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Types of Leaf Patterns
Types of Leaf Patterns
Tree leaf patterns refer to the appearance of the veins that carry water and nutrients to the
different parts of the leaf. These veins also help to provide structure for the leaf, acting as a
sort of skeleton. Leaf patterns can be as complex as a spiderweb or as simple as a straight
line. They can be visible to the naked eye or be completely enclosed and out of sight.
Rather than one central midrib, a palmate vein pattern has several
main ribs branching out from the base of the leaf at the stem. Tinier
veins branch off from each of the main ribs, resembling a hand with the
fingers spread apart. Sycamore and maple trees have leaves that are
palmate. This is another example of net-veining.
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The venation is the characteristic arrangement of veins in a leaf.
There are lots of different types of leaf venation that are important for plant
identification.
The term venation refers to how veins are distributed in the leaf blade, Usually lamina
comprise anastomotic veins that are veins ending in a closed point (e.g. terminating or
fused in a leaf apex) while "non"-anastomotic veins which endings are free are quite
infrequent.
There are two principal types of venation: parallel-veined and reticulatedveined:
The veins on monocots are almost parallel to the margins of the leaf
whereas in dicots radiate from a central primary midvein that gives
rise to secondary or lateral veins and in turn tertiary veins and veinlets
Net venation may be either pinnate or palmate. In pinnate venation, the veins extend
laterally from the midrib to the edge . In palmate venation, the principal veins extend
outward, like the ribs of a fan, from the base of the leaf blade .
Long, thin leaves do not have net-vein patterns. The large, main veins
run parallel to the leaf from stem to tip. These main veins are
connected by tiny cross veins. The bigger the leaf, the more main veins
are found. On larger leaves, such as the rye plant, the main veins
usually can be seen with the naked eye. Needles, such as those found
on the white pine tree, hide their veins within their central core. These
needles are only wide enough to accommodate one or two veins.
Many species of monocots have leaf bases that completely encircle the stem, thus
forming a sheath. The layers of an onion bulb (members of the Alliaceae family)
are leaves of this type. In the leaf blades of most monocots the major strands of
vascular tissue (the veins) are parallel to each other. In this manner they differ
from the typically reticulate or netlike system of veins that occurs in most dicots,
where the major veins branch and diverge, with many of the branches meeting.
There are exceptions, and a reticulate leaf venation system occurs in some
groups of monocots, such as the aroid family (Araceae), which includes skunk
cabbage, Jack-in-the-pulpit, and philodendron, the latter of which is frequently
grown as a houseplant. An unusual variant form of parallel leaf venation occurs in
a group of mono-cots that includes the ginger family (Zingiberaceae) and the
banana family(Musaceae). In these families, as exemplified by the leaf of the
banana plant, there is a bundle of parallel veins along the midrib of the leaf, and
these diverge in succession toward the margin of the leaf, the result being a
characteristic pinnate-parallel leaf venation pattern.
In most monocots, the floral parts occur in multiples of three. One example is the
tulip, which has six petals (often called tepals, since there is no clear
differentiation of sepals and petals), six stamens, and a pistil with three
chambers or locules, representing the three carpels. The pollen grains of
monocots also differ from those of most dicots. In monocots, each pollen grain
has just one thin-walled region, the colpus, which is the area from which the
pollen tube emerges when the pollen grain germinates. Most dicots, in contrast,
have three such regions. This thin area of the pollen wall often takes the form of
a single elongate furrow, or sulcus, that extends most of the length of the pollen
grain.
Bailey, L. H. Manual of Cultivated Plants. New York: Macmillan, 1949.
Dahlgren, R. M. T., H. T. Clifford, and P. F. Yeo. The Families of Monocotyledons.
New York: Springer-Verlag.
Heywood, V.H., ed. Flowering Plants of the World. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1993.
Wilson, K. L., and D. A. Morrison, eds. Monocots: Systematics and Evolution.
Victoria, Australia: CSIRO Publications, 2000.