Basic Leaf Types in Plants

Leaves have many aspects at which to look during the identification process. The different leaf types all have specific purposes and adaptations to help the plant thrive in its native terrain. It is important to look at all parts of the leaf including:

Base Margins Tip Veins Petiole, if present Midrib

The most obvious aspect to examine is the shape of the leaf. If it is an uninterrupted shape, it is simple. If the shape divides into smaller leaf sets the leaf is compound. Identifying plant leaves that are compound divides them into subsets.

Palmate leaves have smaller leaves attached at a central point and radiate out much like your hand when you spread your fingers wide. Pinnate leaves are attached to a stem and produce leaflets along that stem in either even or odd numbers. Bi-pinnate means a pinnate leaf is twice divided. There are also blades, needles, and other forms. These basic shapes are the base of leaf identification.

Common Leaf Types and Arrangements

The arrangement of a leaf refers to how it grows on the stem. Some leaves grow opposite, some alternate, some in rosette forms and others in whorls. Each arrangement changes the way light plays across the photosynthetic cells. The leaf may attach with a petiole, a shortened stem, or it may be sessile (meaning stem-less). The arrangement gives part of the clue as to the species. Venation is one more clue. Venation is the etched veins in the leaf surface. They may be:

Parallel Dichotomous, forming a “Y” Palmate, radiating out from a central point Pinnate, where the veins are arrayed from the midrib

More Visual Cues for Identifying Plant Leaves

Color and texture are two other methods of categorizing foliage. In addition, you can look at any discrepancy in the leaf margin. The edges of leaves may be smooth, toothed, lobed, incised, or wavy. The degree of any of these conditions varies as well. Needle-like leaves also have distinguishing arrangements and shapes. Conifers may be scale-like, awl shaped, single, linear, bundled or clustered. The arrangement of the needles on the stem is also important. The texture of the leaf is yet another aspect at which to look. Some things to note here include whether it is it firm and waxy, shiny, thick, stiff, limp, etc. Let your fingers do the walking and identify if the leaf has resinous glands, prickly thorns, or fine hairs. There are many more fine distinctions for professional botanists, but these basics are generally good enough for most leaf identification for the common gardening enthusiast.

Identifying Plant Leaves  Information On Leaf Types And Arrangements - 61