from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Leaf_morphology_no_title.png
Category Archives: botànica
Leaves
Tree Adoptions
1 | Arbutus unedo | Carla Aguilera | |
2 | Broussonetia papyrifera | Silvia Barbany | |
3 | Celtis australis | Leyla Boulaich | |
4 | Cercis siliquastrum | Zilahy Bueno | |
5 | Chamaerops humilis | Javier Carmona | |
6 | Diospyros kaki | Josué Chicano | |
7 | Dracaena drago | Sergio Fernández | |
8 | Eleagnus angustifolia | Victoria Ferrer | |
9 | Erythrina crista-galli | Javier Gallego | |
10 | Eucalyptus camaldulensis | Tracy García | |
11 | Ficus carica | Patricia Garrido | |
12 | Fraxinus angustifolia | María Gómez | |
13 | Jacaranda mimosifolia | Ester González | |
14 | Melia azerdarach | Alex Gonzalo | |
15 | Morus alba | Raisa Hernández | |
16 | Olea europaea | Anabel Hernández | |
17 | Pinus halepensis | Zoe Martín | |
18 | Platanus x hispanica | Carlota Puente | |
19 | Phoenix canariensis | Lizeth Reascos | |
20 | Phoenix dactylifera | Melisa Recalde | |
21 | Phytolacca dioica | María Rodríguez | |
22 | Punica granatum | Miguel Rodríguez | |
23 | Quercus suber | Alba Rodríguez | |
24 | Quercus ilex | Andrés Sillo | |
25 | Sophora japonica | Jeraldin Toro | |
26 | Tamarix gallica | Hongjun Xia | |
27 | Taxodium distichum | Jonathan Yépez | |
28 | Tipuana tipu | ||
29 | Washingtonia robusta |
One leaf, many leaves!
How are the leaves grouped on the branches? groupings.doc
Venation : venation.doc
Common leaves shapes: leaf-shapes.doc
Leaf-margins: leaf-margins.doc
Leaf-traits: leaf-traits.doc
Thanks to Carla, Patricia and Maria !
Exploring the secret life of trees
Exploring the secret life of trees
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/trees2/19.html
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/trees2/index2.html
Parts of a tree
A tree is made up of the crown, heartwood, cambium, xylem, phloem, bark and roots.
A tree is a woody plant that usually is more than 10 feet tall and has one main stem. Although trees come in different shapes and sizes, most have the same basic parts. Each of these parts – from the highest leaves in the crown to the tiny root hairs buried in the soil – plays an important role in the tree’s function and survival.
The crown of the tree is made up of the leaves and branches.
The trunk of the tree supports the crown and serves as a highway for food made in the leaves to travel to the roots and for water and nutrients from the roots to travel to the leaves.
The heartwood of the tree develops as the tree gets older. It is old sapwood that no longer carries sap and gives the trunk support and stiffness. In many kinds of trees, the heartwood is a darker color than the sapwood, since its water-carrying tubes get clogged up.
The cambium is a layer or zone of cells, one cell thick, inside the inner bark. The cambium produces both the xylem and phloem cells. This is where diameter growth occurs and where rings and inner bark are formed.
In the xylem (sapwood) layer, tree sap (water plus nitrogen and mineral nutrients) is carried back up from the roots to the leaves. Sapwood gives a tree its strength.
In the phloem (inner bark) layer, sugar that is made in the leaves or needles is carried down to the branches, trunks and roots, where it is converted into the food (starch) the tree needs for growth.
The bark layer protects the tree from insects and disease, excessive heat and cold and other injuries.
The roots of the tree support the trunk and crown and also anchor the tree in the soil. They serve as a storage facility during the winter for the food produced by the leaves during the growing season. The roots also absorb water and nutrients from the soil for use by the tree.