Tadpoles

Tall Grasses

Tall Grass Prairie

Tamper

Tan oaks

Tangential Section

A tangential section is a longitudinal section of a stem where the section is perpendicular to the tangent or radius of the stem.  The section will be perpendicular to the vascular rays, so therefore only the ends of the rays will be visible.

                    DIAGRAM:  Stem Sections / Tangential Section

                          PHOTO:  

Tannic Acid

Tannins

Taproot

                    DIAGRAM:  Root Systems

                          PHOTO:  

Taxacol

Taxodiaceae

Taxonomy

Taxus

Teliospores

                    DIAGRAM:  

                          PHOTO:  Puccinia / Puccinia / Puccinia

Temperate

(biomes)

                    DIAGRAM:  Biome Comparison

                          PHOTO:  

Temperate Coniferous Forest Biome

Temperate Grassland Biome

Temperature

Tendrils

                    DIAGRAM:  Tendrils

                          PHOTO:  

Tensile Strength

Tension

Tepals

                    DIAGRAM:  

                          PHOTO:  Narcissus / Narcissus / Narcissus / Narcissus / Narcissus

Terminal

Terminal Buds

Terminal buds are buds that are at the apex or tip of the stem.  These buds are the dominant buds meaning that they cause all the lateral buds below them to remain dormant at all times of the year.

                    DIAGRAM:  Woody Dicot Stem Morphology
                                           Leaf Primordium

                          PHOTO:  

Terminal Meristem

Terminal meristem is the same as the apical meristem.  It is the meristem at the tip end of the stem.

Terrestrial

Terrestrial Habitation

Tetrad of Tetraspores

                    DIAGRAM:  

                          PHOTO:  Marchantia / Marchantia

Tetraploid

Theca

Theophrastus

Thermacidophiles

Thermal Vents

Thermal Stratification

Thermoclines

Thigmotropism

Third Law of Thermodynamics

Thompson Seedless Grapes

Thorn

A thorn is a modified stem that is sharp and helps to protect a plant from damage by animals.

Tides

Tissue Culture

Tmesipteris

Tobacco

Tolerate

Tomatoes

Topography

Torreya

Torus

The torus is the thickened glob of secondary wall in the center of a bordered pit.

                    DIAGRAM:  Pits

                          PHOTO:  

Totipotent

Toyon

Trace

(amounts of micronutrients

Tracheids

Tracheids are conducting cells in the xylem that are dead when functioning.  They are characterized by containing lignin in their cell walls and thus stain red.  They are long and slender with very oblique end walls for increasing the surface area.  They contain pits.

                    DIAGRAM:  Stem Sections
                                           Tangential Section
                                           Monocot Vascular Bundle
                                           Sclerenchyma
                                           Hydathode

                          PHOTO:  Pinus Stem Cross Section
                                           6-Year Tilia Stem Cross Section
                                           Pinus Stem Radial Section

Transfer Cells

Transfer cells have the morphology of parenchyma cells, but they function much differently. Their job is to carry materials in across their cell membrane and deposit these materials somewhere else, carrying them across their cell membrane as it is deposited either in another cell or where it can be picked up by another cell.  These cells contain a greater proportion of mitochondria, clustered along the plasmalemma, for the production of energy for this cellular pumping action.

Transfer cells are abundant in the mesophyll of leaves.  They exist along the veinlets where they pick up glucose from the mesophyll, convert it into sucrose, and deposit it in the sieve-tube member.

Transformation

(energy from one form to another)

Transmitted

Transpiration

Transpiration occurs while photosyntheis is occuring.  While the stomata are open for gas exchange, water vapor evaporates from the surface of the spongy parenchyma and escapes out through the stomata into the atmosphere.  The loss of water by this means from the plant is called transpiration.

Transport

Transport Proteins

Transverse Wall

(casparian strip

Transverse Lid

(as in capsule)

Triarch

Trichomes

Trichomes are plant hairs on the surface of the epidermis of any plant organ that contains an epidermis, including stems, leaves, and fruits. They are simple, branched, scale-like and glandular.

Triploid

Trophic Level

Tropical

Tropical Rainforest Biome

Tropical

(biomes)

Tropical Rainforest Biome

Tropism

True Ferns

True Berry

Truncate

                    DIAGRAM:  Leaf Bases

                          PHOTO:  

Tryptophan

Tsuga

Tube nucleus

Tuber

A tuber is a modified stem that contains nodes and internodes.  It is underground and is attached to a rhizome.  It is really the swollen portion of a rhizome where large amounts of food are stored, generally starch.  A good example of a tuber is a potato.  It is possible to find the terminal bud and the lateral buds.  The eyes of the potato are these buds.  When potatos are planted, the potato is cut up in pieces so that each piece has an eye.  Each eye will sprout a new stem and the portion of attached potato will provide the food necessary to get the plant started growing.

                    DIAGRAM:  Tuber

                          PHOTO:  

Tundra Biome

Tunicate

Turgor Movements

Turgor Pressure

Turnip

Turtles

Two,four-D

Two-lipped Corolla

Tyloses

Tyloses are parenchyma cells that grow inside vessel elements for the sole purpose of plugging them up.  This typically occurs in the vessels adjacent to an abscission zone so as to prevent the vessels from bleeding or being infected by fungal spores or bacteria.