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Plant Classification

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Plant Classification Objectives of today s lecture: learn some common terms used to group plants learn the scientific protocols used to name plants so they can be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Classification


1
Plant Classification
  • Objectives of todays lecture
  • learn some common terms used to group plants
  • learn the scientific protocols used to name
    plants so they can be universally recognized
  • learn about the terminology used to distinguish
    plants within a species

2
Categorizing plants is an ancient practice
  • The Greek philosopher Theophrastus (300 B.C.E.)
    published the first horticulture text book
    Historia Plantarum. In this text, plants are
    grouped together based on life span, growth
    habit, retention of leaves, and other traits
  • Many of these characteristics are still used to
    classify plants

3
Categorizing plants
  • Thousands of plants are used today in various
    areas of horticulture
  • Convenient to group plants together based on
    common characteristics
  • life cycle
  • growth habit
  • environmental adaptation
  • end use or function

4
Classification based on life cycle
  • Annuals
  • plants that complete their life cycle (from seed
    to seed) in 1 year, e.g. petunia, peas

5
Classification based on life cycle
  • Biennials
  • plants that require all or part of two growing
    seasons vegetative growth in the first year,
    followed by overwintering (low temperature)
    biennials flower in the second growing season,
    e.g. hollyhocks, carrot

6
Classification based on life cycle
  • Perennials
  • plants that persist for more than two seasons and
    do not die after flowering, e.g. maple,
    forsythia, tulips, daylily

7
Classification based on life cycle
  • Note that many biennials and perennials are grown
    as annuals
  • root crops such as carrots and beets are grown
    and harvested in one season, before they flower
  • tomatoes and poinsettias are grown in the US as
    annuals, but in S. America they grow as perennials

8
Classification based on growth habit
  • Normally applied to perennial plants
  • Woody plants
  • have persistent vegetative structures, e.g. trees
    and shrubs

9
Classification based on growth habit
  • Herbaceous perennials
  • do not have woody structures and vegetation does
    not persist, e.g. daylily, hosta

10
Classification based on growth habit
  • Vines
  • climbing or trailing plants that require support,
    e.g. grapes, wisteria, clematis

11
Classification based on growth habit
  • Deciduous plants
  • shed leaves for part of the year
  • Evergreens
  • never without leaves
  • they still shed leaves or needles after new
    organs are formed

12
Classification based on environmental adaptation
  • Temperature
  • Hardy, tolerant of low temperatures
  • Tender, unable to survive low temperatures
  • Warm season crops, e.g. corn, beans, melon
  • Cool season crops, e.g. lettuce, peas, broccoli

13
Classification based on environmental adaptation
  • Temperature
  • USDA hardiness zone map

14
Classification based on environmental adaptation
  • Requirement for water
  • Aquatic plants, which live in water
  • Xerophytes, which require very little water
  • Soil conditions
  • Halophytes are adapted to salty conditions
  • Acidophytes require acid soils, e.g.
    rhododendrons
  • Metallophytes require high levels of specific
    metals

15
Classification based on usage
  • Edible plants
  • fruits (dessert or snack)
  • vegetables (savory)
  • Note that this classification differs from the
    botanical definition of a fruit. The strict
    botanical definition of a fruit is a structure
    that develops from the ovary in a flower. Using
    this definition, a tomato is a fruit while a
    strawberry is not.

16
Classification based on usage
  • Other culinary uses include
  • nuts (hard seeded fruits)
  • herbs (fresh or dried vegetative tissue)
  • spices (dried fruit or bark)
  • beverages (tea and coffee)
  • Medicinal plants
  • source of pharmaceuticals, e.g. digitalis from
    foxglove, taxol from a yew

17
Classification based on usage
  • Industrial plants
  • provide raw materials for industrial use
  • oils from oil palm or jojoba
  • fibers from flax or hemp

18
Classification based on usage
  • Ornamental uses
  • nursery crops, e.g. trees and shrubs
  • ground covers, e.g. ivy and pachysandra
  • bedding plants, e.g. petunias and pansies
  • foliage plants, for indoor decoration
  • pot crops, e.g. poinsettia and chrysanthemum
  • floriculture crops, e.g. roses and carnations

19
Limitations of these classification systems
  • Classifications are very subjective
  • Based on your perspective, a hazel shrub can be
    regarded as a source of nuts, an ornamental
    landscape shrub, or a weed.
  • What is grown as an annual in one region is
    classified as a perennial elsewhere.
  • Plants that are considered hardy in Florida or
    Georgia are considered tender in Indiana.

20
Limitations of these classification systems
  • These classifications are not understood
    throughout the world, in different languages or
    across cultures
  • Common names can be confusing
  • Same name used to describe different plants
  • Different names to describe the same plant

21
Scientific classification system
  • Advantages of this system include
  • common universal designation
  • based on international convention
  • uses Latin, a dead language that will not
    change
  • All organisms are divided into a series of
    categories called taxa

22
Scientific classification system
  • Kingdom (plant, animal, bacteria, etc.)
  • Division
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species
  • Members of each successive category are more
    similar to each other

23
Scientific classification system
  • Developed by Carl von Linne, a Swedish physician.
    He is better known as Linnaeus, the father of
    taxonomy
  • In 1753, Species Plantarum was published ,
    which described his new classification system

24
Scientific classification system
  • Linnaeus system of classification is based on
    stable morphological features, especially flowers
  • Avoids features that can vary with age of the
    plant or the environment in which the plant is
    grown
  • Incorporates the concept of evolution, i.e.
    plants with similar features share a common
    ancestor

25
The Binomial System
  • Each name has two components
  • Genus specific epithet species
  • Prunus persica (peach)
  • belongs to the Genus Prunus
  • species name is Prunus persica
  • Conventions that apply to this system
  • written in italics (or underlined)
  • first letter of the Genus is capitalized

26
The Binomial System
  • Genus - a group of similar organisms, some of
    which may interbreed
  • Species - members will interbreed and produce
    similar progeny
  • No matter your origin or situation, Solanum
    tuberosum is recognized as referring to pomme de
    terre, kartoffel, potato

27
The Binomial System
  • Avoids confusion that can arise when using common
    names

Rose of Sharon
Rose of Sharon
28
Additional terms used with the binomial
  • Prunus persica (L.) Batsch
  • (L.) indicates the authority, the individual
    who first named this species
  • Linnaeus is indicated by (L.)
  • Others are written out in full
  • Amendments to the classification are added after
    the authority, e.g. Batsch

29
Additional terms used with the binomial
  • Botanical varieties
  • Juniperus communis var. depressa
  • Indicates a botanical variety within this species
    of juniper, in this case plants with a
    distinctive low-growing (depressed) habit

30
Additional terms used with the binomial
  • Interspecific hybrids
  • Forsythia X intermedia
  • X indicates these plants result from a cross
    between two different species (F.suspensa and F.
    viridissima) in the genus Forsythia

31
Additional terms used with the binomial
  • Prunus persica cv. Redhaven
  • cv. Redhaven indicates a cultivar
  • Also written as Prunus persica Redhaven
  • single quotation marks indicates the cultivar
  • Cultivars are cultivated varieties
  • Cultivars are groups of plants within a species
    that share common characteristics and maintain
    their identity

32
Summary
  • Many different methods used to classify plants
    used in horticulture
  • The scientific binomial system provides a
    universal protocol that does not depend on
    variable factors
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