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{{short description|Photosynthetic part of a vascular plant}}
:''This article is about the '''leaf''', a ] organ. See ] for other meanings.''
{{Redirect|Leaves|other uses of "leaf" or "leaves"|Leaf (disambiguation)}}
----
In ], a '''leaf''' is an above-ground ] ] specialized for ]. For this purpose, a leaf is typically flat (laminar) and thin, to expose the ] containing cells ('''''chlorenchyma''''' tissue) to light over a broad area, and to allow light to penetrate fully into the tissues. Leaves are also the sites in most plants where ], ], and ] take place. Leaves can store ] and ], and are modified in some plants for other purposes. The comparable structures of ]s are correctly referred to as ]s.


{{pp-move}}
]


{{Use American English|date=July 2019}}
== Leaf structure ==
]
]
]'' (Silver lime tree)]]
A structurally complete leaf of an ] consists of a '''''petiole''''' (leaf stem), a '''''lamina''''' (leaf blade), and ''''']s''''' (small processes located to either side of the base of the petiole). The point at which the petiole attaches to the stem is called the leaf '''''axil'''''. Not every species produces leaves with all of these structural parts. In some species, paired stipules are not obvious or are absent altogether; a petiole may be absent; or the blade may not be laminar (flattened). The tremendous variety shown in leaf structure (anatomy) from species to species is presented in detail below under <u>Leaf types, arrangements, and forms</u>.
[[File:Leaf, Bud, and Stem Diagram.svg|thumb|Diagram of a simple leaf. {{flatlist|{{ordered list
| Apex
| Midvein (Primary vein)
| Secondary vein.
| Lamina.
| Leaf margin
| Petiole
| Bud
| Stem
}}}}]]
]'' (compound leaf) <br/>Bottom: skunk cabbage, '']'' (simple leaf) {{olist |Apex |Primary vein |Secondary vein |Lamina |Leaf margin |Rachis}}]]


A '''leaf''' ({{plural form}}: '''leaves''') is a principal appendage of the ] of a ],{{sfn|Esau|2006}} usually borne laterally above ground and specialized for ]. Leaves are collectively called '''foliage''', as in "autumn foliage",{{sfn|Haupt|1953}}{{sfn|Mauseth|2009}} while the leaves, stem, ], and ] collectively form the ] system.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.cactus-art.biz/note-book/Dictionary/Dictionary_S/dictionary_shoot_system.htm |title=Shoot system |date=n.d. |website=Dictionary of botanic terminology |publisher=Cactus Art Nursery |access-date=4 May 2021 |archive-date=4 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210504055224/https://www.cactus-art.biz/note-book/Dictionary/Dictionary_S/dictionary_shoot_system.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> In most leaves, the primary photosynthetic ] is the ] and is located on the upper side of the blade or lamina of the leaf,{{sfn|Esau|2006}} but in some species, including the mature foliage of '']'',{{sfn|James et al|1999}} palisade mesophyll is present on both sides and the leaves are said to be isobilateral. The leaf is an integral part of the stem system, and most leaves are flattened and have distinct upper (]) and lower (]) surfaces that differ in color, ], the number of ] (pores that intake and output gases), the amount and structure of ], and other features. Leaves are mostly green in color due to the presence of a compound called ] which is essential for photosynthesis as it absorbs light energy from the ]. A leaf with lighter-colored or white patches or edges is called a ].
A leaf is considered to be a plant organ, typically consisting of the following tissues:
# An '''epidermis''' that covers the upper and lower surfaces
# An interior ''chlorenchyma'' called the '''''mesophyll'''''
# An arrangement of '''veins''' (the vascular tissue).


Leaves can have many different shapes, sizes, textures and colors. The broad, flat leaves with complex ] of ]s are known as ''megaphylls'' and the species that bear them (the majority) as broad-leaved or ] plants, which also include ]s and ]s. In the ], with different evolutionary origins, the leaves are simple (with only a single vein) and are known as ''microphylls''.{{sfn|Stewart|Rothwell|1993}} Some leaves, such as ] scales, are not above ground. In many aquatic species, the leaves are submerged in water. ] plants often have thick juicy leaves, but some leaves are without major photosynthetic function and may be dead at maturity, as in some ]s and ]. Furthermore, several kinds of leaf-like structures found in vascular plants are not totally homologous with them. Examples include flattened plant stems called ]s and ], and flattened leaf stems called ] which differ from leaves both in their structure and origin.{{sfn|Mauseth|2009}}{{sfn|Cooney-Sovetts|Sattler|1987}} Some structures of non-vascular plants look and function much like leaves. Examples include the ] of ] and ].
=== Epidermis ===
The epidermis is the outer multi-layered group of cells covering the leaf. It forms the boundary between the plant and the external world. The epidermis serves several functions: protection against water loss, regulation of gas exchange, secretion of metabolic compounds, and (in some species) absorption of water. Most leraves show dorsoventral anatomy: the upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces have somewhat different construction and may serve different functions.


==General characteristics==
The epidemis is usually ] (epidermal cells lack chloroplasts) and coated on the outer side with a waxy ''']''' that prevents water loss. The cuticle may be thinner on the lower epidermis than on the upper epidermis; and is thicker on leaves from dry climates as compared with those from wet climates.
] scan of a leaf]]


Leaves are the most important organs of most ].{{sfn|Tsukaya|2013}} Green plants are ], meaning that they do not obtain food from other living things but instead create their own food by ]. They capture the energy in ] and use it to make simple ]s, such as ] and ], from ] ({{CO2}}) and water. The sugars are then stored as ], further processed by ] into more complex organic molecules such as ]s or ], the basic structural material in plant cell walls, or ] by ] to provide chemical energy to run cellular processes. The leaves draw water from the ground in the ] through a ] known as ] and obtain carbon dioxide from the ] by diffusion through openings called ] in the outer covering layer of the leaf (]), while leaves are orientated to maximize their exposure to sunlight. Once sugar has been synthesized, it needs to be transported to areas of active growth such as the ] and ]s. Vascular plants transport sucrose in a special tissue called the ]. The phloem and xylem are parallel to each other, but the transport of materials is usually in opposite directions. Within the leaf these vascular systems branch (ramify) to form veins which supply as much of the leaf as possible, ensuring that ] carrying out photosynthesis are close to the transportation system.{{sfn|Feugier|2006}}
The epidermis tissue includes several differentiated cell types: epidermal cells, guard cells, subsidiary cells, and epidermal hairs (trichomes). The epidermal cells are the most numerous, largest, and least specialized. These are typically more elongated in the leaves of ]s than in those of ]s.


Typically leaves are broad, flat and thin (dorsiventrally flattened), thereby maximising the surface area directly exposed to light and enabling the light to penetrate the ] and reach the ]s, thus promoting photosynthesis. They are arranged on the plant so as to expose their surfaces to light as efficiently as possible without shading each other, but there are many exceptions and complications. For instance, plants adapted to windy conditions may have ] leaves, such as in many ]s and ]s. The flat, or laminar, shape also maximizes ] with the surrounding air, promoting cooling. Functionally, in addition to carrying out photosynthesis, the leaf is the principal site of ], providing the energy required to draw the transpiration stream up from the roots, and ].
The epidermis is covered with ]s called ''''']''''' (sing., ''stoma''), part of a '''stoma complex''' consisting of a pore surrounded on each side by chloroplast-containing '''guard cells''', and two to four '''subsidiary cells''' that lack chloroplasts. The stoma complex regulates the exchange of gases and water vapor between the outside air and the interior of the leaf. Typically, the stomata are more numerous over the abaxial (lower) epidermis than the (adaxial) upper epidermis.


Many ] have thin needle-like or scale-like leaves that can be advantageous in cold climates with frequent snow and frost.{{sfn|Purcell|2016}} These are interpreted as reduced from ] leaves of their ] ancestors.{{sfn|Stewart|Rothwell|1993}} Some leaf forms are adapted to modulate the amount of light they absorb to avoid or mitigate excessive heat, ] damage, or desiccation, or to sacrifice light-absorption efficiency in favor of protection from herbivory. For ]s the major constraint is not light ] or ], but drought.{{sfn|Willert et al|1992}} Some ] such as '']'' species and some '']'' species such as ''Haworthia tesselata'' and '']'' are examples of xerophytes.{{sfn|Bayer|1982}}
''']s''' or hairs grow out from the epidermis in many species.


Leaves function to store chemical energy and water (especially in ]) and may become specialized organs serving other functions, such as ] of ]s and other ], the protective ] of ], and the insect traps in ] such as '']'' and ''Sarracenia''.{{sfn|Simpson|2011|loc=p.&nbsp;356}} Leaves are the fundamental structural units from which ] are constructed in ] (each cone scale is a modified megaphyll leaf known as a ]){{sfn|Stewart|Rothwell|1993}}{{rp|408}} and from which flowers are constructed in ]s.{{sfn|Stewart|Rothwell|1993}}{{rp|445}}
=== Mesophyll ===
] that make them harder to degrade for microorganisms.]]
Most of the interior of the leaf between the upper and lower layers of epidermis is a '']'' (ground tissue) or '']'' tissue called the ''']''' (= middle leaf). This "assimilation tissue" is the primary location of photosynthesis in the plant (The products of photosynthesis are called '''assimilates''').
In ferns and most flowering plants the mesophyll is divided into two layers:
*an upper '''palisade layer''' of tightly packed, vertically elongated cells, one to two cells thick, directly beneath the adaxial epidermis. Its cells contain many more chloroplasts than the spongy layer. These long cylindrical cells are regularly arranged in one to five rows. Cylindrical cells, with the chloroplasts close to the walls of the cell, can take optimal advantage of light. The slight separation of the cells provides maximal ] of carbon dioxide. This separation must be minimal to afford ] for water distribution. In order to adapt to their different environment (such as sun or shade), plants had to adapt this structure to obtain optimal result. Sun leaves have a multi-layered palisade layer, while shade leaves or older leaves closer to the soil, are single-layered.
*Beneath the palisade layer is the '''spongy layer'''. The cells of the spongy layer are more rounded and not so tightly packed. There are large intercellular air spaces. These cells contain less chloroplasts than....


The internal organization of most kinds of leaves has evolved to maximize exposure of the photosynthetic ] (]s) to light and to increase the absorption of {{CO2}} while at the same time controlling water loss. Their surfaces are waterproofed by the ], and gas exchange between the mesophyll cells and the atmosphere is controlled by minute (length and width measured in tens of μm) stomata which open or close to regulate the rate exchange of {{CO2}}, ] (O<sub>2</sub>), and ] into and out of the internal intercellular space system. Stomatal opening is controlled by the ] in a pair of ]s that surround the stomatal aperture. In any square centimeter of a plant leaf, there may be from 1,000 to 100,000 stomata.{{sfn|Krogh|2010}}
The pores or ''stomata'' of the epidermis open into '''substomatal chambers''', connecting to air spaces between the spongy layer cells.
]
]'' saplings have juvenile dorsiventral foliage from the previous year, but this season their newly sprouting foliage is isobilateral, like the mature foliage on the adult trees above]]


The shape and structure of leaves vary considerably from species to species of plant, depending largely on their adaptation to climate and available light, but also to other factors such as grazing animals, available nutrients, and ecological competition from other plants. Considerable changes in leaf type occur within species, too, for example as a plant matures (''Eucalyptus'' species commonly have isobilateral, pendent leaves when mature and dominating their neighbors; however, such trees tend to have erect or horizontal ] leaves as seedlings, when their growth is limited by the available light.){{sfn|James |Bell|2000}} Other factors include the need to balance water loss at high temperature and low humidity against the need to absorb {{CO2}}. In most plants, leaves also are the primary organs responsible for ] and ] (beads of fluid forming at leaf margins).
These two different layers of the mesophyll are absent in many aquatic and marsh plants. Even an epidermis and a mesophyll may be lacking. Instead for their gaseous exchanges they use a homogenous '''aerenchyma''' (thin-walled cells separated by large gas-filled spaces). Their stomata are situated at the upper surface.


Leaves can also store food and water and are modified accordingly to meet these functions, for example in the leaves of succulent plants and in ] scales. The concentration of photosynthetic structures in leaves requires that they be richer in ], ]s, and sugars than, say, woody stem tissues. Accordingly, leaves are prominent in the ] of many ]s. Correspondingly, leaves represent heavy investment on the part of the plants bearing them, and their retention or disposition are the subject of elaborate strategies for dealing with pest pressures, seasonal conditions, and protective measures such as the growth of thorns and the production of ]s, ]s, ]s and ]s.
Leaves are normally ] in color, which comes from ] found in ]s in the '''chlorenchyma''' cells. Plants that lack chlorophyll cannot photosynthesize.


] plants in cold temperate regions typically shed their leaves in ], whereas in areas with a severe ], some plants may shed their leaves until the dry season ends. In either case, the shed leaves often contribute their retained nutrients to the soil where they fall. In contrast, many other non-seasonal plants, such as ] and conifers, retain their leaves for long periods; '']'' retains its two main leaves throughout a lifetime that may exceed a thousand years.
Leaves in ], ], and seasonally dry zones may be seasonally ''']''' (falling off or dying for the inclement season). This mechanism to shed leaves is called '''abscission'''. After the leaf is shed, a '''leaf scar''' develops on the twig. In cold autumns they sometimes turn ], bright ] or ] as various accessory pigments (''']s''' and ''']s''') are revealed when the tree responds to cold and reduced ] by curtailing chlorophyll production.


The leaf-like organs of ]s (e.g., ]es and ]), known as ], differ greatly morphologically from the leaves of ]. In most cases, they lack vascular tissue, are a single cell thick and have no ], stomata, or internal system of intercellular spaces. (The phyllids of the moss family ] are notable exceptions.) The phyllids of bryophytes are only present on the ]s, while in contrast the leaves of vascular plants are only present on the ]. These can further develop into either vegetative or reproductive structures.{{sfn|Simpson|2011|loc=p.&nbsp;356}}
=== Veins ===
The '''veins''' are the vascular tissue of the leaf and are located in the spongy layer of the mesophyll. They are typical examples of pattern formation through ramification.


Simple, vascularized leaves (]), such as those of the early Devonian lycopsid '']'', first evolved as enations, extensions of the stem. True leaves or euphylls of larger size and with more complex venation did not become widespread in other groups until the Devonian period, by which time the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere had dropped significantly. This occurred independently in several separate lineages of vascular plants, in ]s like '']'', in ], ]s and later in the ]s and ]s. Euphylls are also referred to as macrophylls or megaphylls (large leaves).{{sfn|Stewart|Rothwell|1993}}
The veins are made up of:
* ], which brings water from the stem into the leaf.
* ], which usually moves sap out, the latter containing the glucose produced by photosynthesis in the leaf.


== Morphology ==
The xylem typically lies over the phloem. Both are embedded in a dense parenchyma tissue (= ground tissue), called '''pith''', with usually some structural '''collenchyma''' tissue present.
{{see also|Glossary of leaf morphology}}
]'' (California redwood)]]
]'': ], two ], ], five ]|alt=Leafstem of dog rose with petiole, stipules and leaflets ]]
]'' leaves with translucent glands{{sfn|Heywood et al|2007}}]]


A structurally complete leaf of an ] consists of a ] (leaf stalk), a lamina (leaf blade), ]s (small structures located to either side of the base of the petiole) and a sheath. Not every species produces leaves with all of these structural components. The proximal stalk or petiole is called a ] in ]. The lamina is the expanded, flat component of the leaf which contains the ]. The sheath is a structure, typically at the base that fully or partially clasps the ] above the node, where the leaf is attached. Leaf sheathes typically occur in ] (grasses) and ] (umbellifers). Between the sheath and the lamina, there may be a ], a petiole like structure. Pseudopetioles occur in some ] including ], ] and ].{{sfn|Simpson|2011|loc=pp.&nbsp;356–357}} Stipules may be conspicuous (e.g. ] and ]), soon falling or otherwise not obvious as in ] or absent altogether as in the ]. A petiole may be absent (apetiolate), or the blade may not be laminar (flattened). The petiole mechanically links the leaf to the plant and provides the route for transfer of water and sugars to and from the leaf. The lamina is typically the location of the majority of photosynthesis. The upper (]) angle between a leaf and a stem is known as the axil of the leaf. It is often the location of a ]. Structures located there are called "axillary".] leaves]]External leaf characteristics, such as shape, margin, hairs, the petiole, and the presence of stipules and glands, are frequently important for identifying plants to family, genus or ] levels, and botanists have developed a rich ] for describing leaf characteristics. Leaves almost always have determinate growth. They grow to a specific pattern and shape and then stop. Other plant parts like stems or roots have non-determinate growth, and will usually continue to grow as long as they have the resources to do so.
== Leaf types, arrangements, and forms ==
External leaf characteristics (such as shape, margin, hairs, etc.) are important for identifying plant species, and botanists have developed a rich terminology for describing leaf characteristics.
]
Leaves may be classified in many different ways, and the type is usually characteristic of a species, although some species produce more than one type of leaf. The terminology associated with describing leaf morphology is presented (with illustrations) at .


]]]
* <big>Basic leaf types</big>:
** ]s have '''fronds'''.
** ] leaves are typically needle-, awl-, or scale-shaped
** ] (flowering plant) leaves: the standard form includes ''stipules'', ''petiole'', and ''lamina''.
** ] leaves.
** ] leaves (type found in most ]).
** Specialized leaves.


The type of leaf is usually characteristic of a species (monomorphic), although some species produce more than one type of leaf (dimorphic or ]). The longest leaves are those of the ], ''R. regalis'' which may be up to {{convert|25|m|ft|abbr=on}} long and {{convert|3|m|ft|abbr=on}} wide.{{sfn|Hallé|1977}} The terminology associated with the description of leaf morphology is presented, in illustrated form, at ].
=== Arrangement on the stem ===
As a stem grows, leaves tend to appear arranged around the stem in away that optimizes yield of light. In essence, leaves come off the stem in a spiral pattern, either clockwise or counterclockwise, with (depending upon the species) the same '''angle of divergence'''. There is a regularity in these angles and they follow the numbers in a ]: 1/2, 2/3, 3/5, 5/8, 8/13, 13/21, 21/34, 34/55, 55/89. This series tends to a limit of 360° x 34/89 = 137,52 or 137° 30', an angle known mathematically as the 'golden angle'. In the series, the numerator gives the number of complete turns or gyres until the leaf arrives at the initial position. The denominator gives the number of leaves in the arrangement. This can be demonstrated by the following:
* alternate leaves have an angle of 180° (or 1/2)
* 120° (or 1/3) : three leaves in one circle
* 144° (or 2/5) : five leaves in two gyres
* 135° (or 3/8) : eight leaves in three gyres.
The fact that an arrangement of anything in nature can be described by a mathematical formula is not in itself mysterious. Mathematics is the science of discovering numerical relationships and applying formulae to these relationships. The formulae themselves can provide clues to the underlying physiological processes that, in this case, determine where the next leaf bud will form in the elongating stem. However, we can more easily describe the arrangement of leaves using the following terms:
* '''Alternate''' &mdash; leaf attachments singular at nodes, and leaves ''alternate'' direction, to a greater or lesser degree, along the stem.
* '''Opposite''' &mdash; leaf attachments paired at each node; '''decussate''' if, as typical, each successive pair is rotated 90° going along the stem; or '''distichous''' if not rotated, but two-ranked (in the same plane).
* '''Whorled''' &mdash; three or more leaves attach at each point or node on the stem. As with opposite leaves, successive whorls may or may not be decussate, rotated by half the angle between the leaves in the whorl (i.e., successive whorls of three rotated 60°, whorls of four rotated 45°, etc). Note: opposite leaves may appear whorled near the tip of the stem.
* '''Rosulate''' &mdash; leaves form a '''rosette''' ( = a cluster of leaves growing in crowded circles from a common center).
]


]'']]
=== Divisions of the ''lamina'' (blade) ===
Two basic forms of leaves can be described considering the way the blade is divided. A '''simple''' leaf has an undivided blade. However, the leaf shape may be one of lobes, but the gaps between lobes do not reach to the main vein. A '''compound''' leaf has a fully subdivided blade, each '''leaflet''' of the blade separated along a main or secondary vein. Because each leaflet can appear to be a "simple leaf", it is important to recognize where the petiole occurs to identify a compound leaf. Compound leaves are a characteristic of some families of higher plants, such as the ].
* ''Palmately compound'' leaves have the leaflets radiating from the end of the petiole, like fingers off the palm of a hand. There is no rachis, e.g. '']'' (hemp) and '']'' (buckeyes).
* ''Pinnately compound'' leaves have the leaflets arranged along the main or ''mid-vein'' (called a '''rachis''' in this case).
**odd pinnate: with a terminal leaflet, e.g. '']'' (ash).
**even pinnate: lacking a terminal leaflet, e.g. '']'' (mahogany).
* ''Bipinnately compound'' leaves are twice divided: the leaflets are arranged along a secondary vein that is one of several branching off the ''rachis''. Each leaflet is called a ''pinnule''. The pinnules on one secondary vein are called ''pinna''; e.g. '']'' (silk tree).
*''trifoliate'': a pinnate leaf with just three leaflets, e.g. '']'' (clover), '']'' (laburnum).
*''pinnatifid'': pinnately dissected to the midrib, but with the leaflets not entirely separate, e.g. some '']'' (whitebeams).


Where leaves are basal, and lie on the ground, they are referred to as ].
* <big>Characteristics of the ''petiole''</big>:
** Petiolated leaves have a petiole.
***In '''peltate''' leaves, the petiole attaches to the blade inside from the blade margin.
** '''Sessile''' or '''clasping''' leaves do not have a petiole. In sessile leaves the blade attaches directly to the stem. In clasping leaves, the blade partially or wholly surrounds the stem, giving the impression that the shoot grows through the leaf such as in ''Claytonia perfoliata'' of the purslane family (]).


{{anchor|Basic leaf types}}
In some '']'' species, such as the Koa Tree (''Acacia koa''), the petioles are expanded or broadened and function like leaf blades; these are called '''phyllodes'''. There may or may not be normal pinnate leaves at the tip of the phyllode.


===Basic leaf types===
* <big> Characteristics of the ''stipule'' </big>
]]]
**A stipule, present on the leaves of many ]s, is an appendage on each side at the base of the petiole, resembling a small leaf. They may be lasting and not be shed (a ''stipulate'' leaf, such as in ]s and ]s); or be shed as the leaf expands, leaving a stipule scar on the twig (an ''exstipulate'' leaf).
**The situation, arrangement, and structure of the stipules is called the ''stipulation''.
***free
***adnate : fused to the petiole base
***ochreate : provided with ochrea, or sheath-formed stipules, e.g. ],
***encircling the petiole base
***interpetiolar : between the petioles of two opposite leaves.
***intrapetiolar : between the petiole and the subtending stem


] plants whose leaves are shed annually are said to have deciduous leaves, while leaves that remain through winter are ]s. Leaves attached to stems by stalks (known as ]) are called petiolate, and if attached directly to the stem with no petiole they are called sessile.<ref name=types>{{cite book |title=Botany Illustrated: Introduction to Plants Major Groups Flowering Plant Families |publisher=Thomson Science |date=1984 |page=21}}</ref>
* <big>Arrangement of the veins ('''venation''')</big>:
]
There are two subtypes of venation, ''craspedodromus'' (the major veins stretch up to the margin of the leaf) and ''camptodromous'' (major veins come close to the margin, but bend before they get to it).
** Feather-veined, reticulate &mdash; the veins arise pinnately from a single mid-vein and subdivide into veinlets. These, in turn, form a complicated network. This type of venation is typical for ]s.
*** Pinnate-netted, penniribbed, penninerved, penniveined; the leaf has usually one main vein (called the '''mid-vein'''), with '''veinlets''', smaller veins branching off laterally, usually somewhat parallel to each other; eg '']'' (apples).
*** Three main veins originate from the base of the lamina, as in '']''.
*** Palmate-netted, palmate-veined, fan-veined; several main veins ] from near the leaf base where the petiole attaches, and radiate toward the edge of the leaf; e.g. most ] (maples).
** Parallel-veined, parallel-ribbed, parallel-nerved, penniparallel &mdash; veins run ] most the length of the leaf, from the base to the apex. ''Commissural'' veins (small veins) connect the major parallel veins. Typical for most ]s, such as ].
** Dichotomous &mdash; There are no dominant bundles, with the veins forking regularly by pairs; found in '']'' and some ]s.


* Ferns have ]s.
<br clear=right>
* Conifer leaves are typically needle- or awl-shaped or scale-like; they are usually evergreen but can sometimes be deciduous. Usually, they have a single vein.
]
* The standard form of flowering plants (angiosperm) includes ]s, a petiole, and a ].
* ]s have ].
* ] leaves are the type found in most ] and many other monocots.
* Other specialized leaves include those of '']'', a pitcher plant.


] leaves have blades with pinnate venation (where major veins diverge from one large mid-vein and have smaller connecting networks between them). Less commonly, dicot leaf blades may have palmate venation (several large veins diverging from ] to leaf edges). Finally, some exhibit parallel venation.<ref name=types/> ] leaves in temperate climates usually have narrow blades and usually parallel venation converging at leaf tips or edges. Some also have pinnate venation.<ref name="types" />
== Leaf shapes ==
See ]


===Arrangement on the stem===
== Leaf margins ==
{{main article|Phyllotaxis}}
The leaf margin is characteristic for a genus and aids in determining the species.
The arrangement of leaves on the stem is known as ].<ref>Didier Reinhardt and Cris Kuhlemeier, "Phyllotaxis in higher plants", in Michael T. McManus, Bruce Veit, eds., ''Meristematic Tissues in Plant Growth and Development'', January 2002, {{ISBN|978-1-84127-227-6}}, Wiley-Blackwell.</ref> A large variety of phyllotactic patterns occur in nature:
*entire: even; with a smooth margin; without toothing
*ciliate: fringed with hairs
*crenate: wavy-toothed; dentate with rounded teeth, such as ] (beech)
*dentate: toothed, such as ] (chestnut)
**coarse-toothed: with large teeth
**glandular toothed: with teeth that bear glands.
*denticulate: finely toothed
*doubly toothed: each tooth bearing smaller teeth, such as ] (elm)
*lobate: indented, with the indentations not reaching to the center, such as many ] (oaks)
**palmately lobed: indented with the indentations reaching to the center, such as ] (hop).
*serrate: saw-toothed with asymmetrical teeth pointing forward, such as ] (nettle)
*serrulate: finely serrate
*sinuate: with deep, wave-like indentations; coarsely crenate, such as many '']'' (docks)
*spiny: with stiff, sharp points, such as some ] (hollies) and ] (thistles).


] one another, with successive pairs at right angles to each other (''decussate'') along the red stem. Note the developing buds in the axils of these leaves.]]
== Leaf tips ==
]'') are alternately arranged.]]
* acuminate: long-pointed, prolonged into a narrow, tapering point in a concave manner.
* acute: ending in a sharp, but not prolonged point
* cuspidate: with a sharp, elongated, rigid tip; tipped with a cusp.
* emarginate: indented, with a shallow notch at the tip.
* mucronate: abruptly tipped with a small short point, as a continuation of the midrib; tipped with a mucro.
* mucronulate: mucronate, but with a smaller spine.
* obcordate: inversely heart-shaped, deeply notched at the top.
* obtuse: rounded or blunt
* truncate: ending abruptly with a flat end, that looks cut off.


;Alternate: One leaf, branch, or flower part attaches at each point or node on the stem, and leaves alternate direction—to a greater or lesser degree—along the stem.
== Leaf bases ==
;Basal: Arising from the base of the plant.
* acuminate: coming to a sharp, narrow, prolonged point.
;Cauline: Attached to the aerial stem.
* acute: coming to a sharp, but not prolonged point.
;Opposite: Two leaves, branches, or flower parts attach at each point or node on the stem. Leaf attachments are paired at each node.
* auriculate: ear-shaped
;]: An opposite arrangement in which each successive pair is rotated 90° from the previous.
* cordate: heart-shaped with the norch away from the stem.
;], or verticillate: Three or more leaves, branches, or flower parts attach at each point or node on the stem. As with opposite leaves, successive whorls may or may not be decussate, rotated by half the angle between the leaves in the whorl (i.e., successive whorls of three rotated 60°, whorls of four rotated 45°, etc.). Opposite leaves may appear whorled near the tip of the stem. '''Pseudoverticillate''' describes an arrangement only appearing whorled, but not actually so.
* ]: wedge-shaped.
;Rosulate: Leaves form a ].
* hastate: shaped like an halberd and with the basal lobes pointing outward.
;Rows: The term ''distichous'' literally means ''two rows''. Leaves in this arrangement may be alternate or opposite in their attachment. The term ''2-ranked'' is equivalent. The terms ''tristichous'' and ''tetrastichous'' are sometimes encountered. For example, the "leaves" (actually microphylls) of most species of '']'' are tetrastichous but not decussate.
* oblique: slanting.
* reniform: kidney-shaped but rounder and broader than long.
* rounded: curving shape.
* sagittate: shaped like an arrowhead and with the acute basal lobes pointing downward.
* truncate: ending abruptly with a flat end, that looks cut off.


In the simplest mathematical models of phyllotaxis, the apex of the stem is represented as a circle. Each new node is formed at the apex, and it is rotated by a constant angle from the previous node. This angle is called the ''divergence angle''. The number of leaves that grow from a node depends on the plant species. When a single leaf grows from each node, and when the stem is held straight, the leaves form a ].
== Hairiness ==
Leaves can show several degrees of hairiness. The meaning of several of the following terms can overlap. See also : ].
*glabrous: no hairs of any kind present.
*arachnoid, arachnose: with many fine, entangled hairs giving a cobwebby appearance.
*barbellate: with finely barbed hairs (barbellae).
*bearded: with long, stiff hairs.
*bristly: with stiff hair-like prickles.
*canescent: hoary with dense grayish-white pubescence.
*ciliate: marginally fringed with short hairs (cilia).
*ciliolate: minutely ciliate.
*floccose: with flocks of soft, woolly hairs, which tend to rub off.
*glandular: with a gland at the tip of the hair.
*hirsute: with rather rough or stiff hairs.
*hispid: with rigid, bristly hairs.
*hispidulous: minutely hispid.
*hoary: with a fine, close grayish-white pubescence.
*lanate, lanose: with woolly hairs.
*pilose: with soft, clearly separated hairs.
*puberulent, puberulous: with fine, minute hairs.
*pubescent: with soft, short and erect hairs.
*scabrous, scabrid: rough to the touch
*sericeous: silky appearance through fine, straight and appressed (lying close and flat) hairs.
*silky: with adpressed, soft and straight pubescence.
*stellate, stellifrom: with star-shaped hairs.
*strigose: with appressed, sharp, straight and stiff hairs.
*tomentose: densely pubescent with matted, soft white woolly hairs.
**cano-tomentose: between canescent and tomentose
**felted-tomentose: woolly and matted with curly hairs.
*villous: with long and soft hairs, usually curved.
*woolly: with long, soft and tortuous or matted hairs.


The divergence angle is often represented as a fraction of a full rotation around the stem. A rotation fraction of 1/2 (a divergence angle of 180°) produces an alternate arrangement, such as in ] or the fan-aloe ]. Rotation fractions of 1/3 (divergence angles of 120°) occur in ] and ]. ] and ] rotate by 2/5, sunflowers, poplar, and pear by 3/8, and in willow and almond the fraction is 5/13.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Introduction to geometry|first=H. S. M.|last=Coxeter|name-list-style=vanc|author-link=Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter|publisher=Wiley|year=1961|pages=169}}</ref> These arrangements are periodic. The ] of the rotation fraction indicates the number of leaves in one period, while the ] indicates the number of complete turns or ''gyres'' made in one period. For example:
== Leaf surfaces ==
* 180° (or {{frac|1|2}}): two leaves in one circle (alternate leaves)
The surface of a leaf can be described by several botanical terms:
* 120° (or {{frac|1|3}}): three leaves in one circle
*farinose: bearing farina; mealy, covered with a waxy, whitish powder.
* 144° (or {{frac|2|5}}): five leaves in two gyres
*glabrous: smooth, not hairy.
* 135° (or {{frac|3|8}}): eight leaves in three gyres.
*glaucous: with a whitish bloom; covered with a very fine, bluish-white powder.
*glutinous: sticky, viscid.
*papillate, papillose: bearing papillae (minute, nipple-shaped protuberances).
*pubescent: covered with erect hairs (especially soft and short ones)
*punctate: marked with dots; dotted with depressions or with translucent glands or colored dots.
*rugose: deeply wrinkled; with veins clearly visible.
*scurfy: covered with tiny, broad scalelike particles.
*tuberculate: covered with tubercles; covered with warty prominences.
*verrucose: warted, with warty outgrowths.
*viscid, viscous: covered with thick, sticky secretions.


Most divergence angles are related to the sequence of ] {{math|''F''<sub>''n''</sub>}}. This sequence begins 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13; each term is the sum of the previous two. Rotation fractions are often quotients {{math|''F''<sub>''n''</sub> / ''F''<sub>''n'' + 2</sub>}} of a Fibonacci number by the number two terms later in the sequence. This is the case for the fractions 1/2, 1/3, 2/5, 3/8, and 5/13. The ratio between successive Fibonacci numbers tends to the ] {{math|φ {{=}} (1 + √5)/2}}. When a circle is divided into two arcs whose lengths are in the ratio {{math|1:φ}}, the angle formed by the smaller arc is the ], which is {{math|1/φ<sup>2</sup> × 360° ≈ 137.5°}}. Because of this, many divergence angles are approximately {{math|137.5°}}. In plants where a pair of opposite leaves grows from each node, the leaves form a double helix. If the nodes do not rotate (a rotation fraction of zero and a divergence angle of 0°), the two helices become a pair of parallel lines, creating a distichous arrangement as in ] or ] trees. More common in a decussate pattern, in which each node rotates by 1/4 (90°) as in the herb ]. The leaves of tricussate plants such as ] form a triple helix. The leaves of some plants do not form helices. In some plants, the divergence angle changes as the plant grows.<ref>Reinhardt and Kuhlemeier, p. 175</ref> In orixate phyllotaxis, named after '']'', the divergence angle is not constant. Instead, it is periodic and follows the sequence 180°, 90°, 180°, 270°.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Yonekura |first1=Takaaki |last2=Iwamoto |first2=Akitoshi |last3=Fujita |first3=Hironori |last4=Sugiyama |first4=Munetaka |date=2019-06-06 |editor-last=Umulis |editor-first=David |title=Mathematical model studies of the comprehensive generation of major and minor phyllotactic patterns in plants with a predominant focus on orixate phyllotaxis |journal=PLOS Computational Biology |language=en |volume=15 |issue=6 |pages=e1007044 |doi=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007044 |issn=1553-7358 |pmc=6553687 |pmid=31170142 |doi-access=free|bibcode=2019PLSCB..15E7044Y }}</ref>
== Adaptations ==
In order to survive in a harsh ], leaves can adapt in the following ways:
* Hairy leaf surface to lessen water loss
* ]y leaf surface to prevent water loss
* Small, shiny leaves to deflect the ]'s rays
* Thicker leaves to store water (e.g. ])
* Spines instead of leaves (e.g. ])
* Leaves to trap insects (e.g. ])
* Bulbs to store food (e.g. ])


{{anchor|Divisions of the lamina (blade)}}
==See Also==
* ]
* ]
* ]


===Divisions of the blade===
== External link ==
] venation]]
* See a schematic of a
*


Two basic forms of leaves can be described considering the way the blade (lamina) is divided. A '''simple leaf''' has an undivided blade. However, the leaf may be ''dissected'' to form lobes, but the gaps between lobes do not reach to the main vein. A '''compound leaf''' has a fully subdivided blade, each ] of the blade being separated along a main or secondary vein. The leaflets may have petiolules and stipels, the equivalents of the petioles and stipules of leaves. Because each leaflet can appear to be a simple leaf, it is important to recognize where the petiole occurs to identify a compound leaf. Compound leaves are a characteristic of some families of higher plants, such as the ]. The middle vein of a compound leaf or a ], when it is present, is called a ].
]
]
]


;Palmately compound: The leaflets all have a common point of attachment at the end of the petiole, radiating like fingers of a hand; for example, '']'' (hemp) and '']'' (buckeyes).
]

]
;Pinnately compound: Leaflets are arranged either side of the main axis, or ].{{glossary}}{{term|Odd pinnate}}{{defn|With a terminal leaflet; for example, '']'' (ash).}}{{term|Even pinnate}}{{defn|Lacking a terminal leaflet; for example, '']'' (mahogany). A specific type of even pinnate is ], where leaves only consist of two leaflets; for example, '']''.}}{{glossary end}}
]

]
;Bipinnately compound: Leaves are twice divided: the leaflets (technically "]") are arranged along a secondary axis that is one of several branching off the rachis. Each leaflet is called a ''pinnule''. The group of pinnules on each secondary vein forms a ''pinna''; for example, '']'' (silk tree).
]

]
;Trifoliate (or trifoliolate): A pinnate leaf with just three leaflets; for example, '']'' (clover), '']'' (laburnum), and some species of '']'' (for instance, ]).
]

]
;Pinnatifid: Pinnately dissected to the central vein, but with the leaflets not entirely separate; for example, '']'', some '']'' (whitebeams). In pinnately veined leaves the central vein is known as the ''midrib''.
]

]
===Characteristics of the petiole===
]
] (''Rheum rhabarbarum'') are edible.]]
]

]
Leaves which have a petiole (leaf stalk) are said to be ''petiolate''. ] (epetiolate) leaves have no petiole, and the blade attaches directly to the stem. Subpetiolate leaves are nearly petiolate or have an extremely short petiole and may appear to be sessile. In '''clasping''' or ] leaves, the blade partially surrounds the stem. When the leaf base completely surrounds the stem, the leaves are said to be '''perfoliate''', such as in '']''. In peltate leaves, the petiole attaches to the blade inside the blade margin. In some '']'' species, such as the koa tree ('']''), the petioles are expanded or broadened and function like leaf blades; these are called ]s. There may or may not be normal pinnate leaves at the tip of the phyllode. A ], present on the leaves of many ]s, is an appendage on each side at the base of the petiole, resembling a small leaf. Stipules may be lasting and not be shed (a stipulate leaf, such as in ]s and ]s), or be shed as the leaf expands, leaving a stipule scar on the twig (an exstipulate leaf). The situation, arrangement, and structure of the stipules is called the "stipulation".
]
;Free, lateral: As in '']''.
;Adnate: Fused to the petiole base, as in '']''.
;Ochreate: Provided with ], or sheath-formed stipules, as in ]; e.g., ].
;Encircling the petiole base:{{glossary}}{{term|]}}{{defn|Between the petioles of two opposite leaves, as in ].}}{{term|]}}{{defn|Between the petiole and the subtending stem, as in ].}}{{glossary end}}

===Veins===
{{see also|#Venation|#Vascular tissue}}
] leaf]]
]]]
] of a leaf skeleton]]

Veins (sometimes referred to as nerves) constitute one of the most visible features of leaves. The veins in a leaf represent the vascular structure of the organ, extending into the leaf via the petiole and providing transportation of water and nutrients between leaf and stem, and play a crucial role in the maintenance of leaf water status and photosynthetic capacity. They also play a role in the mechanical support of the leaf.{{sfn|Rolland-Lagan et al|2009}}{{sfn|Walls|2011}} Within the lamina of the leaf, while some vascular plants possess only a single vein, in most this vasculature generally divides (ramifies) according to a variety of patterns (venation) and form cylindrical bundles, usually lying in the median plane of the ], between the two layers of ].{{sfn|Dickison|2000}} This pattern is often specific to taxa, and of which angiosperms possess two main types, ] and ] (net like). In general, parallel venation is typical of monocots, while reticulate is more typical of ] and ] ("dicots"), though there are many exceptions.{{sfn|Rudall|2007}}{{sfn|Dickison|2000}}<ref name=SimpsonLv/>

The vein or veins entering the leaf from the petiole are called primary or first-order veins. The veins branching from these are secondary or second-order veins. These primary and secondary veins are considered major veins or lower order veins, though some authors include third order.{{sfn|Sack|Scoffoni|2013}} Each subsequent branching is sequentially numbered, and these are the higher order veins, each branching being associated with a narrower vein diameter.{{sfn|Roth-Nebelsick et al|2001}}

In parallel veined leaves, the primary veins run parallel and equidistant to each other for most of the length of the leaf and then converge or fuse (anastomose) towards the apex. Usually, many smaller minor veins interconnect these primary veins but may terminate with very fine vein endings in the mesophyll. Minor veins are more typical of angiosperms, which may have as many as four higher orders.{{sfn|Sack|Scoffoni|2013}}

In contrast, leaves with reticulate venation have a single (sometimes more) primary vein in the centre of the leaf, referred to as the midrib or costa, which is continuous with the vasculature of the petiole. The secondary veins, also known as second order veins or lateral veins, branch off from the midrib and extend toward the leaf margins. These often terminate in a ], a secretory organ, at the margin. In turn, smaller veins branch from the secondary veins, known as tertiary or third order (or higher order) veins, forming a dense reticulate pattern. The areas or islands of mesophyll lying between the higher order veins, are called ]. Some of the smallest veins (veinlets) may have their endings in the areoles, a process known as areolation.{{sfn|Roth-Nebelsick et al|2001}} These minor veins act as the sites of exchange between the mesophyll and the plant's vascular system.{{sfn|Walls|2011}} Thus, minor veins collect the products of photosynthesis (photosynthate) from the cells where it takes place, while major veins are responsible for its transport outside of the leaf. At the same time water is being transported in the opposite direction.{{sfn|Ueno et al|2006}}{{sfn|Rudall|2007}}{{sfn|Dickison|2000}}

The number of vein endings is variable, as is whether second order veins end at the margin, or link back to other veins.<ref name=SimpsonLv/> There are many elaborate variations on the patterns that the leaf veins form, and these have functional implications. Of these, angiosperms have the greatest diversity.{{sfn|Sack|Scoffoni|2013}} Within these the major veins function as the support and distribution network for leaves and are correlated with leaf shape. For instance, the parallel venation found in most monocots correlates with their elongated leaf shape and wide leaf base, while reticulate venation is seen in simple entire leaves, while digitate leaves typically have venation in which three or more primary veins diverge radially from a single point.{{sfn|Runions et al|2005}}{{sfn|Walls|2011}}{{sfn|Roth-Nebelsick et al|2001}}<ref name=MMsvt/>

In evolutionary terms, early emerging taxa tend to have dichotomous branching with reticulate systems emerging later. Veins appeared in the ], prior to the appearance of angiosperms in the ], during which vein hierarchy appeared enabling higher function, larger leaf size and adaption to a wider variety of climatic conditions.{{sfn|Sack|Scoffoni|2013}} Although it is the more complex pattern, branching veins appear to be ]ic and in some form were present in ancient ]s as long as 250 million years ago. A pseudo-reticulate venation that is actually a highly modified penniparallel one is an ]y of some ], which are monocots; e.g., '']'' (True-lover's Knot). In leaves with reticulate venation, veins form a scaffolding matrix imparting mechanical rigidity to leaves.{{sfn|Bagchi et al|2016}}

===Morphology changes within a single plant===

;]: Characteristic in which a plant has small changes in leaf size, shape, and growth habit between juvenile and adult stages, in contrast to;

;]: Characteristic in which a plant has marked changes in leaf size, shape, and growth habit between juvenile and adult stages.

==Anatomy==

===Medium-scale features===

Leaves are normally extensively vascularized and typically have networks of ] containing ], which supplies water for ], and ], which transports the ]s produced by photosynthesis. Many leaves are covered in ]s (small hairs) which have diverse structures and functions.

]

===Small-scale features===

The major tissue systems present are
* The ''']''', which covers the upper and lower surfaces
* The ''']''', which consists of photosynthetic cells rich in ]s. (also called '''chlorenchyma''')
* The arrangement of '''veins''' (the ])

These three tissue systems typically form a regular organization at the cellular scale. Specialized cells that differ markedly from surrounding cells, and which often synthesize specialized products such as crystals, are termed '''idioblasts'''.{{sfn|Cote|2009}}

]

===Major leaf tissues===
<div style="text-align:center;"><gallery>
File:Bifacial leaf cross section.jpg|Cross-section of a leaf
File:Leaf epidermis 2.jpg|Epidermal cells
File:Leaf spongy mesophyll.jpg|Spongy mesophyll cells
</gallery></div>

====Epidermis====
] image of the leaf epidermis of '']'', showing ]s (hair-like appendages) and ]ta (eye-shaped slits, visible at full resolution).]]
The ] is the outer layer of ] covering the leaf. It is covered with a waxy ] which is impermeable to liquid water and water vapor and forms the boundary separating the plant's inner cells from the external world. The cuticle is in some cases thinner on the lower epidermis than on the upper epidermis, and is generally thicker on leaves from dry climates as compared with those from wet climates.{{sfn|Clements|1905}} The epidermis serves several functions: protection against water loss by way of ], regulation of gas exchange and secretion of ] compounds. Most leaves show dorsoventral anatomy: The upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces have somewhat different construction and may serve different functions.

The epidermis tissue includes several differentiated cell types; epidermal cells, epidermal hair cells (]s), cells in the stomatal complex; guard cells and subsidiary cells. The epidermal cells are the most numerous, largest, and least specialized and form the majority of the epidermis. They are typically more elongated in the leaves of ]s than in those of ]s.

Chloroplasts are generally absent in epidermal cells, the exception being the guard cells of the ]. The stomatal pores perforate the epidermis and are surrounded on each side by chloroplast-containing guard cells, and two to four subsidiary cells that lack chloroplasts, forming a specialized cell group known as the stomatal complex. The opening and closing of the stomatal aperture is controlled by the stomatal complex and regulates the exchange of gases and water vapor between the outside air and the interior of the leaf. Stomata therefore play the important role in allowing photosynthesis without letting the leaf dry out. In a typical leaf, the stomata are more numerous over the abaxial (lower) epidermis than the adaxial (upper) epidermis and are more numerous in plants from cooler climates.

====Mesophyll====
{{for|the term ''Mesophyll'' in the size classification of leaves|Leaf size}}
Most of the interior of the leaf between the upper and lower layers of epidermis is a '']'' (ground tissue) or '']'' tissue called the '''mesophyll''' (Greek for "middle leaf"). This ] tissue is the primary location of photosynthesis in the plant. The products of photosynthesis are called "assimilates".

In ferns and most flowering plants, the mesophyll is divided into two layers:
* An upper ''']''' of vertically elongated cells, one to two cells thick, directly beneath the adaxial epidermis, with intercellular air spaces between them. Its cells contain many more chloroplasts than the spongy layer. Cylindrical cells, with the '']'' close to the walls of the cell, can take optimal advantage of light. The slight separation of the cells provides maximum ] of carbon dioxide. Sun leaves have a multi-layered palisade layer, while shade leaves or older leaves closer to the soil are single-layered.
* Beneath the palisade layer is the ''']'''. The cells of the spongy layer are more branched and not so tightly packed, so that there are large intercellular air spaces between them. The pores or ''stomata'' of the epidermis open into substomatal chambers, which are connected to the intercellular air spaces between the spongy and palisade mesophyll cell, so that oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor can diffuse into and out of the leaf and access the mesophyll cells during respiration, photosynthesis and transpiration.

Leaves are normally green, due to chlorophyll in chloroplasts in the mesophyll cells. Some plants have leaves of different colours due to the presence of ]s such as ]s in their mesophyll cells.

====Vascular tissue====
] leaf]]

The '''veins''' are the ] of the leaf and are located in the spongy layer of the mesophyll. The pattern of the veins is called ]. In ] the venation is typically parallel in ] and forms an interconnecting network in ]. They were once thought to be typical examples of ] through ], but they may instead exemplify a pattern formed in a stress ].{{sfn|Couder et al|2002}}{{sfn|Corson et al|2009}}{{sfn|Laguna et al|2008}}

A vein is made up of a ]. At the core of each bundle are clusters of two
distinct types of conducting cells:
; ]: Cells that bring water and minerals from the roots into the leaf.
; ]: Cells that usually move ], with dissolved sucrose (glucose to sucrose) produced by photosynthesis in the leaf, out of the leaf.

The xylem typically lies on the adaxial side of the vascular bundle and the phloem typically lies on the abaxial side. Both are embedded in a dense parenchyma tissue, called the sheath, which usually includes some structural collenchyma tissue.

==Leaf development==

According to ]'s partial-shoot theory of the leaf, leaves are partial shoots,{{sfn|Arber|1950}} being derived from leaf ] of the shoot apex. Early in development they are dorsiventrally flattened with both dorsal and ventral surfaces.{{sfn|Simpson|2011|loc=p.&nbsp;356}} Compound leaves are closer to shoots than simple leaves. Developmental studies have shown that compound leaves, like shoots, may branch in three dimensions.{{sfn|Rutishauser|Sattler|1997}}{{sfn|Lacroix et al|2003}} On the basis of molecular genetics, Eckardt and Baum (2010) concluded that "it is now generally accepted that compound leaves express both leaf and shoot properties."{{sfn|Eckardt|Baum|2010}} Many dicotyledonous leaves show endogenously driven daily rhythmicity in growth.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Poiré |first1=Richard |last2=Wiese-Klinkenberg |first2=Anika |last3=Parent |first3=Boris |last4=Mielewczik |first4=Michael |last5=Schurr |first5=Ulrich |last6=Tardieu |first6=François |last7=Walter |first7=Achim |date=2010 |title=Diel time-courses of leaf growth in monocot and dicot species: endogenous rhythms and temperature effects |journal=Journal of Experimental Botany |language=en |volume=61 |issue=6 |pages=1751–1759 |doi=10.1093/jxb/erq049 |issn=1460-2431 |pmc=2852670 |pmid=20299442}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Mielewczik |first1=Michael |last2=Friedli |first2=Michael |last3=Kirchgessner |first3=Norbert |last4=Walter |first4=Achim |date=2013-07-25 |title=Diel leaf growth of soybean: a novel method to analyze two-dimensional leaf expansion in high temporal resolution based on a marker tracking approach (Martrack Leaf) |journal=Plant Methods |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=30 |doi=10.1186/1746-4811-9-30 |doi-access=free |pmid=23883317 |pmc=3750653 |issn=1746-4811|hdl=20.500.11850/76534 |hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Friedli |first1=Michael |last2=Walter |first2=Achim |date=2015 |title=Diel growth patterns of young soybean ( G lycine max ) leaflets are synchronous throughout different positions on a plant |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pce.12407 |journal=Plant, Cell & Environment |language=en |volume=38 |issue=3 |pages=514–524 |doi=10.1111/pce.12407 |pmid=25041284 |bibcode=2015PCEnv..38..514F |issn=0140-7791}}</ref>

== Ecology ==

=== Biomechanics ===
Plants respond and adapt to environmental factors, such as light and mechanical stress from wind. Leaves need to support their own mass and align themselves in such a way as to optimize their exposure to the sun, generally more or less horizontally. However, horizontal alignment maximizes exposure to bending forces and failure from stresses such as wind, snow, hail, falling debris, animals, and abrasion from surrounding foliage and plant structures. Overall leaves are relatively flimsy with regard to other plant structures such as stems, branches and roots.{{sfn|Read|Stokes|2006}}

Both leaf blade and petiole structure influence the leaf's response to forces such as wind, allowing a degree of repositioning to minimize ] and damage, as opposed to resistance. Leaf movement like this may also increase ] of the air close to the surface of the leaf, which thins the ] of air immediately adjacent to the surface, increasing the capacity for gas and heat exchange, as well as photosynthesis. Strong wind forces may result in diminished leaf number and surface area, which while reducing drag, involves a ] of also reducing photosynthesis. Thus, leaf design may involve compromise between carbon gain, thermoregulation and water loss on the one hand, and the cost of sustaining both static and dynamic loads. In vascular plants, perpendicular forces are spread over a larger area and are relatively flexible in both bending and ], enabling elastic deforming without damage.{{sfn|Read|Stokes|2006}}

Many leaves rely on ] support arranged around a skeleton of vascular tissue for their strength, which depends on maintaining leaf water status. Both the mechanics and architecture of the leaf reflect the need for transportation and support. Read and Stokes (2006) consider two basic models, the "hydrostatic" and "I-beam leaf" form (see Fig 1).{{sfn|Read|Stokes|2006}} Hydrostatic leaves such as in '']'' are large and thin, and may involve the need for multiple leaves rather single large leaves because of the amount of veins needed to support the periphery of large leaves. But large leaf size favors efficiency in photosynthesis and water conservation, involving further trade offs. On the other hand, I-beam leaves such as '']'' involve specialized structures to stiffen them. These I-beams are formed from bundle sheath extensions of ] meeting stiffened sub-epidermal layers. This shifts the balance from reliance on hydrostatic pressure to structural support, an obvious advantage where water is relatively scarce.
{{sfn|Read|Stokes|2006}} Long narrow leaves bend more easily than ovate leaf blades of the same area. Monocots typically have such linear leaves that maximize surface area while minimising self-shading. In these a high proportion of longitudinal main veins provide additional support.{{sfn|Read|Stokes|2006}}

=== Interactions with other organisms ===
]s, like '']'', mimic leaves.]]

Although not as nutritious as other organs such as fruit, leaves provide a food source for many organisms. The leaf is a vital source of energy production for the plant, and plants have evolved protection against animals that consume leaves, such as ]s, chemicals which hinder the digestion of proteins and have an unpleasant taste. Animals that are specialized to eat leaves are known as ]s.

Some species have ] adaptations by which they use leaves in avoiding predators. For example, the caterpillars of ] will create a small home in the leaf by folding it over themselves. Several other ] larvae modify leaves for shelter; perhaps the greatest variety of shelter types occurs among the ] (Hesperiidae), which will cut, fold, and bind leaves using ].<ref>{{cite journal | last=Greeney | first=Harold F | last2=Jones | first2=Meg T | title=Shelter building in the Hesperiidae: a classification scheme for larval shelters | journal=The Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera | volume=37 | date=2003 | doi=10.5962/p.266551 | doi-access=free | pages=27–36 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/partpdf/266551 | access-date=13 January 2025}}</ref> Some ] similarly roll the leaves of their food plants into tubes. Females of the ], so-called leaf-rolling weevils, lay their eggs into leaves that they then roll up as means of protection. Other herbivores and their predators ] the appearance of the leaf. Reptiles such as some chameleons, and insects such as some ], also mimic the oscillating movements of leaves in the wind, moving from side to side or back and forth while evading a possible threat.

===Seasonal leaf loss===
]
{{main|Autumn leaf color}}

Leaves in ], ], and seasonally dry zones may be seasonally deciduous (falling off or dying for the inclement season). This mechanism to shed leaves is called ]. When the leaf is shed, it leaves a leaf scar on the twig. In cold autumns, they sometimes ], and turn ], bright-], or ], as various accessory pigments (]s and ]s) are revealed when the tree responds to cold and reduced ] by curtailing chlorophyll production. Red ] pigments are now thought to be produced in the leaf as it dies, possibly to mask the yellow hue left when the chlorophyll is lost—yellow leaves appear to attract herbivores such as ].{{sfn|Doring et al|2009}} Optical masking of chlorophyll by anthocyanins reduces risk of photo-oxidative damage to leaf cells as they senesce, which otherwise may lower the efficiency of nutrient retrieval from senescing autumn leaves.{{sfn|Feild et al|2001}}

==Evolutionary adaptation==
] ]s are leaves which have evolved red pigmentation in order to attract insects and birds to the central flowers, an adaptive function normally served by ]s (which are themselves leaves highly modified by evolution).]]

In the course of ], leaves have adapted to different ] in the following ways:{{Citation needed|date=April 2019}}
* ] micro- and nanostructures on the surface reduce wetting by rain and adhesion of contamination (''See ]'').
* Divided and compound leaves reduce wind resistance and promote cooling.
* Hairs on the leaf surface trap humidity in dry climates and create a ] reducing water loss.
* ]y plant cuticles reduce water loss.
* Large surface area provides a large area for capture of sunlight.
* In harmful levels of sunlight, specialized leaves, opaque or partly buried, admit light through a translucent ] for photosynthesis at inner leaf surfaces (e.g. '']'').
* ] in plants which perform ]
* ] leaves store water and organic acids for use in ].
* ]s, ] or ] produced by leaf borne glands deter herbivores (e.g. ]).
* Inclusions of crystalline minerals deter herbivores (e.g. silica ]s in grasses, ] in ]).
* ]s attract pollinators.
* ] protect the plants from herbivores (e.g. ]).
* ] to protect against herbivory, e.g. in '']'' and '']'' (]).
* Special leaves on carnivorous plants are adapted for trapping food, mainly invertebrate prey, though some species trap small vertebrates as well (see ]s).
* ]s store food and water (e.g. ]s).
* ]s allow the plant to climb (e.g. peas).
* ]s and ] (false flowers) replace normal flower structures when the true flowers are greatly reduced (e.g. ]s, ]s in the ] and ] in the ]).

==Terminology==
{{see also|Glossary of leaf morphology|Glossary of plant morphology|Glossary of botanical terms}}
]
{{Clear}}

===Shape===
{{main article|Glossary of leaf morphology#Leaf and leaflet shapes}}
]
{{Clear}}
{{anchor|Margins (edge)}}

===Edge (margin)===
The ''edge'' or ''margin'' is the outside perimeter of a leaf. The terms are interchangeable.
{{Leaf margin}}

{{anchor|Tip of the leaf}}

===Apex (tip)<span class="anchor" id="Apex (tip)"></span>===
{| class="wikitable sortable centre"
|-
! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Image
! scope="col" | Term
! scope="col" | Latin
! scope="col" | Description
|-
|]||Acuminate||''_''||Long-pointed, prolonged into a narrow, tapering point in a concave manner
|-
|]||Acute||''_''||Ending in a sharp, but not prolonged point
|-
|]||Cuspidate||''_''||With a sharp, elongated, rigid tip; tipped with a cusp
|-
|]||Emarginate||''_''||Indented, with a shallow notch at the tip
|-
|]||Mucronate||''_''||Abruptly tipped with a small short point
|-
|]||Mucronulate||''_''||Mucronate, but with a noticeably diminutive spine
|-
|]||Obcordate||''_''||Inversely heart-shaped
|-
|]||Obtuse||''_''||Rounded or blunt
|-
|]||Truncate||''_''||Ending abruptly with a flat end
|}

{{anchor|Base of the leaf}}

===Base===
;Acuminate: Coming to a sharp, narrow, prolonged point.
;Acute: Coming to a sharp, but not prolonged point.
;Auriculate: Ear-shaped.
;Cordate: Heart-shaped with the notch towards the stalk.
;Cuneate: Wedge-shaped.
;Hastate: Shaped like an halberd and with the basal lobes pointing outward.
;Oblique: Slanting.
;Reniform: Kidney-shaped but rounder and broader than long.
;Rounded: Curving shape.
;Sagittate: Shaped like an arrowhead and with the acute basal lobes pointing downward.
;Truncate: Ending abruptly with a flat end, that looks cut off.

{{anchor|Surface of the leaf}}

===Surface===
].]]

The leaf surface is also host to a large variety of ]; in this context it is referred to as the ].
;Lepidote: Covered with fine scurfy scales.

{{anchor|Hairiness (trichomes)}}

===Hairiness===
]'') leaves are covered in dense, stellate trichomes.]]
]) leaf]]
]'') leaves are sericeous.]]
"Hairs" on plants are properly called ]s. Leaves can show several degrees of hairiness. The meaning of several of the following terms can overlap.
;Arachnoid, or arachnose: With many fine, entangled hairs giving a cobwebby appearance.
;Barbellate: With finely barbed hairs (barbellae).
;Bearded: With long, stiff hairs.
;Bristly: With stiff hair-like prickles.
;Canescent: Hoary with dense grayish-white pubescence.
;Ciliate: Marginally fringed with short hairs (cilia).
;Ciliolate: Minutely ciliate.
;Floccose: With flocks of soft, woolly hairs, which tend to rub off.
;Glabrescent: Losing hairs with age.
;Glabrous: No hairs of any kind present.
;Glandular: With a gland at the tip of the hair.
;Hirsute: With rather rough or stiff hairs.
;Hispid: With rigid, bristly hairs.
;Hispidulous: Minutely hispid.
;Hoary: With a fine, close grayish-white pubescence.
;{{anchor|lanate|lanose}}Lanate, or lanose: With woolly hairs.
;Pilose: With soft, clearly separated hairs.
;Puberulent, or puberulous: With fine, minute hairs.
;{{anchor|pubescent}}Pubescent: With soft, short and erect hairs.
;Scabrous, or scabrid: Rough to the touch.
;Sericeous: Silky appearance through fine, straight and appressed (lying close and flat) hairs.
;Silky: With adpressed, soft and straight pubescence.
;Stellate, or stelliform: With star-shaped hairs.
;Strigose: With appressed, sharp, straight and stiff hairs.
;Tomentose: Densely pubescent with matted, soft white woolly hairs.{{glossary}}{{term|Cano-tomentose}}{{defn|Between canescent and tomentose.}}{{term|Felted-tomentose}}{{defn|Woolly and matted with curly hairs.}}{{glossary end}}
;Tomentulose: Minutely or only slightly tomentose.
;{{anchor|villous}}Villous: With long and soft hairs, usually curved.
;Woolly: With long, soft and tortuous or matted hairs.

===Timing===
;Hysteranthous: Developing after the flowers <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.kew.org/Glossary/hysteranthous.htm?prefix=h|title=Kew Glossary – definition of hysteranthous|date=December 3, 2013|access-date=May 12, 2017|archive-date=December 3, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203015400/http://www.kew.org/Glossary/hysteranthous.htm?prefix=h|url-status=bot: unknown}}</ref>
;Synanthous: Developing at the same time as the flowers <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.kew.org/Glossary/synanthous.htm?prefix=s|title=Kew Glossary – definition of synanthous|date=December 3, 2013|access-date=May 12, 2017|archive-date=December 3, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203015354/http://www.kew.org/Glossary/synanthous.htm?prefix=s|url-status=bot: unknown}}</ref>

=== Venation ===

==== Classification ====
{{multiple image | header = Hickey primary venation types| align = right | direction = vertical | width = 200 | float = none
| image1 =Ostrya virginiana1.jpg| caption1 = 1. Pinnate venation, ]| alt1 = |image2=Tulip Leaves AWL.JPG|thumb|caption2=2. Parallel venation, '']''
|image3=Maianthemum bifolium 2.JPG|caption3=3. Campylodromous venation, '']''
|image4=Starr 031118-0115 Miconia calvescens.jpg|caption4=4. Acrodromous venation (basal), '']''
|image5=Puttali (Tamil- பூத்தாளி) (5656476463).jpg|caption5=5. Actinodromous venation (suprabasal), '']''
|image6=Platanus orientalis leaf.JPG|caption6=6. Palinactodromous venation, '']''
}}
A number of different classification systems of the patterns of leaf veins (venation or veination) have been described,<ref name=SimpsonLv/> starting with Ettingshausen (1861),{{sfn|Ettingshausen|1861}} together with many different descriptive terms, and the terminology has been described as "formidable".<ref name=SimpsonLv/> One of the commonest among these is the Hickey system, originally developed for "]" and using a number of Ettingshausen's terms derived from Greek (1973–1979):{{sfn|Hickey|1973}}{{sfn|Hickey|Wolfe|1975}}{{sfn|Hickey|1979}} (''see also'': Simpson Figure 9.12, p.&nbsp;468)<ref name=SimpsonLv/>

===== Hickey system =====
;1. ] (feather-veined, reticulate, pinnate-netted, penniribbed, penninerved, or penniveined): The veins arise ] (feather like) from a single primary vein (mid-vein) and subdivide into secondary veinlets, known as higher order veins. These, in turn, form a complicated network. This type of venation is typical for (but by no means limited to) "]s" (non monocotyledon ]). E.g., '']''.{{paragraph}} There are three subtypes of pinnate venation:{{glossary}}{{term
| ''Craspedodromous'' (Greek: ''kraspedon'' – edge, ''dromos'' – running)}}{{defn
| The major veins reach to the margin of the leaf.}}{{term
| ''Camptodromous''}}{{defn
| Major veins extend close to the margin, but bend before they intersect with the margin.}}{{term
| ''Hyphodromous''}}{{defn
| All secondary veins are absent, rudimentary or concealed}}{{glossary end}} These in turn have a number of further subtypes such as eucamptodromous, where secondary veins curve near the margin without joining adjacent secondary veins.
{{multiple image
| header = Pinnate
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 140
| float = none
| image1 =Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - craspedodromous simple.svg
| caption1 = Craspedodromous
| image2= Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - camptodromous eucamptodromous.svg
| caption2= Camptodromous
| image3= Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - hyphodromous.svg
| caption3= Hyphodromous
}}

;2. Parallelodromous (parallel-veined, parallel-ribbed, parallel-nerved, penniparallel, striate): Two or more primary veins originating beside each other at the leaf base, and running ] to each other to the apex and then converging there. Commissural veins (small veins) connect the major parallel veins. Typical for most ]s, such as ].{{paragraph}} The additional terms marginal (primary veins reach the margin), and reticulate (net-veined) are also used.
{{multiple image
| header = Parallelodromous
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - parallelodromous.svg
}}

;3. Campylodromous (''{{lang|grc-Latn|campylos}}'' – curve): Several primary veins or branches originating at or close to a single point and running in recurved arches, then converging at apex. E.g. '']'' .
{{multiple image
| header = Campylodromous
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 =Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - campylodromous.svg
}}

;4. Acrodromous: Two or more primary or well developed secondary veins in convergent arches towards apex, without basal recurvature as in Campylodromous. May be basal or suprabasal depending on origin, and perfect or imperfect depending on whether they reach to 2/3 of the way to the apex. E.g., '']'' (basal type), '']'' (suprabasal type).
{{multiple image
| header = Acrodromous
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - acrodromous imperfect basal.svg
| caption1 = Imperfect basal
| image2 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - acrodromous imperfect suprabasal.svg
| caption2=Imperfect suprabasal
| image3=Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - acrodromous perfect basal.svg
| caption3=Perfect basal
| image4=Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - acrodromous perfect suprabasal.svg
| caption4=Perfect suprabasal
}}

;5. Actinodromous: Three or more primary veins diverging radially from a single point. E.g., '']'' (basal type), '']'' (suprabasal type).
{{multiple image
| header = Actinodromous
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - actinodromous imperfect marginal.svg
| caption1 = Imperfect marginal
| image2 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - actinodromous imperfect reticulate.svg
| caption2 = Imperfect reticulate {{Dubious|date=April 2022}}
}}

;6. Palinactodromous: Primary veins with one or more points of secondary dichotomous branching beyond the primary divergence, either closely or more distantly spaced. E.g., '']''.

]
{{multiple image
| header = Palinactodromous
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 =Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - palinactinodromous.svg
}}

Types 4–6 may similarly be subclassified as basal (primaries joined at the base of the blade) or suprabasal (diverging above the blade base), and perfect or imperfect, but also flabellate.

At about the same time, Melville (1976) described a system applicable to all Angiosperms and using Latin and English terminology.{{sfn|Melville|1976}} Melville also had six divisions, based on the order in which veins develop.

; Arbuscular (arbuscularis): Branching repeatedly by regular dichotomy to give rise to a three dimensional bush-like structure consisting of linear segment (2 subclasses)
; Flabellate (flabellatus): Primary veins straight or only slightly curved, diverging from the base in a fan-like manner (4 subclasses)
; Palmate (palmatus): Curved primary veins (3 subclasses)
; Pinnate (pinnatus): Single primary vein, the midrib, along which straight or arching secondary veins are arranged at more or less regular intervals (6 subclasses)
; Collimate (collimatus): Numerous longitudinally parallel primary veins arising from a transverse meristem (5 subclasses)
; Conglutinate (conglutinatus): Derived from fused pinnate leaflets (3 subclasses)

A modified form of the Hickey system was later incorporated into the Smithsonian classification (1999) which proposed seven main types of venation, based on the architecture of the primary veins, adding Flabellate as an additional main type. Further classification was then made on the basis of secondary veins, with 12 further types, such as;
; Brochidodromous: Closed form in which the secondaries are joined in a series of prominent arches, as in '']''.
; Craspedodromous: Open form with secondaries terminating at the margin, in toothed leaves, as in '']''.
; Eucamptodromous: Intermediate form with upturned secondaries that gradually diminish apically but inside the margin, and connected by intermediate tertiary veins rather than loops between secondaries, as in '']''.
; Cladodromous: Secondaries freely branching toward the margin, as in '']''.

terms which had been used as subtypes in the original Hickey system.{{sfn|Leaf Architecture Working Group|1999}}
{{multiple image
| header = Secondary venation patterns
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 95
| float = none
| image1 = Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - camptodromous brochidodromous.svg
| caption1 = Brochidodromous
| image2=Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - craspedodromous simple.svg
| caption2 = Craspedodromous
| image3=Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - camptodromous eucamptodromous.svg
| caption3=Eucamptodromous
| image4=Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - camptodromous cladodromous.svg
| caption4=Cladodromous
}}
{{multiple image
| align = center
| image1 =Hildegardia migeodii - leaf shape (8307117710).jpg
| caption1 = Brochidodromous<br>'']''
| width1={{#expr: (150 * 1900 /1425) round 0}}
| image2=Celtis occidentalis (18).JPG
| caption2=Craspedodromous<br>'']''
| width2={{#expr: (150 * 2736 /3192) round 0}}
| image3=Cornus officinalis 02.JPG
| caption3=Eucamptodromous<br>'']''
| width3={{#expr: (150 * 2448/3264) round 0}}
| image4=Rhus ovata 1.jpg
| caption4=Cladodromous<br>'']''
| width4={{#expr: (150 * 1500 /1155) round 0}}
}}

Further descriptions included the higher order, or minor veins and the patterns of areoles (''see'' Leaf Architecture Working Group, Figures 28–29).{{sfn|Leaf Architecture Working Group|1999}}

]'']]
;Flabellate: Several to many equal fine basal veins diverging radially at low angles and branching apically. E.g. '']''.

{{multiple image
| header = Flabellate
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| width = 75
| float = none
| image1 =Leaf morphology - venation Hickey 1973 - flabellate.svg
}}

Analyses of vein patterns often fall into consideration of the vein orders, primary vein type, secondary vein type (major veins), and minor vein density. A number of authors have adopted simplified versions of these schemes.{{sfn|Judd et al| 2007}}<ref name=SimpsonLv/> At its simplest the primary vein types can be considered in three or four groups depending on the plant divisions being considered;
* pinnate
* palmate
* parallel

where palmate refers to multiple primary veins that radiate from the petiole, as opposed to branching from the central main vein in the pinnate form, and encompasses both of Hickey types 4 and 5, which are preserved as subtypes; e.g., palmate-acrodromous (''see'' National Park Service Leaf Guide).{{sfn|Florissant Leaf Key|2016}}

]'' ]]
;Palmate, Palmate-netted, palmate-veined, fan-veined: Several main veins of approximately equal size ] from a common point near the leaf base where the petiole attaches, and radiate toward the edge of the leaf. Palmately veined leaves are often lobed or divided with lobes radiating from the common point. They may vary in the number of primary veins (3 or more), but always radiate from a common point.<ref name=KlingLv/> e.g. most ] (maples).
{{multiple image
| header = Palmate
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| float = none
| image1 = Leaf morphology venation palmate.png
}}

===== Other systems =====
Alternatively, Simpson uses:<ref name=SimpsonLv/>

; Uninervous: Central midrib with no lateral veins (]), seen in the non-seed bearing ], such as ]
; Dichotomous: Veins successively branching into equally sized veins from a common point, forming a Y junction, fanning out. Amongst temperate woody plants, '']'' is the only species exhibiting dichotomous venation. Also some ] (ferns).<ref name=KlingLv/>
; Parallel: Primary and secondary veins roughly parallel to each other, running the length of the leaf, often connected by short perpendicular links, rather than form networks. In some species, the parallel veins join at the base and apex, such as needle-type evergreens and grasses. Characteristic of monocotyledons, but exceptions include '']'', and as below, under netted.<ref name=KlingLv/>
; Netted (reticulate, pinnate): A prominent midvein with secondary veins branching off along both sides of it. The name derives from the ultimate veinlets which form an interconnecting net like pattern or network. (The primary and secondary venation may be referred to as pinnate, while the net like finer veins are referred to as netted or reticulate); most non-monocot angiosperms, exceptions including '']''. Some monocots have reticulate venation, including '']'', '']'' and '']''.<ref name=KlingLv/>

{{multiple image | header = | align = center | direction = horizontal | total_width = 400 | float = none
| image1 =Horsetail vegeative stem.JPG| caption1 = '']'':<br>Reduced microphyllous leaves (L) arising in whorl from node| alt1 = |width1 =175 |height1 = 528
| image2 =Ginkgo biloba scanned leaf.jpg|caption2= '']'':<br>Dichotomous venation |width2 =580 |height2 = 599
}}

However, these simplified systems allow for further division into multiple subtypes. Simpson,<ref name=SimpsonLv/> (and others){{sfn|Berg|2007}} divides parallel and netted (and some use only these two terms for Angiosperms)<ref name=AMVen/> on the basis of the number of primary veins (costa) as follows;
; Parallel:{{glossary}}{{term
| Penni-parallel (pinnate, pinnate parallel, unicostate parallel)}}{{defn
| Single central prominent midrib, secondary veins from this arise perpendicularly to it and run parallel to each other towards the margin or tip, but do not join (anastomose). The term unicostate refers to the prominence of the single midrib (costa) running the length of the leaf from base to apex. e.g. ], such as ] etc.}}{{term
| Palmate-parallel (multicostate parallel)}}{{defn
| Several equally prominent primary veins arising from a single point at the base and running parallel towards tip or margin. The term multicostate refers to having more than one prominent main vein. e.g. ] (Arecaceae){{glossary}}{{term
| Multicostate parallel convergent}}{{defn
| Mid-veins converge at apex e.g. '']'' {{=}} ''B. bambos'' (Aracaceae), '']''}}{{term
| Multicostate parallel divergent}}{{defn
| Mid-veins diverge more or less parallel towards the margin e.g. '']'' (Poaceae), fan palms}}{{glossary end}}}}{{glossary end}}
; Netted (Reticulate):{{glossary
}}{{term
| Pinnately (veined, netted, unicostate reticulate)}}{{defn
| Single prominent midrib running from base to apex, secondary veins arising on both sides along the length of the primary midrib, running towards the margin or apex (tip), with a network of smaller veinlets forming a reticulum (mesh or network). e.g. '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']''}}{{term
| Palmately (multicostate reticulate)}}{{defn
| More than one primary veins arising from a single point, running from base to apex. e.g. '']'' This may be further subdivided;{{glossary}}{{term
| Multicostate convergent}}{{defn
| Major veins diverge from origin at base then converge towards the tip. e.g. '']'', ''Smilax'', '']''}}{{term
| Multicostate divergent}}{{defn
| All major veins diverge towards the tip. e.g. '']'', '']'', '']'', '']''}}{{glossary end}}}}{{term
| Ternately (ternate-netted)}}{{defn
| Three primary veins, as above, e.g. (''see'') '']'',<ref name=SimpsonCl/> '']'',<ref name=SimpsonCt/> '']''}}{{glossary end}}
{{multiple image | header = Simpson venation patterns | align = center | direction = | total_width= 800 | float = |perrow=4
| image1 = Maranta leuconeura var. erythroneura1.jpg
| caption1 = '']'' var. ''erythroneura'' (]):<br>Penni-parallel
| width1={{#expr: (150 * 800 /600) round 0}}
| image2= Coccothrinax argentea kz2.JPG
| caption2= '']'' (Arecaceae):<br>Palmate-parallel
| width2={{#expr: (150 * 800 /577) round 0}}
| image5 = Salix alba leaf.jpg
| caption5 = '']'':<br>Pinnately netted
| width5={{#expr: (150 * 138/598) round 0}}
| image6= Liquidambar feuilles FR 2013.jpg
| caption6= '']'':<br>Palmately netted
| width6={{#expr: (150 * 800/549) round 0}}
| image3=Plantarum indigenarum et exoticarum icones ad vivum coloratae, oder, Sammlung nach der Natur gemalter Abbildungen inn- und ausländlischer Pflanzen, für Liebhaber und Beflissene der Botanik (15902604278).jpg
| caption3='']'':<br>Multicostate parallel convergent
| width3={{#expr: (150 * 361/598) round 0}}
| image4=SrahSrangTree.jpg
| caption4= '']'' sp.:<br>Multicostate parallel divergent
| width4={{#expr: (150 * 450/600) round 0}}
| image7=(Ziziphus jujuba) Foliage at Ammuguda 01.jpg
| caption7= '']'':<br>Multicostate palmate convergent
| width7={{#expr: (150 * 664/600) round 0}}
| image8=Starr 050128-3307 Gossypium tomentosum.jpg
| caption8= '']'':<br>Multicostate palmate divergent
| width8={{#expr: (150 * 179/240) round 0}}
}}

These complex systems are not used much in morphological descriptions of taxa, but have usefulness in plant identification,
<ref name=SimpsonLv/> although criticized as being unduly burdened with jargon.<ref name=HLlv/>

An older, even simpler system, used in some flora{{sfn|Cullen et al|2011}} uses only two categories, open and closed.

* Open: Higher order veins have free endings among the cells and are more characteristic of non-monocotyledon angiosperms. They are more likely to be associated with leaf shapes that are toothed, lobed or compound. They may be subdivided as;
** Pinnate (feather-veined) leaves, with a main central vein or rib (midrib), from which the remainder of the vein system arises
** Palmate, in which three or more main ribs rise together at the base of the leaf, and diverge upward.
** Dichotomous, as in ferns, where the veins fork repeatedly
* Closed: Higher order veins are connected in loops without ending freely among the cells. These tend to be in leaves with smooth outlines, and are characteristic of monocotyledons.
** They may be subdivided into whether the veins run parallel, as in grasses, or have other patterns.

==== Other descriptive terms ====

There are also many other descriptive terms, often with very specialized usage and confined to specific taxonomic groups.{{sfn|Neotropikey|2017}} The conspicuousness of veins depends on a number of features. These include the width of the veins, their prominence in relation to the lamina surface and the degree of opacity of the surface, which may hide finer veins. In this regard, veins are called '''obscure''' and the order of veins that are obscured and whether upper, lower or both surfaces, further specified.{{sfn|Oxford herbaria glossary|2017}}<ref name=KlingLv/>

Terms that describe vein prominence include '''bullate''', '''channelled''', '''flat''', '''guttered''', '''impressed''', '''prominent''' and '''recessed''' (''Fig''.&nbsp;6.1 Hawthorne & Lawrence 2013).<ref name=HLlv/><ref name=OxHerbVp/> Veins may show different types of prominence in different areas of the leaf. For instance '']'' has a channelled midrib on the upper surface, but this is prominent on the lower surface.<ref name=HLlv/>

Describing vein prominence:

;Bullate: Surface of leaf raised in a series of domes between the veins on the upper surface, and therefore also with marked depressions. e.g. '']'',{{sfn|Verdcourt|Bridson|1991}} '']''
;Channelled (canalicululate): Veins sunken below the surface, resulting in a rounded channel. Sometimes confused with "guttered" because the channels may function as gutters for rain to run off and allow drying, as in many ].<ref name=Hemsley254/> e.g. (''see'') '']'' (Myrtaceae),<ref name=OxHerbPimrac/> '']'' (Melastomataceae).
;Guttered: Veins partly prominent, the crest above the leaf lamina surface, but with channels running along each side, like gutters
;Impressed: Vein forming raised line or ridge which lies below the plane of the surface which bears it, as if pressed into it, and are often exposed on the lower surface. Tissue near the veins often appears to pucker, giving them a sunken or embossed appearance
;Obscure: Veins not visible, or not at all clear; if unspecified, then not visible with the naked eye. e.g. '']''. In this ''Berberis'', the veins are only obscure on the undersurface.<ref name=CullenBgag/>
;Prominent: Vein raised above surrounding surface so to be easily felt when stroked with finger. e.g. (''see'') '']'',<ref name=OxHerbPimrac/> '']''<ref name=KwantlenSpcan/>
;Recessed: Vein is sunk below the surface, more prominent than surrounding tissues but more sunken in channel than with impressed veins. e.g. '']''.

{{multiple image | header = Types of vein prominence | align = center | direction = | total_width= 700 | float = |perrow=3
| image1 = Blattadern-wein-P7089798-PS.jpg
| caption1 = '']''<br> Bullate
| width1={{#expr: (150 * 800 /600) round 0}}
| image2= Flickr - João de Deus Medeiros - Clidemia hirta.jpg
| caption2= '']''<br> Channeled
| width2={{#expr: (150 * 800 /600) round 0}}
| image3=Cornus mas (3).jpg
| caption3='']''<br>Impressed
| width3={{#expr: (150 * 800/435) round 0}}
| image4=Berberis gagnepainii thorn.jpg
| caption4= '']''<br> Obscure (under surface)
| width4={{#expr: (150 * 495/393) round 0}}
| image5= Spathiphyllum cannifolium kz2.jpg
| caption5 = '']''<br> Prominent
| width5={{#expr: (150 * 415/600) round 0}}
| image6= Viburnum plicatum var plicatum4.jpg
| caption6= '']''<br> Recessed
| width6={{#expr: (150 * 445/599) round 0}}
}}

Describing other features:
;] (plinerved): More than one main vein (nerve) at the base. Lateral secondary veins branching from a point above the base of the leaf. Usually expressed as a ], as in 3-plinerved or triplinerved leaf. In a 3-plinerved (triplinerved) leaf three main veins branch above the base of the lamina (two secondary veins and the main vein) and run essentially parallel subsequently, as in '']'' and in '']''. Similarly, a quintuplinerve (five-veined) leaf has four secondary veins and a main vein. A pattern with 3–7 veins is especially conspicuous in ]. The term has also been used in ]. The term has been used as synonymous with acrodromous, palmate-acrodromous or suprabasal acrodromous, and is thought to be too broadly defined.{{sfn|Pedraza-Peñalosa|2013}}{{sfn|Pedraza-Peñalosa|2013}}
;Scalariform: Veins arranged like the rungs of a ladder, particularly higher order veins
;Submarginal: Veins running close to leaf margin
;Trinerved: 2 major basal nerves besides the midrib

==== Diagrams of venation patterns ====
{| class="wikitable sortable centre"
|
|-
! Image
! Term
! Description
|-
|]||Arcuate||Secondary arching toward the apex
|-
|]||Dichotomous||Veins splitting in two
|-
|]||Longitudinal||All veins aligned mostly with the midvein
|-
|]||Parallel||All veins parallel and not intersecting
|-
|]||Pinnate||Secondary veins borne from midrib
|-
|{{anchor|Reticulate}}]||Reticulate||All veins branching repeatedly, net veined
|-
|]||Rotate||Veins coming from the center of the leaf and radiating toward the edges
|-
|]||Transverse||Tertiary veins running perpendicular to axis of main vein, connecting secondary veins
|}

===Size===
{{main article|Leaf size}}
The terms '''megaphyll''', '''macrophyll''', '''mesophyll''', '''notophyll''', '''microphyll''', '''nanophyll''' and '''leptophyll''' are used to describe leaf sizes (in descending order), in a classification devised in 1934 by ] and since modified by others.{{sfn|Whitten et al|1997}}<ref>{{cite journal |title=A Physiognomic Classification of Australian Rain Forests|first1=Len|last1=Webb| author-link=Leonard Webb (academic) | journal = Journal of Ecology| publisher=British Ecological Society : Journal of Ecology Vol. 47, No. 3, pp. 551–570|date=1 Oct 1959|volume = 47|issue = 3|pages =555 |doi = 10.2307/2257290|jstor = 2257290|bibcode=1959JEcol..47..551W }}</ref>

==See also==
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]&nbsp;– a device that measures the moisture level in plant leaves
* ]
* ]&nbsp;– sprouting of leaves, also the arrangement of leaves in the bud
* ]
{{div col end}}

==References==
{{reflist|20em|refs=

<ref name=CullenBgag>{{harvnb|Cullen et al|2011|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=HLlv>{{harvnb|Hawthorne|Lawrence|2013|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=Hemsley254>{{harvnb|Hemsley|Poole|2004|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=KlingLv>{{harvnb|Kling et al|2005|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=KwantlenSpcan>{{harvnb|Kwantlen|2015|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=OxHerbVp>{{harvnb|Oxford herbaria glossary|2017|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=OxHerbPimrac>{{harvnb|Hughes|2017|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=MMsvt>{{harvnb|Massey|Murphy|1996|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=SimpsonLv>{{harvnb|Simpson|2011|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=SimpsonCl>{{harvnb|Simpson|2017|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=SimpsonCt>{{harvnb|Simpson|2017|loc=}}</ref>

<ref name=AMVen>{{harvnb|Angiosperm Morphology|2017|loc=}}</ref>

}}

== Bibliography ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
=== Books and chapters ===
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* {{cite book|last=Cutter|first=E.G.|year=1969|title=Plant Anatomy, experiment and interpretation, Part 2 Organs|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oRJHAAAAYAAJ|publisher=Edward Arnold|location=London|isbn=978-0-7131-2302-9|page=117}}
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* {{cite book|last1=Ettingshausen|first1=C.|title=Die Blatt-Skelete der Dicotyledonen mit besonderer Ruchsicht auf die Untersuchung und Bestimmung der fossilen Pflanzenreste|date=1861|publisher=Classification of the Architecture of Dicotyledonous|location=Vienna}}
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* {{cite book|editor1-last=Hemsley|editor1-first=Alan R.|editor2-last=Poole|editor2-first=Imogen|title=The Evolution of Plant Physiology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7Eub0D4QWXIC|date=2004|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-08-047272-0}}
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* {{cite book|last1=Hickey|first1=LJ|title=A revised classification of the architecture of dicotyledonous leaves|pages=i 5–39|ref={{harvid|Hickey|1979}}}}, in {{harvtxt|Metcalfe|Chalk|1979}}
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* {{cite book|last1=Leaf Architecture Working Group|title=Manual of Leaf Architecture - morphological description and categorization of dicotyledonous and net-veined monocotyledonous angiosperms|url=http://www3.geosc.psu.edu/~pdw3/1999_MLA.pdf|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-9677554-0-3|date=1999|access-date=2017-02-15|archive-date=2016-10-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161020045657/http://www3.geosc.psu.edu/~pdw3/1999_MLA.pdf|url-status=live}}
* {{cite book|last1=Marloth|first1=Rudolf|author-link=Rudolf Marloth|title=The Flora of South Africa: With Synopical Tables of the Genera of the Higher Plants. 6 vols|date=1913–1932|publisher=Darter Bros. & Co.|location=Cape Town|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZmxBAQAAIAAJ|access-date=2020-08-27|archive-date=2023-09-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230906232323/https://books.google.com/books?id=ZmxBAQAAIAAJ|url-status=live}}
* {{cite book|last1=Mauseth|first1=James D.|title=Botany: an introduction to plant biology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E3oaqR_owy4C|date=2009|publisher=Jones and Bartlett Publishers|location=Sudbury, Mass.|isbn=978-0-7637-5345-0|edition=4th}}
* {{cite book|editor1-last=Metcalfe|editor1-first=CR|editor2-last=Chalk|editor2-first=L|title=Anatomy of the Dicotyledons: Leaves, stem and wood in relation to taxonomy, with notes on economic uses. 2 vols.|date=1979|orig-year=1957|publisher=Clarendon Press|location=Oxford|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=28AnMQAACAAJ|isbn=978-0-19-854383-1|edition=2nd}}
**
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=== Articles and theses ===

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* {{cite journal|last=Corson|first=Francis|author2=Adda-Bedia, Mokhtar|author3=Boudaoud, Arezki|title=In silico leaf venation networks: Growth and reorganization driven by mechanical forces|journal=]|volume=259|issue=3|pages=440–448|doi=10.1016/j.jtbi.2009.05.002|pmid=19446571|year=2009|bibcode=2009JThBi.259..440C|s2cid=25560670 |ref={{harvid|Corson et al|2009}}|url=http://www.lps.ens.fr/~adda/papiers/JTB09.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171209035241/http://www.lps.ens.fr/~adda/papiers/JTB09.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2017-12-09}}
* {{Cite journal | last1 = Cote | first1 = G. G. | title = Diversity and distribution of idioblasts producing calcium oxalate crystals in ''Dieffenbachia seguine'' (Araceae)| journal = ]| volume = 96| issue = 7| pages = 1245–1254| year = 2009| doi = 10.3732/ajb.0800276|pmid=21628273| doi-access = free}}
* {{cite journal|last=Couder|first=Y.|author2=Pauchard, L.|author3=Allain, C.|author4=Adda-Bedia, M.|author5=Douady, S.|url=http://www.lps.ens.fr/~adda/papiers/EPJB02.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171209010751/http://www.lps.ens.fr/~adda/papiers/EPJB02.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=9 December 2017|title=The leaf venation as formed in a tensorial field|journal=]|date=1 July 2002|volume=28|issue=2|pages=135–138|doi=10.1140/epjb/e2002-00211-1|bibcode=2002EPJB...28..135C|s2cid=51687210|ref={{harvid|Couder et al|2002}}}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Döring|first1=T. F|last2=Archetti|first2=M.|last3=Hardie|first3=J.|title=Autumn leaves seen through herbivore eyes|journal=]|date=7 January 2009|volume=276|issue=1654|pages=121–127|doi=10.1098/rspb.2008.0858|pmid = 18782744|pmc = 2614250|ref={{harvid|Doring et al|2009}}}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Eckardt|first1=N. A.|last2=Baum|first2=D.|title=The Podostemad Puzzle: The Evolution of Unusual Morphology in the Podostemaceae|journal=]|date=20 July 2010|volume=22|issue=7|pages=2104|doi=10.1105/tpc.110.220711|pmid=20647343|pmc=2929115|bibcode=2010PlanC..22.2104E }}
* {{cite book|last1=Feugier|first1=François|title=Models of Vascular Pattern Formation in Leaves|date=14 December 2006|publisher=]|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/file/index/docid/487510/filename/Feugier_2006_Models_of_Vascular_Pattern_Formation_in_Leaves_thesis.pdf|format=PhD Thesis|access-date=6 March 2017|archive-date=7 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170307045345/https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/file/index/docid/487510/filename/Feugier_2006_Models_of_Vascular_Pattern_Formation_in_Leaves_thesis.pdf|url-status=live}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Feild|first1=T. S.|last2=Lee|first2=D. W.|last3=Holbrook|first3=N. M.|title=Why Leaves Turn Red in Autumn. The Role of Anthocyanins in Senescing Leaves of Red-Osier Dogwood|journal=]|date=1 October 2001|volume=127|issue=2|pages=566–574|doi=10.1104/pp.010063| pmid = 11598230| pmc = 125091|ref={{harvid|Feild et al|2001}}}}
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* {{cite journal|last1=Pedraza-Peñalosa|first1=Paola|last2=Salinas|first2=Nelson R.|last3=Wheeler|first3=Ward C.|title=Venation patterns of neotropical blueberries (Vaccinieae: Ericaceae) and their phylogenetic utility|journal=]|date=26 April 2013|volume=96|issue=1|pages=1|doi=10.11646/phytotaxa.96.1.1|url=https://wardwheeler.files.wordpress.com/2016/12/pedrazaetal2013.pdf|ref={{harvid|Pedraza-Peñalosa|2013}}|access-date=17 February 2017|archive-date=18 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170218144807/https://wardwheeler.files.wordpress.com/2016/12/pedrazaetal2013.pdf|url-status=live}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Read|first1=J.|last2=Stokes|first2=A.|title=Plant biomechanics in an ecological context|journal=]|date=1 October 2006|volume=93|issue=10|pages=1546–1565|doi=10.3732/ajb.93.10.1546|pmid=21642101|doi-access=free}}
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* {{cite journal|last1=Roth-Nebelsick|last2=Uhl|first2=Dieter|last3=Mosbrugger|first3=Volker|last4=Kerp|first4=Hans|first1=A|title=Evolution and Function of Leaf Venation Architecture: A Review|journal=]|date=May 2001|volume=87|issue=5|pages=553–566|doi=10.1006/anbo.2001.1391|ref={{harvid|Roth-Nebelsick et al|2001}}|doi-access=free|bibcode=2001AnBot..87..553R }}
* {{cite book|last1=Runions|first1=Adam|last2=Fuhrer|first2=Martin|last3=Lane|first3=Brendan|last4=Federl|first4=Pavol|last5=Rolland-Lagan|first5=Anne-Gaëlle|last6=Prusinkiewicz|first6=Przemyslaw|title=ACM SIGGRAPH 2005 Papers |chapter=Modeling and visualization of leaf venation patterns |volume=24|issue=3|date=1 January 2005|pages=702–711|doi=10.1145/1186822.1073251|isbn=9781450378253 |ref={{harvid|Runions et al|2005}}|citeseerx=10.1.1.102.1926|s2cid=2629700}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Rutishauser|first1=R.|last2=Sattler|first2=R.|title=Expression of shoot processes in leaf development of ''Polemonium caeruleum''|journal=Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik|date=1997|volume=119|pages=563–582}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Sack|first1=Lawren|last2=Scoffoni|first2=Christine|title=Leaf venation: structure, function, development, evolution, ecology and applications in the past, present and future|journal=]|date=June 2013|volume=198|issue=4|pages=983–1000|doi=10.1111/nph.12253|pmid=23600478|doi-access=free|bibcode=2013NewPh.198..983S }}
* {{cite journal|last1=Shelley|first1=A.J.|last2=Smith|first2=W.K.|last3=Vogelmann|first3=T.C.|pmid=21680359|year=1998|title=Ontogenetic differences in mesophyll structure and chlorophyll distribution in ''Eucalyptus globulus'' ssp. ''globulus'' (Myrtaceae)|journal=]|volume=86|issue=2|pages=198–207|doi=10.2307/2656937|ref={{harvid|James et al|1999}} |jstor=2656937|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Tsukaya|first1=Hirokazu|title=Leaf Development|journal=The Arabidopsis Book|date=January 2013|volume=11|pages=e0163|doi=10.1199/tab.0163|pmid=23864837|pmc=3711357}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Ueno|first1=Osamu|last2=Kawano|first2=Yukiko|last3=Wakayama|first3=Masataka|last4=Takeda|first4=Tomoshiro|title=Leaf Vascular Systems in {{C3}} and {{C4}} Grasses: A Two-dimensional Analysis|journal=]|date=1 April 2006|volume=97|issue=4|pages=611–621|doi=10.1093/aob/mcl010|pmid=16464879|ref={{harvid|Ueno et al|2006}}|pmc=2803656}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Walls|first1=R. L.|title=Angiosperm leaf vein patterns are linked to leaf functions in a global-scale data set|journal=]|date=25 January 2011|volume=98|issue=2|pages=244–253|doi=10.3732/ajb.1000154|pmid=21613113}}

=== Websites ===

* {{cite web|last1=Bucksch|first1=Alexander|last2=Blonder|first2=Benjamin|last3=Price|first3=Charles|last4=Wing|first4=Scott|last5=Weitz|first5=Joshua|last6=Das|first6=Abhiram|title=Cleared Leaf Image Database|url=http://www.clearedleavesdb.org/|publisher=School of Biology, ]|access-date=12 March 2017|date=2017|ref={{harvid|Buckach et al|2017}}|archive-date=25 September 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140925043827/http://clearedleavesdb.org/|url-status=usurped}}
* {{cite web|last1=Geneve|first1=Robert|title=Leaf|url=http://dept.ca.uky.edu/PLS220/leafmainpage.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160315062623/http://dept.ca.uky.edu/PLS220/leafmainpage.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2016-03-15|website=PLS 220: Introduction to plant identification|publisher=University of Kentucky: Department of Horticulture}}
* {{cite web|last1=Kling|first1=Gary J.|last2=Hayden|first2=Laura L.|last3=Potts|first3=Joshua J.|title=Botanical terminology|url=http://woodyplantstutorial.nres.illinois.edu/|publisher=], Urbana-Champaign|access-date=7 March 2017|date=2005|ref={{harvid|Kling et al|2005}}|archive-date=8 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170308051032/http://woodyplantstutorial.nres.illinois.edu/|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|last1=de Kok|first1=Rogier|last2=Biffin|first2=Ed|title=The Pea Key: An interactive key for Australian pea-flowered legumes|url=https://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/cd-keys/peakey/key/The%20Pea%20Key/Media/Html/index.html|publisher=Australian Pea-flowered Legume Research Group|access-date=9 March 2017|date=November 2007|archive-date=26 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226150100/http://anbg.gov.au/cpbr/cd-keys/peakey/key/The%20Pea%20Key/Media/Html/index.html|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|last1=Kranz|first1=Laura|title=The Vein Patterns of Leaves|url=http://lauraakranz.com/vein-patterns-leaves/|format=Drawings|access-date=2017-03-05|archive-date=2017-03-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170306033751/http://lauraakranz.com/vein-patterns-leaves/|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|last1=Massey|first1=Jimmy R.|last2=Murphy|first2=James C.|title=Vascular plant systematics|url=http://www.ibiblio.org/botnet/glossary/|website=NC Botnet|publisher=University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|access-date=19 January 2016|date=1996|archive-date=17 January 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160117025929/http://www.ibiblio.org/botnet/glossary/|url-status=live}}
** {{cite web|title=Leaves|url=http://www.ibiblio.org/botnet/glossary/a_v.html|access-date=2016-01-19|archive-date=2016-07-25|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160725170655/http://www.ibiblio.org/botnet/glossary/a_v.html|url-status=live}}, in {{harvtxt|Massey|Murphy|1996}}
* {{cite web|last=Purcell|first=Adam|title=Leaves|url=http://basicbiology.net/plants/physiology/leaves.php|website=Basic Biology|publisher=Adam Purcell|date=16 January 2016|access-date=17 February 2017|archive-date=19 April 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419002416/http://basicbiology.net/plants/physiology/leaves.php|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|last1=Simpson|first1=Michael G.|title=Plants of San Diego County, California|url=http://www.sci.sdsu.edu/plants/sdpls/|publisher=College of Science, ]|access-date=2 March 2017|ref={{harvid|Simpson|2017}}|archive-date=3 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170303044642/http://www.sci.sdsu.edu/plants/sdpls/|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|title=Florissant Fossil Beds Leaf Key|url=https://www.nps.gov/flfo/learn/education/upload/PlantPackage.pdf|website=]|publisher=], ]|access-date=16 February 2017|ref={{harvid|Florissant Leaf Key|2016}}|archive-date=16 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170216150109/https://www.nps.gov/flfo/learn/education/upload/PlantPackage.pdf|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|title=Plant Database|url=https://plantdatabase.kpu.ca/plant/search.gsp|publisher=School of Horticulture, ]|access-date=9 March 2017|date=2015|ref={{harvid|Kwantlen|2015}}|archive-date=21 September 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170921023245/http://plantdatabase.kpu.ca/plant/search.gsp|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|title=Angiosperm Morphology|url=http://www.tutorvista.com/content/biology/biology-iii/angiosperm-morphology/angiosperm-morphologyindex.php|publisher=TutorVista|date=2017|ref={{harvid|Angiosperm Morphology|2017}}|access-date=2017-03-09|archive-date=2020-06-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200621215228/http://www.tutorvista.com/content/biology/biology-iii/angiosperm-morphology/angiosperm-morphologyindex.php|url-status=dead}}

;Glossaries
* {{cite web|last1=Hughes|first1=Colin|title=The virtual field herbarium|url=http://herbaria-old.plants.ox.ac.uk/vfh/about/|publisher=]|access-date=4 March 2017|ref={{harvid|Hughes|2017}}|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170305113254/http://herbaria-old.plants.ox.ac.uk/vfh/about/|archive-date=5 March 2017|url-status=dead}}
** {{cite web|title=Plant Characteristics|url=http://herbaria-old.plants.ox.ac.uk/vfh/image/index.php?glossary=show|access-date=4 March 2017|format=Glossary|ref={{harvid|Oxford herbaria glossary|2017}}|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170305034525/http://herbaria-old.plants.ox.ac.uk/vfh/image/index.php?glossary=show|archive-date=5 March 2017|url-status=dead}}, in {{harvtxt|Hughes|2017}}
* {{cite web|title=Glossary of botanical terms|url=http://www.kew.org/science/tropamerica/neotropikey/families/glossary.htm#P|website=Neotropikey|publisher=Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew|access-date=18 February 2017|ref={{harvid|Neotropikey|2017}}|archive-date=21 January 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170121214009/http://www.kew.org/science/tropamerica/neotropikey/families/glossary.htm#P|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web |title=Illustrated glossary of leaf shapes |url=http://plants.ifas.ufl.edu/education/images/GlossaryLeafShapes.pdf |publisher=Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants, ], University of Florida |access-date=8 January 2020 |date=2009 |archive-date=10 January 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200110130658/http://plants.ifas.ufl.edu/education/images/GlossaryLeafShapes.pdf |url-status=live }}
* {{cite web |title=Leafshapes |url=http://www.donsgarden.co.uk/leafshapes/ |website=Donsgarden |access-date=9 January 2020 |archive-date=4 February 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160204160841/http://www.donsgarden.co.uk/leafshapes |url-status=dead }}
{{refend}}

==External links==
{{commons category multi|Leaves|Leaf veins}}{{wiktionary|leaf|position = }}
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Leaf|volume=15|first= Alfred Barton |last= Rendle |author-link=Alfred Barton Rendle|page=322–329|short=x}}
* {{Cite Americana|wstitle= Leaves |volume= XVII |last= Ingersoll |first= Ernest |author-link= Ernest Ingersoll|short=1 }}

{{Botany}}
{{Authority control}}

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Latest revision as of 01:06, 22 January 2025

Photosynthetic part of a vascular plant "Leaves" redirects here. For other uses of "leaf" or "leaves", see Leaf (disambiguation).

The diversity of leaves
Leaf of Tilia tomentosa (Silver lime tree)
Diagram of a simple leaf.
  1. Apex
  2. Midvein (Primary vein)
  3. Secondary vein.
  4. Lamina.
  5. Leaf margin
  6. Petiole
  7. Bud
  8. Stem
Top and right: staghorn sumac, Rhus typhina (compound leaf)
Bottom: skunk cabbage, Symplocarpus foetidus (simple leaf)
  1. Apex
  2. Primary vein
  3. Secondary vein
  4. Lamina
  5. Leaf margin
  6. Rachis

A leaf (pl.: leaves) is a principal appendage of the stem of a vascular plant, usually borne laterally above ground and specialized for photosynthesis. Leaves are collectively called foliage, as in "autumn foliage", while the leaves, stem, flower, and fruit collectively form the shoot system. In most leaves, the primary photosynthetic tissue is the palisade mesophyll and is located on the upper side of the blade or lamina of the leaf, but in some species, including the mature foliage of Eucalyptus, palisade mesophyll is present on both sides and the leaves are said to be isobilateral. The leaf is an integral part of the stem system, and most leaves are flattened and have distinct upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces that differ in color, hairiness, the number of stomata (pores that intake and output gases), the amount and structure of epicuticular wax, and other features. Leaves are mostly green in color due to the presence of a compound called chlorophyll which is essential for photosynthesis as it absorbs light energy from the Sun. A leaf with lighter-colored or white patches or edges is called a variegated leaf.

Leaves can have many different shapes, sizes, textures and colors. The broad, flat leaves with complex venation of flowering plants are known as megaphylls and the species that bear them (the majority) as broad-leaved or megaphyllous plants, which also include acrogymnosperms and ferns. In the lycopods, with different evolutionary origins, the leaves are simple (with only a single vein) and are known as microphylls. Some leaves, such as bulb scales, are not above ground. In many aquatic species, the leaves are submerged in water. Succulent plants often have thick juicy leaves, but some leaves are without major photosynthetic function and may be dead at maturity, as in some cataphylls and spines. Furthermore, several kinds of leaf-like structures found in vascular plants are not totally homologous with them. Examples include flattened plant stems called phylloclades and cladodes, and flattened leaf stems called phyllodes which differ from leaves both in their structure and origin. Some structures of non-vascular plants look and function much like leaves. Examples include the phyllids of mosses and liverworts.

General characteristics

3D rendering of a computed tomography scan of a leaf

Leaves are the most important organs of most vascular plants. Green plants are autotrophic, meaning that they do not obtain food from other living things but instead create their own food by photosynthesis. They capture the energy in sunlight and use it to make simple sugars, such as glucose and sucrose, from carbon dioxide (CO2) and water. The sugars are then stored as starch, further processed by chemical synthesis into more complex organic molecules such as proteins or cellulose, the basic structural material in plant cell walls, or metabolized by cellular respiration to provide chemical energy to run cellular processes. The leaves draw water from the ground in the transpiration stream through a vascular conducting system known as xylem and obtain carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by diffusion through openings called stomata in the outer covering layer of the leaf (epidermis), while leaves are orientated to maximize their exposure to sunlight. Once sugar has been synthesized, it needs to be transported to areas of active growth such as the shoots and roots. Vascular plants transport sucrose in a special tissue called the phloem. The phloem and xylem are parallel to each other, but the transport of materials is usually in opposite directions. Within the leaf these vascular systems branch (ramify) to form veins which supply as much of the leaf as possible, ensuring that cells carrying out photosynthesis are close to the transportation system.

Typically leaves are broad, flat and thin (dorsiventrally flattened), thereby maximising the surface area directly exposed to light and enabling the light to penetrate the tissues and reach the chloroplasts, thus promoting photosynthesis. They are arranged on the plant so as to expose their surfaces to light as efficiently as possible without shading each other, but there are many exceptions and complications. For instance, plants adapted to windy conditions may have pendent leaves, such as in many willows and eucalypts. The flat, or laminar, shape also maximizes thermal contact with the surrounding air, promoting cooling. Functionally, in addition to carrying out photosynthesis, the leaf is the principal site of transpiration, providing the energy required to draw the transpiration stream up from the roots, and guttation.

Many conifers have thin needle-like or scale-like leaves that can be advantageous in cold climates with frequent snow and frost. These are interpreted as reduced from megaphyllous leaves of their Devonian ancestors. Some leaf forms are adapted to modulate the amount of light they absorb to avoid or mitigate excessive heat, ultraviolet damage, or desiccation, or to sacrifice light-absorption efficiency in favor of protection from herbivory. For xerophytes the major constraint is not light flux or intensity, but drought. Some window plants such as Fenestraria species and some Haworthia species such as Haworthia tesselata and Haworthia truncata are examples of xerophytes.

Leaves function to store chemical energy and water (especially in succulents) and may become specialized organs serving other functions, such as tendrils of peas and other legumes, the protective spines of cacti, and the insect traps in carnivorous plants such as Nepenthes and Sarracenia. Leaves are the fundamental structural units from which cones are constructed in gymnosperms (each cone scale is a modified megaphyll leaf known as a sporophyll) and from which flowers are constructed in flowering plants.

Vein skeleton of a leaf. Veins contain lignin that make them harder to degrade for microorganisms.

The internal organization of most kinds of leaves has evolved to maximize exposure of the photosynthetic organelles (chloroplasts) to light and to increase the absorption of CO2 while at the same time controlling water loss. Their surfaces are waterproofed by the plant cuticle, and gas exchange between the mesophyll cells and the atmosphere is controlled by minute (length and width measured in tens of μm) stomata which open or close to regulate the rate exchange of CO2, oxygen (O2), and water vapor into and out of the internal intercellular space system. Stomatal opening is controlled by the turgor pressure in a pair of guard cells that surround the stomatal aperture. In any square centimeter of a plant leaf, there may be from 1,000 to 100,000 stomata.

Near the ground these Eucalyptus saplings have juvenile dorsiventral foliage from the previous year, but this season their newly sprouting foliage is isobilateral, like the mature foliage on the adult trees above

The shape and structure of leaves vary considerably from species to species of plant, depending largely on their adaptation to climate and available light, but also to other factors such as grazing animals, available nutrients, and ecological competition from other plants. Considerable changes in leaf type occur within species, too, for example as a plant matures (Eucalyptus species commonly have isobilateral, pendent leaves when mature and dominating their neighbors; however, such trees tend to have erect or horizontal dorsiventral leaves as seedlings, when their growth is limited by the available light.) Other factors include the need to balance water loss at high temperature and low humidity against the need to absorb CO2. In most plants, leaves also are the primary organs responsible for transpiration and guttation (beads of fluid forming at leaf margins).

Leaves can also store food and water and are modified accordingly to meet these functions, for example in the leaves of succulent plants and in bulb scales. The concentration of photosynthetic structures in leaves requires that they be richer in protein, minerals, and sugars than, say, woody stem tissues. Accordingly, leaves are prominent in the diet of many animals. Correspondingly, leaves represent heavy investment on the part of the plants bearing them, and their retention or disposition are the subject of elaborate strategies for dealing with pest pressures, seasonal conditions, and protective measures such as the growth of thorns and the production of phytoliths, lignins, tannins and poisons.

Deciduous plants in cold temperate regions typically shed their leaves in autumn, whereas in areas with a severe dry season, some plants may shed their leaves until the dry season ends. In either case, the shed leaves often contribute their retained nutrients to the soil where they fall. In contrast, many other non-seasonal plants, such as palms and conifers, retain their leaves for long periods; Welwitschia retains its two main leaves throughout a lifetime that may exceed a thousand years.

The leaf-like organs of bryophytes (e.g., mosses and liverworts), known as phyllids, differ greatly morphologically from the leaves of vascular plants. In most cases, they lack vascular tissue, are a single cell thick and have no cuticle, stomata, or internal system of intercellular spaces. (The phyllids of the moss family Polytrichaceae are notable exceptions.) The phyllids of bryophytes are only present on the gametophytes, while in contrast the leaves of vascular plants are only present on the sporophytes. These can further develop into either vegetative or reproductive structures.

Simple, vascularized leaves (microphylls), such as those of the early Devonian lycopsid Baragwanathia, first evolved as enations, extensions of the stem. True leaves or euphylls of larger size and with more complex venation did not become widespread in other groups until the Devonian period, by which time the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere had dropped significantly. This occurred independently in several separate lineages of vascular plants, in progymnosperms like Archaeopteris, in Sphenopsida, ferns and later in the gymnosperms and angiosperms. Euphylls are also referred to as macrophylls or megaphylls (large leaves).

Morphology

See also: Glossary of leaf morphology
Animated zoom into the leaf of a Sequoia sempervirens (California redwood)
Leafstem of dog rose with petiole, stipules and leaflets
Rosa canina: Petiole, two stipules, rachis, five leaflets
Citrus leaves with translucent glands

A structurally complete leaf of an angiosperm consists of a petiole (leaf stalk), a lamina (leaf blade), stipules (small structures located to either side of the base of the petiole) and a sheath. Not every species produces leaves with all of these structural components. The proximal stalk or petiole is called a stipe in ferns. The lamina is the expanded, flat component of the leaf which contains the chloroplasts. The sheath is a structure, typically at the base that fully or partially clasps the stem above the node, where the leaf is attached. Leaf sheathes typically occur in Poaceae (grasses) and Apiaceae (umbellifers). Between the sheath and the lamina, there may be a pseudopetiole, a petiole like structure. Pseudopetioles occur in some monocotyledons including bananas, palms and bamboos. Stipules may be conspicuous (e.g. beans and roses), soon falling or otherwise not obvious as in Moraceae or absent altogether as in the Magnoliaceae. A petiole may be absent (apetiolate), or the blade may not be laminar (flattened). The petiole mechanically links the leaf to the plant and provides the route for transfer of water and sugars to and from the leaf. The lamina is typically the location of the majority of photosynthesis. The upper (adaxial) angle between a leaf and a stem is known as the axil of the leaf. It is often the location of a bud. Structures located there are called "axillary".

New pomegranate leaves

External leaf characteristics, such as shape, margin, hairs, the petiole, and the presence of stipules and glands, are frequently important for identifying plants to family, genus or species levels, and botanists have developed a rich terminology for describing leaf characteristics. Leaves almost always have determinate growth. They grow to a specific pattern and shape and then stop. Other plant parts like stems or roots have non-determinate growth, and will usually continue to grow as long as they have the resources to do so.

A leaf shed in autumn

The type of leaf is usually characteristic of a species (monomorphic), although some species produce more than one type of leaf (dimorphic or polymorphic). The longest leaves are those of the Raffia palm, R. regalis which may be up to 25 m (82 ft) long and 3 m (9.8 ft) wide. The terminology associated with the description of leaf morphology is presented, in illustrated form, at Wikibooks.

Prostrate leaves in Crossyne guttata

Where leaves are basal, and lie on the ground, they are referred to as prostrate.

Basic leaf types

Whorled leaf pattern of the American tiger lily

Perennial plants whose leaves are shed annually are said to have deciduous leaves, while leaves that remain through winter are evergreens. Leaves attached to stems by stalks (known as petioles) are called petiolate, and if attached directly to the stem with no petiole they are called sessile.

  • Ferns have fronds.
  • Conifer leaves are typically needle- or awl-shaped or scale-like; they are usually evergreen but can sometimes be deciduous. Usually, they have a single vein.
  • The standard form of flowering plants (angiosperm) includes stipules, a petiole, and a lamina.
  • Lycophytes have microphylls.
  • Sheath leaves are the type found in most grasses and many other monocots.
  • Other specialized leaves include those of Nepenthes, a pitcher plant.

Dicot leaves have blades with pinnate venation (where major veins diverge from one large mid-vein and have smaller connecting networks between them). Less commonly, dicot leaf blades may have palmate venation (several large veins diverging from petiole to leaf edges). Finally, some exhibit parallel venation. Monocot leaves in temperate climates usually have narrow blades and usually parallel venation converging at leaf tips or edges. Some also have pinnate venation.

Arrangement on the stem

Main article: Phyllotaxis

The arrangement of leaves on the stem is known as phyllotaxis. A large variety of phyllotactic patterns occur in nature:

The leaves on this plant are arranged in pairs opposite one another, with successive pairs at right angles to each other (decussate) along the red stem. Note the developing buds in the axils of these leaves.
The leaves on this plant (Senecio angulatus) are alternately arranged.
Alternate
One leaf, branch, or flower part attaches at each point or node on the stem, and leaves alternate direction—to a greater or lesser degree—along the stem.
Basal
Arising from the base of the plant.
Cauline
Attached to the aerial stem.
Opposite
Two leaves, branches, or flower parts attach at each point or node on the stem. Leaf attachments are paired at each node.
Decussate
An opposite arrangement in which each successive pair is rotated 90° from the previous.
Whorled, or verticillate
Three or more leaves, branches, or flower parts attach at each point or node on the stem. As with opposite leaves, successive whorls may or may not be decussate, rotated by half the angle between the leaves in the whorl (i.e., successive whorls of three rotated 60°, whorls of four rotated 45°, etc.). Opposite leaves may appear whorled near the tip of the stem. Pseudoverticillate describes an arrangement only appearing whorled, but not actually so.
Rosulate
Leaves form a rosette.
Rows
The term distichous literally means two rows. Leaves in this arrangement may be alternate or opposite in their attachment. The term 2-ranked is equivalent. The terms tristichous and tetrastichous are sometimes encountered. For example, the "leaves" (actually microphylls) of most species of Selaginella are tetrastichous but not decussate.

In the simplest mathematical models of phyllotaxis, the apex of the stem is represented as a circle. Each new node is formed at the apex, and it is rotated by a constant angle from the previous node. This angle is called the divergence angle. The number of leaves that grow from a node depends on the plant species. When a single leaf grows from each node, and when the stem is held straight, the leaves form a helix.

The divergence angle is often represented as a fraction of a full rotation around the stem. A rotation fraction of 1/2 (a divergence angle of 180°) produces an alternate arrangement, such as in Gasteria or the fan-aloe Kumara plicatilis. Rotation fractions of 1/3 (divergence angles of 120°) occur in beech and hazel. Oak and apricot rotate by 2/5, sunflowers, poplar, and pear by 3/8, and in willow and almond the fraction is 5/13. These arrangements are periodic. The denominator of the rotation fraction indicates the number of leaves in one period, while the numerator indicates the number of complete turns or gyres made in one period. For example:

  • 180° (or 1⁄2): two leaves in one circle (alternate leaves)
  • 120° (or 1⁄3): three leaves in one circle
  • 144° (or 2⁄5): five leaves in two gyres
  • 135° (or 3⁄8): eight leaves in three gyres.

Most divergence angles are related to the sequence of Fibonacci numbers Fn. This sequence begins 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13; each term is the sum of the previous two. Rotation fractions are often quotients Fn / Fn + 2 of a Fibonacci number by the number two terms later in the sequence. This is the case for the fractions 1/2, 1/3, 2/5, 3/8, and 5/13. The ratio between successive Fibonacci numbers tends to the golden ratio φ = (1 + √5)/2. When a circle is divided into two arcs whose lengths are in the ratio 1:φ, the angle formed by the smaller arc is the golden angle, which is 1/φ × 360° ≈ 137.5°. Because of this, many divergence angles are approximately 137.5°. In plants where a pair of opposite leaves grows from each node, the leaves form a double helix. If the nodes do not rotate (a rotation fraction of zero and a divergence angle of 0°), the two helices become a pair of parallel lines, creating a distichous arrangement as in maple or olive trees. More common in a decussate pattern, in which each node rotates by 1/4 (90°) as in the herb basil. The leaves of tricussate plants such as Nerium oleander form a triple helix. The leaves of some plants do not form helices. In some plants, the divergence angle changes as the plant grows. In orixate phyllotaxis, named after Orixa japonica, the divergence angle is not constant. Instead, it is periodic and follows the sequence 180°, 90°, 180°, 270°.

Divisions of the blade

A leaf with laminar structure and pinnate venation

Two basic forms of leaves can be described considering the way the blade (lamina) is divided. A simple leaf has an undivided blade. However, the leaf may be dissected to form lobes, but the gaps between lobes do not reach to the main vein. A compound leaf has a fully subdivided blade, each leaflet of the blade being separated along a main or secondary vein. The leaflets may have petiolules and stipels, the equivalents of the petioles and stipules of leaves. Because each leaflet can appear to be a simple leaf, it is important to recognize where the petiole occurs to identify a compound leaf. Compound leaves are a characteristic of some families of higher plants, such as the Fabaceae. The middle vein of a compound leaf or a frond, when it is present, is called a rachis.

Palmately compound
The leaflets all have a common point of attachment at the end of the petiole, radiating like fingers of a hand; for example, Cannabis (hemp) and Aesculus (buckeyes).
Pinnately compound
Leaflets are arranged either side of the main axis, or rachis.
Odd pinnate
With a terminal leaflet; for example, Fraxinus (ash).
Even pinnate
Lacking a terminal leaflet; for example, Swietenia (mahogany). A specific type of even pinnate is bifoliolate, where leaves only consist of two leaflets; for example, Hymenaea.
Bipinnately compound
Leaves are twice divided: the leaflets (technically "subleaflets") are arranged along a secondary axis that is one of several branching off the rachis. Each leaflet is called a pinnule. The group of pinnules on each secondary vein forms a pinna; for example, Albizia (silk tree).
Trifoliate (or trifoliolate)
A pinnate leaf with just three leaflets; for example, Trifolium (clover), Laburnum (laburnum), and some species of Toxicodendron (for instance, poison ivy).
Pinnatifid
Pinnately dissected to the central vein, but with the leaflets not entirely separate; for example, Polypodium, some Sorbus (whitebeams). In pinnately veined leaves the central vein is known as the midrib.

Characteristics of the petiole

The overgrown petioles of rhubarb (Rheum rhabarbarum) are edible.

Leaves which have a petiole (leaf stalk) are said to be petiolate. Sessile (epetiolate) leaves have no petiole, and the blade attaches directly to the stem. Subpetiolate leaves are nearly petiolate or have an extremely short petiole and may appear to be sessile. In clasping or decurrent leaves, the blade partially surrounds the stem. When the leaf base completely surrounds the stem, the leaves are said to be perfoliate, such as in Eupatorium perfoliatum. In peltate leaves, the petiole attaches to the blade inside the blade margin. In some Acacia species, such as the koa tree (Acacia koa), the petioles are expanded or broadened and function like leaf blades; these are called phyllodes. There may or may not be normal pinnate leaves at the tip of the phyllode. A stipule, present on the leaves of many dicotyledons, is an appendage on each side at the base of the petiole, resembling a small leaf. Stipules may be lasting and not be shed (a stipulate leaf, such as in roses and beans), or be shed as the leaf expands, leaving a stipule scar on the twig (an exstipulate leaf). The situation, arrangement, and structure of the stipules is called the "stipulation".

Free, lateral
As in Hibiscus.
Adnate
Fused to the petiole base, as in Rosa.
Ochreate
Provided with ochrea, or sheath-formed stipules, as in Polygonaceae; e.g., rhubarb.
Encircling the petiole base
Interpetiolar
Between the petioles of two opposite leaves, as in Rubiaceae.
Intrapetiolar
Between the petiole and the subtending stem, as in Malpighiaceae.

Veins

Branching veins on underside of taro leaf
The venation within the bract of a linden
Micrograph of a leaf skeleton

Veins (sometimes referred to as nerves) constitute one of the most visible features of leaves. The veins in a leaf represent the vascular structure of the organ, extending into the leaf via the petiole and providing transportation of water and nutrients between leaf and stem, and play a crucial role in the maintenance of leaf water status and photosynthetic capacity. They also play a role in the mechanical support of the leaf. Within the lamina of the leaf, while some vascular plants possess only a single vein, in most this vasculature generally divides (ramifies) according to a variety of patterns (venation) and form cylindrical bundles, usually lying in the median plane of the mesophyll, between the two layers of epidermis. This pattern is often specific to taxa, and of which angiosperms possess two main types, parallel and reticulate (net like). In general, parallel venation is typical of monocots, while reticulate is more typical of eudicots and magnoliids ("dicots"), though there are many exceptions.

The vein or veins entering the leaf from the petiole are called primary or first-order veins. The veins branching from these are secondary or second-order veins. These primary and secondary veins are considered major veins or lower order veins, though some authors include third order. Each subsequent branching is sequentially numbered, and these are the higher order veins, each branching being associated with a narrower vein diameter.

In parallel veined leaves, the primary veins run parallel and equidistant to each other for most of the length of the leaf and then converge or fuse (anastomose) towards the apex. Usually, many smaller minor veins interconnect these primary veins but may terminate with very fine vein endings in the mesophyll. Minor veins are more typical of angiosperms, which may have as many as four higher orders.

In contrast, leaves with reticulate venation have a single (sometimes more) primary vein in the centre of the leaf, referred to as the midrib or costa, which is continuous with the vasculature of the petiole. The secondary veins, also known as second order veins or lateral veins, branch off from the midrib and extend toward the leaf margins. These often terminate in a hydathode, a secretory organ, at the margin. In turn, smaller veins branch from the secondary veins, known as tertiary or third order (or higher order) veins, forming a dense reticulate pattern. The areas or islands of mesophyll lying between the higher order veins, are called areoles. Some of the smallest veins (veinlets) may have their endings in the areoles, a process known as areolation. These minor veins act as the sites of exchange between the mesophyll and the plant's vascular system. Thus, minor veins collect the products of photosynthesis (photosynthate) from the cells where it takes place, while major veins are responsible for its transport outside of the leaf. At the same time water is being transported in the opposite direction.

The number of vein endings is variable, as is whether second order veins end at the margin, or link back to other veins. There are many elaborate variations on the patterns that the leaf veins form, and these have functional implications. Of these, angiosperms have the greatest diversity. Within these the major veins function as the support and distribution network for leaves and are correlated with leaf shape. For instance, the parallel venation found in most monocots correlates with their elongated leaf shape and wide leaf base, while reticulate venation is seen in simple entire leaves, while digitate leaves typically have venation in which three or more primary veins diverge radially from a single point.

In evolutionary terms, early emerging taxa tend to have dichotomous branching with reticulate systems emerging later. Veins appeared in the Permian, prior to the appearance of angiosperms in the Triassic, during which vein hierarchy appeared enabling higher function, larger leaf size and adaption to a wider variety of climatic conditions. Although it is the more complex pattern, branching veins appear to be plesiomorphic and in some form were present in ancient seed plants as long as 250 million years ago. A pseudo-reticulate venation that is actually a highly modified penniparallel one is an autapomorphy of some Melanthiaceae, which are monocots; e.g., Paris quadrifolia (True-lover's Knot). In leaves with reticulate venation, veins form a scaffolding matrix imparting mechanical rigidity to leaves.

Morphology changes within a single plant

Homoblasty
Characteristic in which a plant has small changes in leaf size, shape, and growth habit between juvenile and adult stages, in contrast to;
Heteroblasty
Characteristic in which a plant has marked changes in leaf size, shape, and growth habit between juvenile and adult stages.

Anatomy

Medium-scale features

Leaves are normally extensively vascularized and typically have networks of vascular bundles containing xylem, which supplies water for photosynthesis, and phloem, which transports the sugars produced by photosynthesis. Many leaves are covered in trichomes (small hairs) which have diverse structures and functions.

Medium-scale diagram of leaf internal anatomy
Medium-scale diagram of leaf internal anatomy

Small-scale features

The major tissue systems present are

These three tissue systems typically form a regular organization at the cellular scale. Specialized cells that differ markedly from surrounding cells, and which often synthesize specialized products such as crystals, are termed idioblasts.

Fine-scale diagram of leaf structure
Fine-scale diagram of leaf structure

Major leaf tissues

  • Cross-section of a leaf Cross-section of a leaf
  • Epidermal cells Epidermal cells
  • Spongy mesophyll cells Spongy mesophyll cells

Epidermis

SEM image of the leaf epidermis of Nicotiana alata, showing trichomes (hair-like appendages) and stomata (eye-shaped slits, visible at full resolution).

The epidermis is the outer layer of cells covering the leaf. It is covered with a waxy cuticle which is impermeable to liquid water and water vapor and forms the boundary separating the plant's inner cells from the external world. The cuticle is in some cases thinner on the lower epidermis than on the upper epidermis, and is generally thicker on leaves from dry climates as compared with those from wet climates. The epidermis serves several functions: protection against water loss by way of transpiration, regulation of gas exchange and secretion of metabolic compounds. Most leaves show dorsoventral anatomy: The upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces have somewhat different construction and may serve different functions.

The epidermis tissue includes several differentiated cell types; epidermal cells, epidermal hair cells (trichomes), cells in the stomatal complex; guard cells and subsidiary cells. The epidermal cells are the most numerous, largest, and least specialized and form the majority of the epidermis. They are typically more elongated in the leaves of monocots than in those of dicots.

Chloroplasts are generally absent in epidermal cells, the exception being the guard cells of the stomata. The stomatal pores perforate the epidermis and are surrounded on each side by chloroplast-containing guard cells, and two to four subsidiary cells that lack chloroplasts, forming a specialized cell group known as the stomatal complex. The opening and closing of the stomatal aperture is controlled by the stomatal complex and regulates the exchange of gases and water vapor between the outside air and the interior of the leaf. Stomata therefore play the important role in allowing photosynthesis without letting the leaf dry out. In a typical leaf, the stomata are more numerous over the abaxial (lower) epidermis than the adaxial (upper) epidermis and are more numerous in plants from cooler climates.

Mesophyll

For the term Mesophyll in the size classification of leaves, see Leaf size.

Most of the interior of the leaf between the upper and lower layers of epidermis is a parenchyma (ground tissue) or chlorenchyma tissue called the mesophyll (Greek for "middle leaf"). This assimilation tissue is the primary location of photosynthesis in the plant. The products of photosynthesis are called "assimilates".

In ferns and most flowering plants, the mesophyll is divided into two layers:

  • An upper palisade layer of vertically elongated cells, one to two cells thick, directly beneath the adaxial epidermis, with intercellular air spaces between them. Its cells contain many more chloroplasts than the spongy layer. Cylindrical cells, with the chloroplasts close to the walls of the cell, can take optimal advantage of light. The slight separation of the cells provides maximum absorption of carbon dioxide. Sun leaves have a multi-layered palisade layer, while shade leaves or older leaves closer to the soil are single-layered.
  • Beneath the palisade layer is the spongy layer. The cells of the spongy layer are more branched and not so tightly packed, so that there are large intercellular air spaces between them. The pores or stomata of the epidermis open into substomatal chambers, which are connected to the intercellular air spaces between the spongy and palisade mesophyll cell, so that oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor can diffuse into and out of the leaf and access the mesophyll cells during respiration, photosynthesis and transpiration.

Leaves are normally green, due to chlorophyll in chloroplasts in the mesophyll cells. Some plants have leaves of different colours due to the presence of accessory pigments such as carotenoids in their mesophyll cells.

Vascular tissue

The veins of a bramble leaf

The veins are the vascular tissue of the leaf and are located in the spongy layer of the mesophyll. The pattern of the veins is called venation. In angiosperms the venation is typically parallel in monocotyledons and forms an interconnecting network in broad-leaved plants. They were once thought to be typical examples of pattern formation through ramification, but they may instead exemplify a pattern formed in a stress tensor field.

A vein is made up of a vascular bundle. At the core of each bundle are clusters of two distinct types of conducting cells:

Xylem
Cells that bring water and minerals from the roots into the leaf.
Phloem
Cells that usually move sap, with dissolved sucrose (glucose to sucrose) produced by photosynthesis in the leaf, out of the leaf.

The xylem typically lies on the adaxial side of the vascular bundle and the phloem typically lies on the abaxial side. Both are embedded in a dense parenchyma tissue, called the sheath, which usually includes some structural collenchyma tissue.

Leaf development

According to Agnes Arber's partial-shoot theory of the leaf, leaves are partial shoots, being derived from leaf primordia of the shoot apex. Early in development they are dorsiventrally flattened with both dorsal and ventral surfaces. Compound leaves are closer to shoots than simple leaves. Developmental studies have shown that compound leaves, like shoots, may branch in three dimensions. On the basis of molecular genetics, Eckardt and Baum (2010) concluded that "it is now generally accepted that compound leaves express both leaf and shoot properties." Many dicotyledonous leaves show endogenously driven daily rhythmicity in growth.

Ecology

Biomechanics

Plants respond and adapt to environmental factors, such as light and mechanical stress from wind. Leaves need to support their own mass and align themselves in such a way as to optimize their exposure to the sun, generally more or less horizontally. However, horizontal alignment maximizes exposure to bending forces and failure from stresses such as wind, snow, hail, falling debris, animals, and abrasion from surrounding foliage and plant structures. Overall leaves are relatively flimsy with regard to other plant structures such as stems, branches and roots.

Both leaf blade and petiole structure influence the leaf's response to forces such as wind, allowing a degree of repositioning to minimize drag and damage, as opposed to resistance. Leaf movement like this may also increase turbulence of the air close to the surface of the leaf, which thins the boundary layer of air immediately adjacent to the surface, increasing the capacity for gas and heat exchange, as well as photosynthesis. Strong wind forces may result in diminished leaf number and surface area, which while reducing drag, involves a trade off of also reducing photosynthesis. Thus, leaf design may involve compromise between carbon gain, thermoregulation and water loss on the one hand, and the cost of sustaining both static and dynamic loads. In vascular plants, perpendicular forces are spread over a larger area and are relatively flexible in both bending and torsion, enabling elastic deforming without damage.

Many leaves rely on hydrostatic support arranged around a skeleton of vascular tissue for their strength, which depends on maintaining leaf water status. Both the mechanics and architecture of the leaf reflect the need for transportation and support. Read and Stokes (2006) consider two basic models, the "hydrostatic" and "I-beam leaf" form (see Fig 1). Hydrostatic leaves such as in Prostanthera lasianthos are large and thin, and may involve the need for multiple leaves rather single large leaves because of the amount of veins needed to support the periphery of large leaves. But large leaf size favors efficiency in photosynthesis and water conservation, involving further trade offs. On the other hand, I-beam leaves such as Banksia marginata involve specialized structures to stiffen them. These I-beams are formed from bundle sheath extensions of sclerenchyma meeting stiffened sub-epidermal layers. This shifts the balance from reliance on hydrostatic pressure to structural support, an obvious advantage where water is relatively scarce. Long narrow leaves bend more easily than ovate leaf blades of the same area. Monocots typically have such linear leaves that maximize surface area while minimising self-shading. In these a high proportion of longitudinal main veins provide additional support.

Interactions with other organisms

Some insects, like Kallima inachus, mimic leaves.

Although not as nutritious as other organs such as fruit, leaves provide a food source for many organisms. The leaf is a vital source of energy production for the plant, and plants have evolved protection against animals that consume leaves, such as tannins, chemicals which hinder the digestion of proteins and have an unpleasant taste. Animals that are specialized to eat leaves are known as folivores.

Some species have cryptic adaptations by which they use leaves in avoiding predators. For example, the caterpillars of some leaf-roller moths will create a small home in the leaf by folding it over themselves. Several other lepidopteran larvae modify leaves for shelter; perhaps the greatest variety of shelter types occurs among the skipper butterflies (Hesperiidae), which will cut, fold, and bind leaves using silk. Some sawflies similarly roll the leaves of their food plants into tubes. Females of the Attelabidae, so-called leaf-rolling weevils, lay their eggs into leaves that they then roll up as means of protection. Other herbivores and their predators mimic the appearance of the leaf. Reptiles such as some chameleons, and insects such as some katydids, also mimic the oscillating movements of leaves in the wind, moving from side to side or back and forth while evading a possible threat.

Seasonal leaf loss

Leaves shifting color in autumn (fall)
Main article: Autumn leaf color

Leaves in temperate, boreal, and seasonally dry zones may be seasonally deciduous (falling off or dying for the inclement season). This mechanism to shed leaves is called abscission. When the leaf is shed, it leaves a leaf scar on the twig. In cold autumns, they sometimes change color, and turn yellow, bright-orange, or red, as various accessory pigments (carotenoids and xanthophylls) are revealed when the tree responds to cold and reduced sunlight by curtailing chlorophyll production. Red anthocyanin pigments are now thought to be produced in the leaf as it dies, possibly to mask the yellow hue left when the chlorophyll is lost—yellow leaves appear to attract herbivores such as aphids. Optical masking of chlorophyll by anthocyanins reduces risk of photo-oxidative damage to leaf cells as they senesce, which otherwise may lower the efficiency of nutrient retrieval from senescing autumn leaves.

Evolutionary adaptation

Poinsettia bracts are leaves which have evolved red pigmentation in order to attract insects and birds to the central flowers, an adaptive function normally served by petals (which are themselves leaves highly modified by evolution).

In the course of evolution, leaves have adapted to different environments in the following ways:

Terminology

See also: Glossary of leaf morphology, Glossary of plant morphology, and Glossary of botanical terms
Leaf morphology terms

Shape

Main article: Glossary of leaf morphology § Leaf and leaflet shapes
Leaves showing various morphologies (clockwise from upper left): tripartite lobation, elliptic with serrulate margin, palmate venation, acuminate odd-pinnate (center), pinnatisect, lobed, elliptic with entire margin

Edge (margin)

The edge or margin is the outside perimeter of a leaf. The terms are interchangeable.

Image Term Latin Description
Entire Forma
integra
Even; with a smooth margin; without toothing
Ciliate ciliatus Fringed with hairs
Crenate crenatus Wavy-toothed; dentate with rounded teeth
crenulate crenulatus Finely crenate
crisped crispus Curly
Dentate dentatus Toothed;

may be coarsely dentate, having large teeth

or glandular dentate, having teeth which bear glands

Denticulate denticulatus Finely toothed
Doubly serrate duplicato-dentatus Each tooth bearing smaller teeth
Serrate serratus Saw-toothed; with asymmetrical teeth pointing forward
Serrulate serrulatus Finely serrate
Sinuate sinuosus With deep, wave-like indentations; coarsely crenate
Lobate lobatus Indented, with the indentations not reaching the center
Undulate undulatus With a wavy edge, shallower than sinuate
Spiny or pungent spiculatus With stiff, sharp points such as thistles

Apex (tip)

Image Term Latin Description
Acuminate _ Long-pointed, prolonged into a narrow, tapering point in a concave manner
Acute _ Ending in a sharp, but not prolonged point
Cuspidate _ With a sharp, elongated, rigid tip; tipped with a cusp
Emarginate _ Indented, with a shallow notch at the tip
Mucronate _ Abruptly tipped with a small short point
Mucronulate _ Mucronate, but with a noticeably diminutive spine
Obcordate _ Inversely heart-shaped
Obtuse _ Rounded or blunt
Truncate _ Ending abruptly with a flat end

Base

Acuminate
Coming to a sharp, narrow, prolonged point.
Acute
Coming to a sharp, but not prolonged point.
Auriculate
Ear-shaped.
Cordate
Heart-shaped with the notch towards the stalk.
Cuneate
Wedge-shaped.
Hastate
Shaped like an halberd and with the basal lobes pointing outward.
Oblique
Slanting.
Reniform
Kidney-shaped but rounder and broader than long.
Rounded
Curving shape.
Sagittate
Shaped like an arrowhead and with the acute basal lobes pointing downward.
Truncate
Ending abruptly with a flat end, that looks cut off.

Surface

The scale-shaped leaves of the Norfolk Island Pine.

The leaf surface is also host to a large variety of microorganisms; in this context it is referred to as the phyllosphere.

Lepidote
Covered with fine scurfy scales.

Hairiness

Common mullein (Verbascum thapsus) leaves are covered in dense, stellate trichomes.
Scanning electron microscope image of trichomes on the lower surface of a Coleus blumei (coleus) leaf
Silky aster (Symphyotrichum sericeum) leaves are sericeous.

"Hairs" on plants are properly called trichomes. Leaves can show several degrees of hairiness. The meaning of several of the following terms can overlap.

Arachnoid, or arachnose
With many fine, entangled hairs giving a cobwebby appearance.
Barbellate
With finely barbed hairs (barbellae).
Bearded
With long, stiff hairs.
Bristly
With stiff hair-like prickles.
Canescent
Hoary with dense grayish-white pubescence.
Ciliate
Marginally fringed with short hairs (cilia).
Ciliolate
Minutely ciliate.
Floccose
With flocks of soft, woolly hairs, which tend to rub off.
Glabrescent
Losing hairs with age.
Glabrous
No hairs of any kind present.
Glandular
With a gland at the tip of the hair.
Hirsute
With rather rough or stiff hairs.
Hispid
With rigid, bristly hairs.
Hispidulous
Minutely hispid.
Hoary
With a fine, close grayish-white pubescence.
Lanate, or lanose
With woolly hairs.
Pilose
With soft, clearly separated hairs.
Puberulent, or puberulous
With fine, minute hairs.
Pubescent
With soft, short and erect hairs.
Scabrous, or scabrid
Rough to the touch.
Sericeous
Silky appearance through fine, straight and appressed (lying close and flat) hairs.
Silky
With adpressed, soft and straight pubescence.
Stellate, or stelliform
With star-shaped hairs.
Strigose
With appressed, sharp, straight and stiff hairs.
Tomentose
Densely pubescent with matted, soft white woolly hairs.
Cano-tomentose
Between canescent and tomentose.
Felted-tomentose
Woolly and matted with curly hairs.
Tomentulose
Minutely or only slightly tomentose.
Villous
With long and soft hairs, usually curved.
Woolly
With long, soft and tortuous or matted hairs.

Timing

Hysteranthous
Developing after the flowers
Synanthous
Developing at the same time as the flowers

Venation

Classification

Hickey primary venation types1. Pinnate venation, Ostrya virginiana2. Parallel venation, Iris3. Campylodromous venation, Maianthemum bifolium4. Acrodromous venation (basal), Miconia calvescens5. Actinodromous venation (suprabasal), Givotia moluccana6. Palinactodromous venation, Platanus orientalis

A number of different classification systems of the patterns of leaf veins (venation or veination) have been described, starting with Ettingshausen (1861), together with many different descriptive terms, and the terminology has been described as "formidable". One of the commonest among these is the Hickey system, originally developed for "dicotyledons" and using a number of Ettingshausen's terms derived from Greek (1973–1979): (see also: Simpson Figure 9.12, p. 468)

Hickey system
1. Pinnate (feather-veined, reticulate, pinnate-netted, penniribbed, penninerved, or penniveined)
The veins arise pinnately (feather like) from a single primary vein (mid-vein) and subdivide into secondary veinlets, known as higher order veins. These, in turn, form a complicated network. This type of venation is typical for (but by no means limited to) "dicotyledons" (non monocotyledon angiosperms). E.g., Ostrya. There are three subtypes of pinnate venation:
Craspedodromous (Greek: kraspedon – edge, dromos – running)
The major veins reach to the margin of the leaf.
Camptodromous
Major veins extend close to the margin, but bend before they intersect with the margin.
Hyphodromous
All secondary veins are absent, rudimentary or concealed

These in turn have a number of further subtypes such as eucamptodromous, where secondary veins curve near the margin without joining adjacent secondary veins.

PinnateCraspedodromousCamptodromousHyphodromous
2. Parallelodromous (parallel-veined, parallel-ribbed, parallel-nerved, penniparallel, striate)
Two or more primary veins originating beside each other at the leaf base, and running parallel to each other to the apex and then converging there. Commissural veins (small veins) connect the major parallel veins. Typical for most monocotyledons, such as grasses. The additional terms marginal (primary veins reach the margin), and reticulate (net-veined) are also used.
Parallelodromous
3. Campylodromous (campylos – curve)
Several primary veins or branches originating at or close to a single point and running in recurved arches, then converging at apex. E.g. Maianthemum .
Campylodromous
4. Acrodromous
Two or more primary or well developed secondary veins in convergent arches towards apex, without basal recurvature as in Campylodromous. May be basal or suprabasal depending on origin, and perfect or imperfect depending on whether they reach to 2/3 of the way to the apex. E.g., Miconia (basal type), Endlicheria (suprabasal type).
AcrodromousImperfect basalImperfect suprabasalPerfect basalPerfect suprabasal
5. Actinodromous
Three or more primary veins diverging radially from a single point. E.g., Arcangelisia (basal type), Givotia (suprabasal type).
ActinodromousImperfect marginalImperfect reticulate
6. Palinactodromous
Primary veins with one or more points of secondary dichotomous branching beyond the primary divergence, either closely or more distantly spaced. E.g., Platanus.
Venation of a poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) leaf
Venation of a Poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) leaf.
Palinactodromous

Types 4–6 may similarly be subclassified as basal (primaries joined at the base of the blade) or suprabasal (diverging above the blade base), and perfect or imperfect, but also flabellate.

At about the same time, Melville (1976) described a system applicable to all Angiosperms and using Latin and English terminology. Melville also had six divisions, based on the order in which veins develop.

Arbuscular (arbuscularis)
Branching repeatedly by regular dichotomy to give rise to a three dimensional bush-like structure consisting of linear segment (2 subclasses)
Flabellate (flabellatus)
Primary veins straight or only slightly curved, diverging from the base in a fan-like manner (4 subclasses)
Palmate (palmatus)
Curved primary veins (3 subclasses)
Pinnate (pinnatus)
Single primary vein, the midrib, along which straight or arching secondary veins are arranged at more or less regular intervals (6 subclasses)
Collimate (collimatus)
Numerous longitudinally parallel primary veins arising from a transverse meristem (5 subclasses)
Conglutinate (conglutinatus)
Derived from fused pinnate leaflets (3 subclasses)

A modified form of the Hickey system was later incorporated into the Smithsonian classification (1999) which proposed seven main types of venation, based on the architecture of the primary veins, adding Flabellate as an additional main type. Further classification was then made on the basis of secondary veins, with 12 further types, such as;

Brochidodromous
Closed form in which the secondaries are joined in a series of prominent arches, as in Hildegardia.
Craspedodromous
Open form with secondaries terminating at the margin, in toothed leaves, as in Celtis.
Eucamptodromous
Intermediate form with upturned secondaries that gradually diminish apically but inside the margin, and connected by intermediate tertiary veins rather than loops between secondaries, as in Cornus.
Cladodromous
Secondaries freely branching toward the margin, as in Rhus.

terms which had been used as subtypes in the original Hickey system.

Secondary venation patternsBrochidodromousCraspedodromousEucamptodromousCladodromous Brochidodromous
Hildegardia migeodiiCraspedodromous
Celtis occidentalisEucamptodromous
Cornus officinalisCladodromous
Rhus ovata

Further descriptions included the higher order, or minor veins and the patterns of areoles (see Leaf Architecture Working Group, Figures 28–29).

Flabellate venation, Adiantum cunninghamii
Flabellate
Several to many equal fine basal veins diverging radially at low angles and branching apically. E.g. Paranomus.
Flabellate

Analyses of vein patterns often fall into consideration of the vein orders, primary vein type, secondary vein type (major veins), and minor vein density. A number of authors have adopted simplified versions of these schemes. At its simplest the primary vein types can be considered in three or four groups depending on the plant divisions being considered;

  • pinnate
  • palmate
  • parallel

where palmate refers to multiple primary veins that radiate from the petiole, as opposed to branching from the central main vein in the pinnate form, and encompasses both of Hickey types 4 and 5, which are preserved as subtypes; e.g., palmate-acrodromous (see National Park Service Leaf Guide).

Palmate venation, Acer truncatum
Palmate, Palmate-netted, palmate-veined, fan-veined
Several main veins of approximately equal size diverge from a common point near the leaf base where the petiole attaches, and radiate toward the edge of the leaf. Palmately veined leaves are often lobed or divided with lobes radiating from the common point. They may vary in the number of primary veins (3 or more), but always radiate from a common point. e.g. most Acer (maples).
Palmate
Other systems

Alternatively, Simpson uses:

Uninervous
Central midrib with no lateral veins (microphyllous), seen in the non-seed bearing tracheophytes, such as horsetails
Dichotomous
Veins successively branching into equally sized veins from a common point, forming a Y junction, fanning out. Amongst temperate woody plants, Ginkgo biloba is the only species exhibiting dichotomous venation. Also some pteridophytes (ferns).
Parallel
Primary and secondary veins roughly parallel to each other, running the length of the leaf, often connected by short perpendicular links, rather than form networks. In some species, the parallel veins join at the base and apex, such as needle-type evergreens and grasses. Characteristic of monocotyledons, but exceptions include Arisaema, and as below, under netted.
Netted (reticulate, pinnate)
A prominent midvein with secondary veins branching off along both sides of it. The name derives from the ultimate veinlets which form an interconnecting net like pattern or network. (The primary and secondary venation may be referred to as pinnate, while the net like finer veins are referred to as netted or reticulate); most non-monocot angiosperms, exceptions including Calophyllum. Some monocots have reticulate venation, including Colocasia, Dioscorea and Smilax.
Equisetum:
Reduced microphyllous leaves (L) arising in whorl from nodeGinkgo biloba:
Dichotomous venation

However, these simplified systems allow for further division into multiple subtypes. Simpson, (and others) divides parallel and netted (and some use only these two terms for Angiosperms) on the basis of the number of primary veins (costa) as follows;

Parallel
Penni-parallel (pinnate, pinnate parallel, unicostate parallel)
Single central prominent midrib, secondary veins from this arise perpendicularly to it and run parallel to each other towards the margin or tip, but do not join (anastomose). The term unicostate refers to the prominence of the single midrib (costa) running the length of the leaf from base to apex. e.g. Zingiberales, such as Bananas etc.
Palmate-parallel (multicostate parallel)
Several equally prominent primary veins arising from a single point at the base and running parallel towards tip or margin. The term multicostate refers to having more than one prominent main vein. e.g. "fan" (palmate) palms (Arecaceae)
Multicostate parallel convergent
Mid-veins converge at apex e.g. Bambusa arundinacea = B. bambos (Aracaceae), Eichornia
Multicostate parallel divergent
Mid-veins diverge more or less parallel towards the margin e.g. Borassus (Poaceae), fan palms
Netted (Reticulate)
Pinnately (veined, netted, unicostate reticulate)
Single prominent midrib running from base to apex, secondary veins arising on both sides along the length of the primary midrib, running towards the margin or apex (tip), with a network of smaller veinlets forming a reticulum (mesh or network). e.g. Mangifera, Ficus religiosa, Psidium guajava, Hibiscus rosa-sinensis, Salix alba
Palmately (multicostate reticulate)
More than one primary veins arising from a single point, running from base to apex. e.g. Liquidambar styraciflua This may be further subdivided;
Multicostate convergent
Major veins diverge from origin at base then converge towards the tip. e.g. Zizyphus, Smilax, Cinnamomum
Multicostate divergent
All major veins diverge towards the tip. e.g. Gossypium, Cucurbita, Carica papaya, Ricinus communis
Ternately (ternate-netted)
Three primary veins, as above, e.g. (see) Ceanothus leucodermis, C. tomentosus, Encelia farinosa
Simpson venation patternsMaranta leuconeura var. erythroneura (Zingiberales):
Penni-parallelCoccothrinax argentea (Arecaceae):
Palmate-parallelBambusa bambos:
Multicostate parallel convergentBorassus sp.:
Multicostate parallel divergentSalix alba:
Pinnately nettedLiquidambar styraciflua:
Palmately nettedZiziphus jujuba:
Multicostate palmate convergentGossypium tomentosum:
Multicostate palmate divergent

These complex systems are not used much in morphological descriptions of taxa, but have usefulness in plant identification, although criticized as being unduly burdened with jargon.

An older, even simpler system, used in some flora uses only two categories, open and closed.

  • Open: Higher order veins have free endings among the cells and are more characteristic of non-monocotyledon angiosperms. They are more likely to be associated with leaf shapes that are toothed, lobed or compound. They may be subdivided as;
    • Pinnate (feather-veined) leaves, with a main central vein or rib (midrib), from which the remainder of the vein system arises
    • Palmate, in which three or more main ribs rise together at the base of the leaf, and diverge upward.
    • Dichotomous, as in ferns, where the veins fork repeatedly
  • Closed: Higher order veins are connected in loops without ending freely among the cells. These tend to be in leaves with smooth outlines, and are characteristic of monocotyledons.
    • They may be subdivided into whether the veins run parallel, as in grasses, or have other patterns.

Other descriptive terms

There are also many other descriptive terms, often with very specialized usage and confined to specific taxonomic groups. The conspicuousness of veins depends on a number of features. These include the width of the veins, their prominence in relation to the lamina surface and the degree of opacity of the surface, which may hide finer veins. In this regard, veins are called obscure and the order of veins that are obscured and whether upper, lower or both surfaces, further specified.

Terms that describe vein prominence include bullate, channelled, flat, guttered, impressed, prominent and recessed (Fig. 6.1 Hawthorne & Lawrence 2013). Veins may show different types of prominence in different areas of the leaf. For instance Pimenta racemosa has a channelled midrib on the upper surface, but this is prominent on the lower surface.

Describing vein prominence:

Bullate
Surface of leaf raised in a series of domes between the veins on the upper surface, and therefore also with marked depressions. e.g. Rytigynia pauciflora, Vitis vinifera
Channelled (canalicululate)
Veins sunken below the surface, resulting in a rounded channel. Sometimes confused with "guttered" because the channels may function as gutters for rain to run off and allow drying, as in many Melastomataceae. e.g. (see) Pimenta racemosa (Myrtaceae), Clidemia hirta (Melastomataceae).
Guttered
Veins partly prominent, the crest above the leaf lamina surface, but with channels running along each side, like gutters
Impressed
Vein forming raised line or ridge which lies below the plane of the surface which bears it, as if pressed into it, and are often exposed on the lower surface. Tissue near the veins often appears to pucker, giving them a sunken or embossed appearance
Obscure
Veins not visible, or not at all clear; if unspecified, then not visible with the naked eye. e.g. Berberis gagnepainii. In this Berberis, the veins are only obscure on the undersurface.
Prominent
Vein raised above surrounding surface so to be easily felt when stroked with finger. e.g. (see) Pimenta racemosa, Spathiphyllum cannifolium
Recessed
Vein is sunk below the surface, more prominent than surrounding tissues but more sunken in channel than with impressed veins. e.g. Viburnum plicatum.
Types of vein prominenceVitis vinifera
BullateClidemia hirta
ChanneledCornus mas
ImpressedBerberis gagnepainii
Obscure (under surface)Spathiphyllum cannifolium
ProminentViburnum plicatum
Recessed

Describing other features:

Plinervy (plinerved)
More than one main vein (nerve) at the base. Lateral secondary veins branching from a point above the base of the leaf. Usually expressed as a suffix, as in 3-plinerved or triplinerved leaf. In a 3-plinerved (triplinerved) leaf three main veins branch above the base of the lamina (two secondary veins and the main vein) and run essentially parallel subsequently, as in Ceanothus and in Celtis. Similarly, a quintuplinerve (five-veined) leaf has four secondary veins and a main vein. A pattern with 3–7 veins is especially conspicuous in Melastomataceae. The term has also been used in Vaccinieae. The term has been used as synonymous with acrodromous, palmate-acrodromous or suprabasal acrodromous, and is thought to be too broadly defined.
Scalariform
Veins arranged like the rungs of a ladder, particularly higher order veins
Submarginal
Veins running close to leaf margin
Trinerved
2 major basal nerves besides the midrib

Diagrams of venation patterns

Image Term Description
Arcuate Secondary arching toward the apex
Dichotomous Veins splitting in two
Longitudinal All veins aligned mostly with the midvein
Parallel All veins parallel and not intersecting
Pinnate Secondary veins borne from midrib
Reticulate All veins branching repeatedly, net veined
Rotate Veins coming from the center of the leaf and radiating toward the edges
Transverse Tertiary veins running perpendicular to axis of main vein, connecting secondary veins

Size

Main article: Leaf size

The terms megaphyll, macrophyll, mesophyll, notophyll, microphyll, nanophyll and leptophyll are used to describe leaf sizes (in descending order), in a classification devised in 1934 by Christen C. Raunkiær and since modified by others.

See also

References

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