glossary - handling & establishing plants - origin & provenance - root-balled trees
The following glossary provides descriptions and definitions of words used within the practice of landscape planting and horticulture and are taken from the following references:
BRITISH STANDARDS INSTITUTION
BS 3975 Glossary for Landscape Work
Part 4 Plant Description (1966)
Part 5 Horticultural, arboricultural and forestry practice (1969)
Clark, R. Purchasing Landscape Trees, a guide to assessing tree quality; Construction Information Systems Australia Pty Ltd. 1996
Kelly, J. (edit.) The Hillier Gardener's Guide to Trees and Shrubs; David and Charles, 1995.
Adventitious root |
A root which arises from any part of a plant other than in the normal
sequence of growth of the root system |
Adventitious shoot |
A shoot arising in a position other than the axil of a leaf or at the
tip of a stem |
Air pruning |
The use of bottomless containers, or containers with holes in the
sides, to arrest root development |
Alien |
A plant originally introduced from other areas |
Alpine |
A plant which is indigenous to the zone above the line at which trees
cease to flourish and below the limits of perpetual snow (and by
extension, a plant which will thrive in simulated alpine conditions |
Alternate |
(Leaves) borne singly at each node on opposite sides of the stem |
Annual |
A plant which grows from seed, flowers, fruits and dies within one year. |
Anther |
Pollen-bearing part of the stamen |
Apical dominance |
Of growth, the dominance of the terminal bud to the lateral buds |
Aquatic plant |
A non-woody plant suitable for growing within in shallow water or in
saturated soil |
Axil |
Angle formed by a leaf or lateral branch with the stem, or that
formed by a vein with the midrib. |
Axillary |
Produced in the axil |
Bedding plant |
A plant suitable for short term display in an ornamental bed |
Berry |
Strictly a pulpy, normally several-seeded, indehiscent fruit |
Biennial |
A plant which grows from seed one year and flowers, fruits and dies
the next (Note: Certain short lived perennials, e.g. Dianthus
barbatus, Sweet Williams,
are commonly treated as biennial |
Bipinnate |
Twice pinnate |
Bisexual |
Both male and female organs in the same flower |
Blade |
Expanded part of a leaf or petal |
Bloom |
A fine powder-like, waxy deposit |
Bog plant |
A plant which thrives in permanently wet soil |
Bole |
Trunk, of a tree |
Bract |
Modified, usually reduced leaf at the base of a flower-stalk, flower-cluster
or shoot |
Bud sport |
A shoot produced by a sudden and permanent change in vegetative cells
in a growing point , causing a change of character |
Budded |
Produced by obtaining a union between a bud from one plant and a
rooted portion of another (the stock) |
Bulblet |
A small immature bulb developed from seed, arising at the base of a
parent bulb or in the axil of a leaf |
Calcicole |
Of plants which thrive in a soil containing free calcium compounds |
Calcifuge |
Of plant which will not tolerate a soil containing free calcium compounds |
Callus |
New tissue which forms over a wound |
Calyx |
Outer part of a flower, the sepals |
Cambium |
The layer of actively dividing cells between bark and wood |
Capsule |
Dry, several-celled pod |
Catkin |
Normally dense spike or spike-like raceme of tiny, scaly-bracted
flowers or fruits |
Central leader |
The clearly defined single, dominant stem at the top of the tree |
Ciliate |
Fringed with hairs |
Cladode |
Flattened leaf-like stem |
Collar |
The position of the main stem or stems of a plant which coincides
with the surface level of the soil |
Columnar |
Tall and cylindrical or tapering |
Compound |
Composed of two or more similar parts |
Conical |
Cone-shaped |
Coniferous |
Cone bearing (mainly evergreen) |
Container grown |
Having been individually grown from propagation in a container. |
Containerised |
Having been transferred at some stage of development (usually prior
to transplanting) into a container for purposes of sale, transport or
decorative effect |
Cordate |
Shaped like a heart |
Corolla |
Inner, normally conspicuous, part of a flower, the petals |
Corymb |
Flat-topped or dome-shaped flowerhead with the outer flowers opening first |
Cotyledon stage |
The stage of growth of a seedling at which seed leaves have developed
above ground |
Crenate |
Toothed with shallow, rounded teeth, scalloped |
Crown |
The base of an herbaceous perennial where stem and root meet and from
which fresh shoots and roots arise |
Cyme |
Flat-topped or domed-shaped flowerhead with the inner flowers opening first |
Deciduous |
(Of tree or shrub) that sheds its leaves each year at the end of the
period of growth |
Deciduous |
Shedding all its leaves before the emergence of next season's leaves |
Decumbent |
Reclining, the tips ascending |
Dentate |
Toothed with teeth directed outward |
Digitate |
With the members arising form one point like fingers |
Dioecious |
Bearing male and female flowers on different plants |
Dissected |
Divided into many narrow segments |
Division |
A form of propagation by splitting clumps of a plant, or by
separating the rhizomes in a clump |
Dormancy |
A state of greatly reduced metabolism in which a plant or part of a
plant is alive but not growing |
Double |
(Flowers) with more than the usual number of petals, often with the
style and stamens changed to petals |
Doubly serrate |
Large teeth and small teeth alternating |
Downy |
Covered with soft hair or down |
Elliptic |
Widest at or about the middle, narrowing equally at both ends |
Embryo |
A rudimentary plant within a seed |
Entire |
Undivided and without teeth |
Ephemeral |
A short-lived annual, capable of producing more than one generation
in one season |
Evergreen |
Remaining green during the winter |
Evergreen |
Having leaves all the year round |
F1 |
First filial generation, the immediate offspring of
cross-fertilisation. A term used commercially to designate a
generation FO seed or resulting plants which does not transmit all
its desirable characteristics and can be obtained only by a
repetition of the cross |
F2 |
Second filial generation, arising from the intercrossing or self-fertilisation
of an F1 generation |
Fastigiate |
With branches erect and close together |
Fertile |
Of stamens producing food pollen or fruit containing good seeds, or
of stems with flowering organs |
Fibrous roots |
Roots which are relatively thin, much branched throughout and have
ample fine growth |
Filament |
Stalk of a stamen |
Florets |
Small, individual flowers of a dense inflorescence |
Glabrous |
Hairless |
Graft chimera |
A plant composed of tissues from two cytologically different plants |
Grafted |
Produced by obtaining a union between a shoot (the scion) of one
plant and a rooted portion of another (the stock) |
Ground cover |
A group of plants which by their natural habit of low, close growth
are suitable for covering the ground surface and discouraging weeds |
Half-hardy annual |
An annual, or a plant commonly treated as an annual, which cannot be
grown in the open before the warm season of the year; usually raised
from seed under glass for summer display in the open |
Harden off |
Gradually to accustom to more rigorous conditions seedlings or other
plants which have been growing in a protected environment |
Hardy |
Able to thrive in a given climate all the year round without special protection |
Heath plant |
A heather, or plant suitable for growing in the same dry and sandy
conditions as heather |
Heel |
A portion of older tissue at the base of a young shoot torn or cut
from its parent |
Herb |
A flowering plant of which the stem does not become woody and which
generally dies to the ground at the end of the season |
Hermaphrodite |
Bisexual, hearing both male and female organs in the same flower |
High or Top worked |
Grafted or budded at the point of the future crotch of standard or
half standard tree |
Incised |
Sharp and usually deeply and irregularly cut |
Indehiscent |
Said of fruits which do not (burst) open |
Indigenous |
Having origin in a particular locality, district, county or country |
Indumentum |
Dense hairy covering |
Inflorescence |
Flowering part of the plant |
Internode |
Portion of stem between two nodes or joints |
Involucre |
Whorl of bracts surrounding a flower or flower cluster |
Lanceolate |
Lance-shaped, widening above the base and long-tapering to the apex |
Lateral |
On or at the side |
Layer |
A plant produced by layering |
Leader |
The main terminal shoot at the apex of a stem or principal branch |
Leaflet |
Part of a compound leaf |
Linear |
Long and narrow with nearly parallel margins |
Low worked |
Grafted or budded at or near ground level |
Marginal plant |
A plant capable of adapting itself to growing either in shallow water
or in saturated soil |
Mature |
Of trees, fully developed |
Midrib |
Central vein or rib of a leaf |
Monoecious |
Bearing male and female flowers separately, but on the same plant |
Mother bulb |
A bulb, especially a Narcissus bulb, which has formed a number of
offsets, all of which, however, remain attached, giving the
appearance of a single bulb |
Mother plant |
The parent plant from which all subsequent stock of a particular
variety, clone, cultivar or strain have been derived |
Mutant |
A plant with new characteristics resulting from a heritable change
(mutation) in the reproductive cells |
Native |
An indigenous plant |
Naturalised |
Having been introduced, and colonised, placed where not indigenous |
Node |
Point on the stem where the leaves are attached, the 'joint' |
Notch planting |
Planting by setting a tree's roots in a vertical notch, or group of
notches, cut in the soil with a spade or mattock, and specified in I-notch,
L-notch, H-notch planting according to the shape of the notch(es) |
Nut |
Non-splitting, one-seeded, hard or bony fruit |
Obovate |
Inversely ovate |
Obtuse |
Blunt (as in apex of leaf or petal) |
Offset |
A new plant formed from a short, rooted side-growth, which can be
detached from its parent |
One year budded |
Having been grown for one season in a nursery plant bed after propagation |
Open ground grown |
Having been established and grown in the ground without protection
and not grown in a container or frame |
Opposite |
(Leaves) borne two to each note, opposite each other |
Oval |
Broadest at the middle |
Ovary |
Basal 'box' part of the pistil, containing the ovules |
Ovate |
Broadest below the middle |
Ovule |
Female germ cell in flowering plant |
Palmate |
Lobed or divided in hand-like fashion, usually five- or seven-lobed |
Panicle |
Branching raceme |
Paniculate |
Bearing flowers in panicles |
Pedicel |
Stalk of an individual flower in an inflorescence |
Peduncle |
Stalk of a flower cluster or of a solitary flower |
Pendulous |
Hanging, weeping |
Perennial |
Living for several years |
Perfoliate |
Of leaves in pairs fused at the base whose stem appears to pass
through them |
Perianth |
Calyx and corolla together; also commonly used for a flower in which
there is no distinction between corolla and calyx |
Pernicious |
Persistent and having qualities harmful to other plants |
Persistent |
Remaining attached |
Petal |
One of the separate segments of a corolla |
Petaloid |
Petal-like (as in a stamen) |
Petiole |
Leaf-stalk |
Pinnate |
With leaflets arranged on either side of a central stalk |
Pistil |
Female organ of a flowering plant comprising ovary, style and stigma |
Pit planting |
Planting in a prepared pit |
Plumose |
Feather, as the down of a thistle |
Pollard |
To cut off all the branches of a tree, leaving only the trunk |
Pollen |
Spores or grains contained in the anther, containing the male element |
Polygamous |
Bearing bisexual and unisexual flowers on the same plant |
Procumbent |
Lying or creeping |
Propagation |
The production of plants, by sexual, asexual or vegetative means |
Prostrate |
Lying flat on the ground |
Pubescent |
Covered with short, soft hairs, downy |
Raceme |
Simple elongated inflorescence with stalked flowers |
Reniform |
Kidney-shaped |
Reticulate |
Like a network (as in veins) |
Rhizome |
A prostrate thickened stem emitting roots and capable of producing
leafy shoots and flowering stems from lateral and terminal buds |
Rib |
Prominent vein in leaf |
Rogue |
A plant differing from, wrongly placed, or appearing in, a batch of
otherwise uniform plants |
Root bound |
Having roots restricted, due to confined conditions, and unable to
extend, resulting in a root mass |
Rootstock |
The rooted portion of a plant or a root upon which one or more scions
are to be or have been worked |
Rugose |
Wrinkled or rough |
Runner |
Trailing shoot taking root at the nodes |
Runner |
A young elongated prostrate herbaceous stem producing new plant at nodes |
Sagittate |
Shaped like an arrowhead |
Scabrous |
Rough to the touch |
Scale |
Minute leaf or bract, or a flat gland-like appendage on the surface
of a leaf, flower or shoot |
Scandant |
With climbing stems |
Scion |
The part of a plant used to provide the shoot system when grafted
upon the rootstock |
Scree plant |
A plant which is indigenous to mountain scree or adaptable to
planting on a site simulating a mountain scree and mainly composed of
loose stones |
Semi-evergreen |
Evergreen in its normal habitat but liable to shed some or all of its
leaves under rigorous conditions |
Sepal |
One of the segments of the calyx |
Serrate |
Saw-toothed |
Sessile |
Attached without a stalk |
Simple |
Said of a leaf that is not compound or an unbranched inflorescence |
Spathulate |
Spoon-shaped |
Spike |
Simple, elongated inflorescence with sessile flowers |
Sport |
A plant propagated vegetatively from a bud sport |
Spur |
A short stubby lateral branch with short internodes |
Stamen |
Male organ of a flowering plant comprising filament and anther |
Standard |
Largest, normally uppermost petal in a pea-flower; tall, clear-stemmed
young tree; shrub (often rose) trained in this fashion |
Stellate |
Star-shaped |
Stem |
The main body of the portion above ground of a shrub, tree or other plant |
Sterile |
Incapable of producing viable seed |
Stigma |
Summit of the pistil which receives the pollen, often sticky or feathery |
Stipule |
Appendage (normally two) at the base of some petioles |
Stolon |
Shoot at or below the surface of the ground which produces a new
plant at its tip |
Stool |
The base of a woody plant which has been cut down to produce new
shoots for propagation purposes, ornamental effect or small timber
production (coppice) |
Stooled |
Cut back to ground level annually or less frequently but regularly |
Style |
Middle part of the pistil, often elongated between the ovary and stigma |
Sub-Shrub |
A shrub-like plant, but with woody parts confined to the lower
portion of the plant |
Succulent |
Juicy, flesh, soft and thickened in texture |
Sucker |
A woody shoot arising from an underground stem or root; or a shoot
arising from the understock of a worked plant |
Suckering |
Producing underground stems; also the shoots from the stock of a
grafted plant |
Tender |
Only able to grow without protection in mild climatic conditions |
Tendril |
Twining thread-like appendage |
Tepal |
Subdivision of a perianth that cannot be clearly differentiated into
sepal or petal |
Tomentose |
With dense, woolly pubescence |
Tray |
A seed tray (or one used for plug production) of standard dimensions |
Trifoliate |
Three-leafed |
Trunk |
The main stem of a tree |
Tuber |
A short, thick, usually underground, modified stem, of one year's
duration, in which food reserves are stored, and which usually has
buds (eyes) from which new plants are produced |
Umbel |
Normally flat-topped inflorescence in which the pedicels or peduncles
all arise from a common point |
Umbellate |
Flowers in umbels |
Undercutting |
The operation of severing downward growing plant roots in situ, to
control root development; usually by machine |
Understock |
The rooted portion of a plant used for propagation by budding or grafting |
Union |
In a worked plant, the junction of scion and rootstock |
Unisexual |
Of one sex |
Venation |
Arrangement of veins |
Verrucose |
Having a wart-like or nodular surface |
Waterside plant |
A plant suitable for growing in the edge of water and tolerant of
periodic flooding |
Weed |
A plant where it is not intended to be |
Well-furnished |
Having even and adequate branches, spurs, leaf growth and bud formation |
Whorl |
Three or more flowers or leaves arranged in a ring |
Wilding |
Any plant occurring naturally |
Woodland plant |
A plant suitable for growing under a degree of shade and drip from trees |
Woody |
Composed in part of wood or hard wood-like tissue |
Worked |
Produced by budding or grafting |