Plants are found throughout the world, on land, in water, and even floating in the air. They are extremely important organisms, essential to the continuation of all life on Earth. Because of both their crucial role and their own interesting variations, plants are the subjects of the science of botany. Botany is the study of not only the so-called vascular plants, such as garden flowers, vines, shrubs, and trees, but also of bacteria, algae, fungi, mosses, and ferns. The basic goals of botany are to explain how plants are structured, why they function the way they do, and what the evolutionary relationships are between them. There are many special subdivisions of botany concerned with the many aspects of plant structure, function, origin, and evolution as well as with specific groups of plants. (See also Plant.) HistoryPrehistoric people were no doubt aware of the great usefulness of certain plants as food and medicine. But it was not until the Assyrians, ancient Chinese, and Egyptians established formal botanical gardens that much scientific attention was given to the study and cultivation of plants. Although these gardens date back to about 2000 BC, no written record exists of any scientific botany before the time of Aristotle in the 4th century BC. Theophrastus, the Father of Botany and a student of Aristotle, wrote the ‘Historia Plantarum', an early classification of the known plants of the world. Four hundred years later, another Greek, Dioscorides, wrote the ‘De materia medica', which describes the medicinal uses of many plants. After the Greeks the serious study of plants was limited, and few botanical advancements were made for centuries. Sixteenth-century European botanists, known as herbalists, made careful descriptions of many plants, particularly the medically important ones, and established a sound foundation for further botanical study. In the 1600s the structure of organisms was first seriously investigated. In 1648 Jan Baptista van Helmont demonstrated the uptake of water by plants, and the physiological properties of plants were investigated by Stephen Hales in the 1700s. Before the end of that century Joseph Priestley discovered that green plants produce oxygen. The development of the microscope as a tool for scientific observation during the 17th and 18th centuries brought new insights to botany. Bacteria and one-celled algae were observed through a microscope by Anthony van Leeuwenhoek. Robert Hooke used a microscope to examine cork and discovered that plants were constructed of tiny building blocks, which he called cells. A major development in botany took place in 1753 with the publication of ‘Species Plantarum' by Carolus Linnaeus, who developed an internationally accepted classification scheme. In this system, called binomial nomenclature, the scientific name of a species is composed of two words, the first being the genus and the second being the species. In his botanical work Linnaeus assigned a genus and species name to every plant known to him. Closely related species, based on similarities in structures, were grouped into the same genus. Linnaeus' system and many of his original names are still in use today. Botany was profoundly affected by the publication of Charles Darwin's ‘On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection' in 1859. Darwin's work encouraged scientists to consider the hereditary relationships and common ancestries of plants throughout the world. It resulted in many classification revisions based on similar evolutionary origins rather than on similar structures. A major finding that would affect all of biology was made in 1865 by Gregor Mendel, though the significance of his work was not revealed until 1900. Mendel's experiments with garden peas showed that they inherited characteristics from their parents in a pattern that could be predicted mathematically. Thus, the concept of the gene as the unit of inheritance began to develop. By the end of the 19th century modern botany was developing rapidly and branching into many specific fields. During the 20th century there have been many discoveries and new ideas in both basic and applied botany. Much new material appears each year in the scientific literature. SubdivisionsMost modern botanists are specialists in particular fields, or subdivisions. Many of them rely on chemistry, geology, and paleontology in attempts to understand certain botanical phenomena. For example, studies of photosynthesis (food production by green plants) require a knowledge of complex chemical processes. Studies of the evolution of plants rely on the knowledgeable examination of fossils, which requires a background in geology and paleontology. Plant taxonomy and systematics. Plant taxonomists and systematists attempt to classify plant species on the basis of their phylogenetic relationships—the degree to which species have evolved from common ancestors. The closeness of species is designated by their common placement at a taxonomic level, with species that share a common ancestral origin being grouped in the same genus. Closely related genera are assigned to the same family. Higher taxonomic categories of plants include order, class, division, and kingdom. Most biologists currently recognize five kingdoms, of which four contain representatives that are studied by botanists. They are Monera, which includes the bacteria and cyanobacteria (formerly called the blue-green algae); Protista, which includes slime molds, diatoms, golden-brown algae, yellow-green algae, dinoflagellates, and euglenoids; Fungi, which includes fungi, water mold, downy mildews, rusts, and mushrooms; and Plantae, which includes green algae, stoneworts, brown algae, red algae, liverworts, and vascular plants (all flowering plants). For each type of organism scientists use phylogenetic relationships in order to categorize it as to genus and then give it a specific name. An example of the scientific classification of a species is eastern mistletoe, which has the scientific name of Phoradendron serotinum. It is placed in the following taxonomic categories, from the most to the least specific. Genus and species: Phoradendron serotinum Family: Loranthaceae Order: Santales Class: Angiospermae Division: Tracheophyta Kingdom: Plantae Plant taxonomy is, in one sense, the oldest field in botany. Botanists continue to study systematics and taxonomy using modern techniques such as electrophoresis (to isolate and identify enzyme systems) and karyotypology (to examine and determine chromosomal structure) in order to explain further plant diversity and evolutionary relationships. Specialized study within a particular group of plants is labeled to designate the group. Some of the major fields of specialization and their taxonomic groups are: algology or phycology (algae); bacteriology (bacteria); bryology (mosses); mycology (fungi); and pteridology (ferns). Plant morphology. Plant anatomists and morphologists study the structure and form of plants. Research is often related to the function of particular plant features. The features may be readily apparent, such as needles on a cactus plant, or they may be microscopic, such as chloroplasts (chlorophyll-containing structures that are contained in the cells of green plants). Plant histology (study of tissues) is a specialized area within the broad scope of plant morphology. Plant physiology. A plant physiologist studies the processes that occur within plants from the cellular to the tissue level. Physiological processes include, but are not limited to, respiration (the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide), transpiration (natural water loss through leaves), and photosynthesis (the process whereby green plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugar and oxygen). Plant cytology and genetics. The development of the electron microscope has permitted outstanding progress during the 20th century. Plant cytologists have been able to investigate features and processes unknown 50 years ago. Microscopic studies of the genes, chromosomes, and enzyme systems of plants have greatly enhanced the understanding of the processes associated with them. This has led to considerable progress in the field of plant genetics, which emphasizes phenomena associated with inheritance. Research in genetics is important in understanding the basic principles of heredity and, because of the agricultural importance of such findings, is of critical economic value. The development of new crop strains that are more productive and disease-resistant has resulted from such studies. Plant ecology. Plant ecologists are botanists who concentrate on interactions between plants and their environments. Plant community ecologists study major plant systems, such as the oak-hickory forests or salt marshes, and may ask and attempt to answer questions about plant distribution and abundance patterns or about the environmental factors that determine the community type. Plant population ecologists concentrate on selected species and examine the life histories of populations in relationship to their environments. Plant ecology has become a critical field of study in the modern world because of the need to understand how natural ecosystems are affected by human intervention. Plant pathology. Drawing on information from many other fields of botany, plant pathologists study plant diseases. Thus, plant taxonomy may reveal differences in the susceptibilities of species to a particular disease, whereas morphological, physiological, and ecological studies may provide information on how the disease affects the organism. Hereditary information can be of great value in developing disease-resistant forms of plant species that are of agricultural or medical importance. (See also Plants, Diseases of.) Agronomy, forest management, horticulture. Because of human dependence on plants for food, clothing, building supplies, and medicine and the enjoyment of plants for decorations and landscaping, many botanists specialize in one of the applied fields. Economic botany, the collective term for these fields, depends on all of the previously named fields to determine how best to use plants. Other fields. Some special categories of botanical research are palynology (the study of pollen, including its distribution through geologic time as an indicator of regional vegetation patterns), dendrochronology (the study of growth rings in trees to examine age-related phenomena), and paleobotany (the study of the plant fossil record). Many other fields of science, such as biochemistry or toxicology, may use plant material and require some level of expertise in one or more of the fields of botany. (See also Plants, Extinct.) The overlap between botany and zoology is extensive because many biological processes are not restricted to plants or animals. For example, ecology is the study of the relationships between plants, animals, and environments. The principles and theories of genetics or evolution apply equally to plants and animals, though a scientist may use a particular group of organisms for specific research. Most botanists are trained as biologists, with plants as their major interest. Botanical research and training will continue to be a major scientific effort throughout the world. Basic botanical discoveries are essential to providing the foundation that will allow the development of new plant varieties and essential plant products. |