Morphology of Flowering Plants Key Notes 2.0

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MORPHOLOGY OF FLOWERING PLANTS


KEYNOTES 2.0
By: Dr. Anand Mani

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Morphology is the study of external forms of organisms.

A flowering plant (Angiosperm) has 2 parts: Root system (underground part) & Shoot system (portion
above the ground).

the root
It is the underground part formed from radicle of embryo.

Root systems are 3 types:

tap root system fibrous root system Adventitious root system

t consists of primary roots


In monocots, primary
(tap root) and its branches
root is short livedand is Roots that arise from
(lateral roots such as
replaced by many roots. parts other than
secondary roots, tertiary
They originate from the radicle.
roots). Seen in dicots. E.g. Grass, Monstera
base of stem to form
Primary root is elongated and banyan tree.
fibrous root system. E.g.
from radicle. E.g. Mustard
Wheat.
plant.

1. regions of root

Root cap: It is the covering at the apex of root. It protects


the tender apex of the root.

Region of meristematic activity: Seen above the root cap.


Here, the cells are very small, thin-walled and with dense
protoplasm. They divide repeatedly.

Region of elongation: Region just above the meristematic


region. Here, cells undergo rapid elongation and enlargement.
Helps in growth of the root in length.

Region of maturation: It is proximal to elongation zone. Here,


the cells differentiate and mature.
Root hairs: Very fine, delicate, thread-like structures formed from epidermal cells in region behind
region of elongation. They absorb water and minerals from the soil.

2. Modifications of root

In some plants, roots are modified to perform functions other than absorption and
conduction. E.g.

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1
Swollen roots

2
for food storage: Prop roots:
E.g. Tap roots of Hanging
carrot, turnips structures that
and adventitious support banyan
roots tree.
of sweet potato.

4
Pneumatophores: The
Stilt roots: The roots that come out of

3
supporting roots the ground and grow
coming out of the vertically upwards to
lower nodes of the get oxygen for
stem. E.g. maize & respiration. E.g.
sugarcane. Rhizophora growing in
swampy areas.

3. functions of root
Absorption of water and minerals from the soil.

Provide a proper anchorage to the plant parts.

Storage of reserve food material.

Synthesis of plant growth regulators.

the stem
It is the ascending part of the axis that develops from
the plumule of the embryo of a germinating seed.

It bears branches, leaves, flowers, fruits, buds


(terminal or axillary), nodes and internodes.

Nodes are the regions of the stem where leaves are


born. Internodes are the portions between two nodes.

Young stem is generally green and later often


become woody and dark brown.

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1. functions of stem

Spreading out branches bearing leaves, flowers and fruits.

It conducts water, minerals and photosynthates.

Food storage, support, protection & vegetative propagation.

2. modifications of stem

For food storage: E.g. underground stems of potato, Stolon: Slender lateral branch that arises from the
ginger, turmeric, zaminkand, Colocasia etc. They also base of the main axis and after growing aerially
act as organs of perennation to tide over conditions for some time arch downwards to touch the
unfavorable for growth. ground. E.g. mint & jasmine.

Stem tendrils: Slender and spirally coiled structures Offset: It is a lateral branch with short internodes
formed from axillary and each node bearing a rosette of leaves and a
buds. They help plants to climb. E.g. Gourds (cucumber, tuft of roots . E.g. aquatic plants like Pistia and
pumpkins, watermelon) & grapevines. Eichhornia.

Thorns: Woody, straight and pointed structures Sucker: The lateral branches that originate from
developed from axillary buds. They protect plants from the basal underground part of the main stem. It
browsing animals. E.g. Citrus, Bougainvillea. grows horizontally beneath the soil and come out
obliquely upward giving rise to leafy shoots. E.g.
Phylloclade: It is a green, flattened or fleshy cylindrical Banana, Pineapple & Chrysanthemum. Underground
stem containing chlorophyll for photosynthesis. Found stems of grass, strawberry etc. spread to new
in some plants of arid regions. E.g. Opuntia (flattened niches. When older parts die, new plants are
stem), Euphorbia (cylindrical stem). formed.

the leaf
It is a lateral, flattened structure borne on the stem.
It develops at the node and bears a bud in its axil.
The axillary bud later develops into a branch.
Leaves originate from shoot apical meristems and are
arranged in an acropetal order.
They are important vegetative organs for photosynthesis.

A typical leaf has 3 main parts:

Leaf base: With this, the leaf is


attached to stem. It may bear Petiole: It helps to hold the
two lateral leaf-like structures Lamina (leaf blade): The green
leaf blade to light. Long thin expanded part with veins &
called stipules. In monocots, the flexible petioles veinlets. The middle prominent
leaf base expands into a sheath allow leaf blades to flutter in vein is called midrib. Veins provide
covering the stem partially or wind, thereby cooling leaf and rigidity to lamina and act as
wholly. In some leguminous bringing fresh air to leaf channels of transport for water,
plants, the leaf base may be surface. minerals & food materials
swollen. It is called pulvinus.

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1. venATION

It is the arrangement of veins and veinlets in leaf lamina.

It is 2 types:

Reticulate venation: Here, Parallel venation: Here, the


the veinlets form a veins run parallel to each
network. It is seen in other within a lamina. It is
dicotyledons. seen in monocotyledons.

2. types of leaves

Simple leaf: Here, leaf lamina is entire or when incised,


the incisions do not touch the midrib.

Compound leaf: Here, the incisions of the lamina reach


up to the midrib breaking it into several leaflets.

A bud is seen in the axil of petiole in simple & compound


leaves, but not in the axil of leaflets of the compound
leaf. The compound leaves are 2 types.

Pinnately compound leaf: In Palmately compound leaf: In


this, many leaflets are present this, leaflets are attached at
on a common axis, the rachis, a common point (at the tip
which represents the midrib of of petiole). E.g. silk cotton.
the leaf. E.g. neem.

3. phyllotaxy
It is the pattern of arrangement of
leaves on the stem or branch.

It is 3 types:
at t t

1 2
Alternate: In this, Opposite: In this,

3
a pair of leaves Whorled: In this,
a single leaf arises more than two
at each node in arise at each node leaves arise at a
alternate manner. and lie opposite to node and form a
E.g. China rose, each other. E.g. whorl. E.g.
mustard & Calotropis and Alstonia.
sunflower. guava.

4. modification of leaves
Leaves are modified to perform functions other than photosynthesis.

In plants such as Australian acacia, the leaves are small and short-lived.
The petioles in these plants expand, become green and synthesise food.

Leaves of some insectivorous plants (e.g. pitcher plant, Venus-fly trap)


are also modified leaves.
leaf tendrils peaplant
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the flower and the inflorescence
A flower is a modified shoot wherein the shoot apical
meristem changes to floral meristem.

Internodes do not elongate and the axis gets condensed.

The apex produces different kinds of floral appendages


laterally at successive nodes instead of leaves.

When a shoot tip transforms into a flower, it is solitary.

The arrangement of cluster of flowers on the floral axis


is called inflorescence.

Based on whether the apex gets converted into a


flower or continues to grow, inflorescences are 2 types:
Racemose and Cymose.

Cymose: In this, main axis


Racemose: In this, the main axis terminates in a flower,
continues to grow. Flowers are
borne laterally in an acropetal hence is limited in growth.
succession. Flowers are borne in a
basipetal order.

1. the flower

It is the reproductive unit in the angiosperms.

It is meant for sexual reproduction.

A flower has a stalk (pedicel). Its swollen end is called thalamus (receptacle).

Reduced leaf found at the base of the pedicel is called bracts. Flowers with
bracts are called bracteate and those without bracts, ebracteate.

A typical flower has 4 kinds of whorls arranged on thalamus- calyx, corolla,


androecium & gynoecium.

Calyx & corolla are accessory organs, while androecium and gynoecium are
reproductive organs.
In flowers like lily, the calyx and corolla are not distinct. It is termed as perianth.

When a flower has both androecium and gynoecium, it is bisexual. A flower having
either only androecium or only gynoecium is unisexual.

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based on symmetry, flowers are 3 types:

Actinomorphic (radial Zygomorphic (bilateral Asymmetric (irregular): Here,


symmetry): Here, a flower can symmetry): Here, a flower a flower cannot be divided
be divided into 2 equal radial can be divided into two into two similar halves by
halves in any radial plane similar halves only in a any vertical plane passing
passing through the centre. particular vertical plane. through the centre. E.g.
E.g. mustard, datura, chilli. E.g. pea, gulmohur, bean, canna.
Cassia.

based on number of floral appendages, flowers are classified as follows:

1 2 3
Tetramerous: Pentamerous:
Trimerous: Floral Floral Floral
appendages are appendages appendages
multiple of 3. are multiple are multiple of
of 4. 5

based on the position of calyx, corolla and androecium in


respect of the ovary on thalamus, the flowers are 3 types:

Perigynous: Here, Epigynous: Here, the


Hypogynous: Here, gynoecium is situated margin of thalamus
gynoecium occupies the in the centre and grows upward enclosing
highest position while other parts are the ovary completely
and getting fused with
other parts are situated located on the rim of
it. Other parts arise
below it. The ovary is the thalamus at the above the ovary. The
superior. E.g. mustard, same level. Ovary is ovary is inferior. E.g.
China rose & brinjal. half inferior. E.g. plum, Guava, cucumber, ray
rose, peach. florets of sunflower

2. parts of a flower
a. calyx

It is the outermost whorl of flower. It is made of sepals.

Generally, sepals are green, leaf like and protect the flower in
the bud stage.

The calyx may be gamosepalous (sepals united) or


polysepalous (sepals free).

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b. corolla

It is the whorl inner to calyx. It is composed of petals.

Petals have bright colour to attract insects for pollination.

Corolla may be gamopetalous (petals united) or polypetalous (petals free).

Shape and colour of corolla vary in plants. Corolla may be tubular, bell-shaped,
funnel-shaped or wheel-shaped.

The mode of arrangement of sepals and petals in floral bud is called aestivation.

3. types of aestivation

Valvate: Sepals or petals in a whorl just touch one another at


the margin, without overlapping. E.g. Calotropis.

Twisted: One margin of the appendage overlaps that ofthe


next one and so on. E.g. China rose, lady’s finger & cotton.

Imbricate: Margins of sepals or petals overlap one another but


not in any particular direction. E.g. Cassia & gulmohur.

Vexillary (papilionaceous): In pea & bean flowers, there are


five petals; the largest (standard) overlaps the two lateral
petals (wings) which in turn overlap the two smallest anterior
petals (keel). This is called vexillary.

c. androecium

The male reproductive part composed of stamens.

Each stamen represents the male reproductive organ. It consists of


a stalk (filament) and an anther.

Each anther is usually bilobed. Each lobe has 2 chambers, the pollen-
sacs.

The pollen grains are produced in pollen-sacs.

A sterile stamen is called staminode.

When stamens are attached to petals, they are epipetalous. E.g.


brinjal. When stamens are attached to perianth they are epiphyllous.
E.g. lily If the stamens are free, it is called polyandrous.

If they are united it is called synandrous. It is many types:

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Polyadelphous: Stamens

1 2 3
Monoadelphous: Diadelphous: are united into more
Stamens are Stamens are than two bundles. E.g.
united into one united into citrus. There may be a
bunch or one two bundles. variation in the length
bundle. E.g. China E.g. pea. of filaments within a
rose. flower. E.g. Salvia and
mustard.

d. gynoecium (pistil)

The female reproductive part made up of one or more carpels. A carpel has
3 parts:

Stigma: It is the receptive surface Marginal: Here, the placenta forms


a ridge along the ventral suture of
for pollen grains. It is usually at
the ovary and the ovules are borne
the tip of the style.
on this ridge forming two rows. E.g.
pea.

Style: An elongated tube that


connects ovary to stigma. Axile: Here, the placenta is axial
and the ovules are attached to it in
a multilocular ovary. E.g. China
Ovary: It is the enlarged basal rose, tomato and lemon.
part on which the style lies. Each
ovary bears one or more ovules
attached to a flattened, cushion- Parietal: Here, the ovules develop
like placenta. Polycarpellary on the inner wall of the ovary or
on peripheral part. Ovary is one
pistils (pistil with many carpels)
chambered but it becomes two-
are 2 types: chambered due to the formation of
the false septum. E.g. mustard and
Argemone.
Apocarpous: Carpels are free. E.g.
lotus and rose.
Basal: Here, placenta develops at
the base of ovary and a single
ovule is attached to it. E.g.
Syncarpous: Carpels are fused. sunflower, marigold.
E.g. mustard and tomato.
Free central: Here, ovules are
borne on central axis and septa are
absent. E.g. Dianthus and Primrose.
Placentation: It is the arrangement
After fertilisation, the ovules
of ovules on the placenta within develop into seeds and the ovary
the ovary. It is many types : matures into a fruit.

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THE FRUIT
It is a ripened ovary developed after fertilisation.

It is a characteristic feature of the flowering


plants.

If a fruit is formed without fertilisation of the


ovary, it is called a parthenocarpic fruit.

In mango & coconut, fruit is called a drupe. They


are one seeded and develop from monocarpellary
superior ovaries.

A fruit consists of

Pericarp (fruit wall): It may be dry or Seeds: In mango, the pericarp is well
fleshy. When pericarp is thick and differentiated into thin epicarp, fleshy
fleshy, it is differentiated into outer edible mesocarp and stony hard
epicarp, middle mesocarp and inner endocarp. In coconut, the mesocarp is
endocarp. fibrous.

THE seed
It is the mature ovule developed after fertilisation.

A seed is made up of a seed coat and an embryo.

Embryo is made up of a radicle, an embryonal axis and


one (e.g. wheat, maize) or 2 cotyledons (e.g. gram & pea).

1. structure of dicotyledonous seed


The outermost covering of a seed is the seed coat.

Seed coat has 2 layers: outer testa and inner tegmen.

The hilum is a scar on the seed coat through which the developing
seeds were attached to the fruit.

Above the hilum is a small pore called the micropyle.

Within the seed coat is the embryo, consisting of an embryonal


axis and two cotyledons.

The cotyledons are often fleshy and full of reserve food materials.
At the two ends of the embryonal axis are present the radicle and
the plumule.

In some seeds such as castor, the endosperm is formed due to


double fertilisation. It is a food storing tissue.

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In plants such as bean, gram and pea, the seeds are non-
endospermous (endosperm is not seen in mature seeds).

2. structure of monocotyledonous seed


Generally, monocot seeds are endospermic but some are non-
endospermic (e.g. orchids).

In cereals such as maize, the seed coat is membranous and


generally fused with the fruit wall.

The endosperm is bulky and stores food.

The outer covering of endosperm separates the embryo by a


proteinous layer called aleurone layer.

The embryo is small and situated in a groove at one end of the


endosperm. It consists of one large and shield shaped cotyledon
known as scutellum and a short axis with a plumule and a radicle.

The plumule is protected in a sheath called coleoptile and radicle


is protected in a sheath called coleorhiza.

SEMI TECHNICAL DESCRIPTION OF A TYPICAL


FLOWERING PLANT
The plant is described beginning with its habit,
vegetative characters and then floral characters.

Then a floral diagram and a floral formula are


presented.

Floral formula is represented by some symbols.


They are

C (corolla)
K (calyx)
G (Gynoecium)
A (androecium)
Br (bracteates)
(inferior ovary)
P (perianth) 9
(female)
G (superior ovary) F
(male)
or
(bisexual)

(zygomorphic)
I
(actinomorphic)

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Fusion is indicated by enclosing the figure within bracket and
adhesion by a line drawn above the symbols of the floral parts.

A floral diagram gives information about the number of parts of a


flower, their arrangement and relation.

Floral formula also shows cohesion and adhesion within parts of


whorls and in between whorls.

SOME IMPORTANT FAMILIES


1. fabaceae

This family was earlier called Papilonoideae, a subfamily of family


Leguminosae. It is distributed all over the world.

Vegetative Characters:

Trees, shrubs, Stem: Leaves: alternate, pinnately


herbs; root erect or compound or simple; leaf
with root climber base, pulvinate; stipulate;
nodules venation reticulate

Floral characters:

Inflorescence: racemose.

Flower: bisexual, zygomorphic.

Calyx: sepals five, gamosepalous; imbricate aestivation.

Corolla: petals five, polypetalous, papilionaceous, consisting of a


posterior standard, two lateral wings, two anterior ones forming
a keel (enclosing stamens and pistil), vexillary aestivation.

Androecium: ten, diadelphous, anther dithecous.

Gynoecium: ovary superior, mono carpellary, unilocular with many


ovules, style single.

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Fruit: legume; seed: one to many, non-endospermic

Floral Formula: K(5) C1+2+(2) A(9)+1 G


L
Pulses: E.g. gram, arhar, sem, moong, soyabean o Edible oil: E.g.
soyabean, groundnut

Dye: E.g. Indigofera

Fibres: E.g. sun hemp

Fodder: E.g. Sesbania, Trifolium

Ornamentals: E.g. lupin, sweet pea

Medicine: E.g. muliathi

2. Solanaceae (Potato family)


It is a large family. It is widely distributed in tropics, subtropics
and even temperate zones.

Vegetative Characters

Plants mostly, herbs, shrubs and


small trees.

Stem: herbaceous rarely woody,


aerial; erect, cylindrical, branched,
solid or hollow, hairy or glabrous,
underground stem in potato
(Solanum tuberosum).

Leaves: alternate, simple, rarely


pinnately compound, exstipulate;
venation reticulate.

Floral Characters

Inflorescence: Solitary, axillary or cymose as in Solanum

Flower: bisexual, actinomorphic

mCalyx: sepals five, united, persistent, valvate aestivation o

Corolla: petals five, united; valvate aestivation

Androecium: stamens five, epipetalous


CA

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Gynoecium: bicarpellary, syncarpous; ovary superior, bilocular,
placenta swollen with many ovules o Fruits: berry or capsule

Seeds: many, endospermous

T
Floral Formula: K(5) C(5) A(5) G(2) o

economic importance:

Food: E.g. tomato, brinjal, potato

Spice: E.g. chilli

Medicine: E.g. belladonna, ashwagandha. o Fumigatory: E.g. tobacco.

Ornamentals: E.g. petunia.

3. Lilaceae (Lily family)


A characteristic representative of monocotyledonous plants. It is
distributed worldwide.

Vegetative Characters

Perennial herbs with underground bulbs/corms/ rhizomes

Leaves mostly basal, alternate, linear, exstipulate with parallel


venation

Floral Characters

Inflorescence: solitary / cymose; often umbellate clusters


8
Flower: bisexual; actinomorphic

Perianth tepal six (3+3), often united into tube; valvate aestivation

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Androcium: stamen six, (3+3)

Gynoecium: tricarpellary, syncarpous, ovary superior,


trilocular with many ovules; axile placentation o Fruit:
capsule, rarely berry

Seed: endospermous

Floral Formula: P3+3 A3+3 G (3)

economic importance:

Ornamentals: E.g. tulip, Gloriosa

Medicine: E.g. Aloe

Vegetables: E.g. Asparagus

Colchicines: E.g. Colchicum autumnale

Additional Points

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