsANGIOSPERM PHENOPHASE DEFINITIONS. Leaf Phenophases. Initial growth. (Forb) New growth of the plant is visible after a period of no growth (winter or drought),.Missing: terminology | Show results with:terminology
-
[146]
[PDF] REGIONAL-SCALE RELATIONSHIPS OF LEAF AREA INDEX TO ...Specific leaf area (SLA, also known as leaf mass per unit area, specific leaf mass, or leaf specific mass) is defined as the leaf area per unit of dry leaf ...
-
[147]
A Grammatical Dictionary of Botanical LatinB): amplexicaul, amplexicaulous, clasping the stem, as the base of a leaf; the lobes at the leaf base may be superimposed over one another, or fused (connate); ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
-
[148]
Perfoliate - Glossary Details - The William & Lynda Steere HerbariumTitle. Perfoliate ; Definition. Referring to a stem that penetrates two leaf bases that are completely fused together. When two leaf bases wrap around the stem ...
-
[149]
Parallel - UIPlants: Botanic TerminologyVeins run the length of the leaf roughly evenly apart. In some species, the parallel veins join together at the base and apex. Needle-type evergreens and ...
-
[150]
Reticulate - Botanic Terminology(Lonicera tatarica). Leaf Veins: Reticulate. Appearing as a network of fibers or net-like. The term netted venation is also used to describe reticulate venation ...
-
[151]
Leaf venation perfect acrodromous - Steere HerbariumDefinition. Referring to a type of leaf venation in which two or more primary or strongly developed secondary veins arch upward from the base or above the base ...Missing: acrodrome | Show results with:acrodrome