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Rangeland Monitoring in Western Uplands

 

Part 3: Plant Classification

Basic Plant Anatomy

Grasses and sedges, forbs, and shrubs are very different groups of plants but they share some common characteristics:

 

  • Roots, which can represent up to half of the total plant weight, are the below ground portions of the plant. They function to anchor the plant in the soil, absorb nutrients and water, support the stem, and store food made during photosynthesis.

  • The stem is the part of the plant that holds it upright and provides support for the leaves. Stems contain nodes where leaves attach and grow from, and internodes, or the space between the leaves. Stems transport water, food (the products of photosynthesis), and minerals. They can be hollow, solid, round, triangular, and woody, depending on the plant. Some plants spread (asexually reproduce without flowers) by sending out underground stems called rhizomes or aboveground stems called stolons (these are more common in grasses).

  • The function of leaves is to manufacture food from carbon dioxide and water, a process called photosynthesis. Leaf arrangement, shape and venation can be used to identify plants.

  • The reproductive structures (flowers) are specialized leaves that produce the pollen and eggs essential for reproduction. For most plants (except grasses), they are the most common character used to identify plant type. Flowers of some plants are found in an inflorescence, or a group of flowers formed on a single stem of the plant. Some stems only have one flower so the term inflorescence does not apply.