#PlantTipTuesday: Helpful Plant Terms
It’s still Mercury Retrograde so we’re reviewing some helpful blog posts of years past. We originally published this one in 2020…and feel like it’s a helpful time for a refresh!
Annual: A plant which completes its whole life cycle, from seed to fruit, in one year. Some plants which are perennial in their native (e.g. tropical) lands are treated as if they are annuals in countries with colder climates.
Biennial: A flowering plant that takes two years to complete its biological life cycle. In the first season growth usually results in basal leaves, often forming a small rosette of leaves near the soil surface. During the second season the stem grows longer and the plant flowers and produces seed, after which the entire plant dies.
Bulbs: A plant storage organ which is normally underground. It is made up of layers of moulded leaves which are wrapped around each other. In Lily bulbs, they are made up of separate scaled leaves. It contains the young plant. Some common plants grown from bulbs include Daffodils, Hyacinth, and Tulips.
Cactus: A succulent plant belonging to the Cactaceae family.
Evergreen: Having leaves all year round. Filament
Filament: The stalk of the stamen which leads to the anther.
Hybrid: A plant that results from cross-pollinating two different plant varieties and grown from the seed that this cross produces.
Latex: A milky fluid (sap) that is produced by 10% of all flowering plants, and which coagulates on exposure to air. Latex is often white or yellow in color and is commonly found in such plants such as euphorbia, fig, dandelion and rubber plants.
Leaf: The main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plants, usually consisting of a flat, blade-like structure that is typically green (but may vary in shape and color), and is attached to the stem directly or by a petiole (stalk).
Midrib: The central or most prominent vein of a leaf.
Perennial: A plant that lives for more than two years and dies back and remains dormant each winter, but regrows from the same root stock the following spring. The term is also widely used in gardening to differentiate between plants that have little or no woody growth from woody trees and shrubs, which are technically also perennials.
Pod: A long, narrow, and relatively flat part of some plants, particularly legumes such as beans and peas, that contains the seeds and usually has a thick skin. The pod usually splits open on both sides when the seeds are ripe.
Rhizome: An underground creeping stem which sends out shoots above and roots below. Sometimes the rhizomes of plants such as Iris, grow on, or very close to the soil surface. Some common rhizomes include Bamboo, Ginger, Peony, Solomon's Seal, and also some Ferns.
Seed: A fertilized ovule, containing the plant embryo, covered by a protective coat and containing nutrients to enable the embryo to grow and develop.
Shrub: A woody branching plant with stems arising at or near the ground.
Stalk: The thin stem-like structure that joins the flower, leaf or fruit to the plant or tree.
Stamen: The male reproductive flower part, comprising the anther and the filament.
Stem: One of two main structural axes of a vascular plant (the other being the root). The stem of a plant acts as a central axis to which all other parts are attached, and it is normally divided into nodes and internodes. In most plants, the stems are visible above ground, but in some species, they are hidden below the ground.
Stigma: The female reproductive part of the flower where the pollen grains are deposited.
Style: The stalk joining the flower ovary to the stigma - carries the pollen.
Sub-shrub: A short or low-growing perennial plant having a woody lower stem, often synonymous with 'bush'.
Succulent (we might be partial to this one!): Plants with fleshy foliage and stalks. A succulent is a water-retaining plant which has adapted to survive in extreme conditions of drought.
Toxic plant: One that is capable of causing injury when touched or eaten, and if consumed in sufficient quantity may cause death.
Tree: A woody perennial plant with a main stem or trunk and featuring lateral branches at some distance from the ground.
Tuber: A plant nutrient storage unit comprising of a thickened underground fleshy root in plants such as the Dahlia or a thickened underground stem such as the Potato.
Vegetable: The edible part of the plant, such as the root, the tuber, the stem, the flowers or the green leafy part of the plant. This will include such vegetables as Potato, Rhubarb, Beetroot, Onion, Cabbage and Broccoli.
Vine: A plant whose stem requires support and which climbs by tendrils or twining or creeps along the ground.
Weed: A wild plant growing where it is not wanted and in competition with cultivated plants.