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Atlantic and
Mediterranean. He noted that some flowers bear petals whereas others do
not, and observed the different relative positions of the petals and
ovary. In his work on propagation and germination, he described the
various ways in which specific plants and trees can grow: from seeds,
from roots, from pieces torn off, from a branch or twig, or from a small
piece of cleft wood. |
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Tradescant,
John (1570–c. 1638) English gardener and botanist who
traveled widely in Europe. He was appointed gardener to King Charles I
and was succeeded by his son, John Tradescant the Younger
(1608–1662), who undertook three plant-collecting trips to Virginia in
North America. The Tradescants introduced many new plants to Britain,
including the acacia, lilac, and occidental plane. Tradescant senior is
generally considered the earliest collector of plants and other
natural-history objects.
Linnaeus
named the genus Tradescantia (the spiderworts) after the younger
Tradescant. |
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In 1604 the
elder Tradescant became gardener to the Earl of Salisbury, who in 1610
sent him abroad to collect plants. In 1620 he accompanied an official
expedition against the North African Barbary pirates and brought back to
England gutta-percha and various fruits and seeds. Later, when he became
gardener to Charles I, Tradescant set up his own garden and museum in
London. In 1624 he published a catalogue of 750 plants grown in his
garden. |
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Van Tiegheim,
Phillipe (1839–1914) French botanist and biologist who defined the
plant as having three distinct parts—the stem, the root, and the
leaf—and studied the origin and differentiation of each type of plant
tissue. His best known research included studies of the gross anatomy of
the phanerogams (an obsolete term for gymnosperms and angiosperms) and
the cryptogams (lower plants, such as mosses and ferns). |
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Warming,
Johannes Eugenius Bülow (1841–1924) Danish botanist whose pioneering
studies of the relationships between plants and their natural
environments established plant ecology as a new discipline within
botany. He investigated the relationships between plants and various
environmental conditions, such as light, temperature, and rainfall, and
attempted to classify types of plant communities (he defined a plant
community as a group of several species that is subject to the same
environmental conditions, which he called ecological factors). In
Plantesamfund/Oecology of Plants (1895) he formulated a program for
future research into the subject. |
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Williamson,
William Crawford (1816–1895) English botanist, surgeon, zoologist,
and paleontologist who was regarded as one of the founders of modern
paleobotany. His research included work on deep-sea deposits, protozoans
(single-celled animals), and lower plants such as ferns and mosses. He
showed that not all plant fossils containing secondary wood were
necessarily seed plants (gymnosperms and angiosperms), but that some
were spore-bearing. |
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abscissin,
or abscissic acid,
plant hormone found in all higher plants. It is involved in the
process of
abscission
and also inhibits stem elongation, germination of seeds, and the
sprouting of buds. |
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abscission
the controlled separation of part of a plant from the main plant
body—most commonly, the falling of leaves or the dropping of fruit
controlled by
abscissin. |
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achene
dry, one-seeded
fruit
that develops from a single ovary and does not split open to disperse
the seed. Achenes commonly occur in groups—for example, the fruiting
heads of buttercup Ranunculus and clematis. The outer surface may
be smooth, spiny, ribbed, or tuberculate, depending on the species. |
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after-ripening
process undergone by the seeds of some plants before germination can
occur. The length of the after-ripening period in different species may
vary from a few weeks to many months. |
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androecium
male part of a flower, comprising a number of
stamens. |
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anemophily
type of
pollination
in which the pollen is carried on the wind. Anemophilous flowers are
usually unscented, have either very reduced petals and sepals or lack
them altogether, and do not produce nectar. |
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angiosperm
flowering plant in which the seeds are enclosed within an ovary,
which ripens into a fruit. |
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annual plant
plant that completes its life cycle within one year, during which
time it germinates, grows to maturity, bears flowers, produces seed, and
then dies. |
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anther
in a flower, the terminal part of a stamen in which the
pollen
grains are produced. It is usually borne on a slender stalk or filament,
and has two lobes, each containing two chambers, or pollen sacs, within
which the pollen is formed. |
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antheridium
organ producing the male gametes, antherozoids, in bryophytes
(mosses and liverworts), and lower vascular plants (ferns, club mosses,
and horsetails). |
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archegonium
female sex organ found in bryophytes (mosses and liverworts), lower
vascular plants (ferns, club mosses, and horsetails), and some
gymnosperms. |
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auxin
plant hormone that promotes stem and root growth in plants. Auxins
influence many aspects of plant growth and development, including cell
enlargement, inhibition of development of axillary buds,
tropisms,
and the initiation of roots. |
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axil
upper angle between a leaf (or bract) and the stem from which it
grows. Organs developing in the axil, such as shoots and buds, are
termed axillary, or lateral. |
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bark
protective outer layer on the stems and roots of woody plants,
composed mainly of dead cells. |
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berry
fleshy, many-seeded
fruit
that does not split open to release the seeds. The outer layer of
tissue, the exocarp, forms |
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