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Botanical Terms - Acer (*Aceraceae family)
a genus of trees where the leaves are either entirely, oppositely lobed, or frequently palmately lobed (but A. negundo, box elder, has pinnate leaves). Flowers are borne in *racemes, *corymbs, or *umbels and are regular, pentamerous flowers. It's a *samara fruit. These trees are valuable for their lumber; many of the little Japanese species and cultivars are beautiful; and A. saccharum is the primary source of maple syrup in North America. In Britain, sycamore (A. pseudoplatanus), native to southern Europe, has naturalized, while field maple (A. campestre) grows wild. There are roughly 128 species, most of which are found in northern temperate regions with a small number found in tropical mountains. The majority of native species are found in China.



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Botanical Terms -Abutilon (Malvaceae family)
​A genus of trees and shrubs with hairy leaves and branches that are native to mild temperate and tropical regions, and vivid, lantern-like blooms that are mostly orange or red. The *stigmas are often *apical, and the fruit is a *schizocarp. Approximately 200 species exist. One member of the genus is A. theophrasti, or China jute



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Botanical Terms -absolute pollen frequency (APF)
The expression of *pollen data from sediments in terms of the absolute numbers (for each species, genus, or family) per unit area of surface and, where deposition rates are known, per unit time. This method provides more precise information in some situations than the conventional expression as *relative pollen frequencies (RPFs). When comparing sites that differ in one or more high-pollen producers, APFs are especially helpful. For instance, an RPF method's copious pollen may indicate a decline in herbaceous species when trees first arrive in the area pollen rain, but an APF method's analysis will reveal consistent values for herb species.


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Botanical Terms -Absorption
the process by which cells or tissues absorb things, most commonly nutrition, water, or light.


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Botanical Terms -absorption spectrum
a graph that displays the proportion of each wavelength of light that a pigment, such as chlorophyll, which mostly absorbs in the red and blue regions of the spectrum, absorbs.


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Botanical Terms - Acacia
Mostly found in temperate and subtropical locations, Acaena is a genus of wind-pollinated, mat-forming plants (family *Rosaceae, subfamily Rosoideae, *tribe Sanguisorbeae). There are roughly 100 species total; 90 of them are known to exist in South America, 14 in New Zealand, 2 in Australia, and more species in South Africa, California, and New Guinea.


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Botanical Terms -Acanthaceae (order Lamiales)
a family that is primarily composed of shrubs and has simple, opposite, and decussate leaves. The flowers are zygomorphic and bisexual, with frequently ostentatious bracts. There are two to four epipetalous stamens, four fused petals and sepals, a superior, bilobar ovary, and many, axile (see PLACENTATION) ovules. A *capsule is the fruit. Many ornamentals are present, such as Thunbergia, Aphelandra, and Acanthus. There are roughly 4000 species in 200 genera, the most of which are tropical with a few exceptions that are temperate.



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Botanical Terms - Acanthus (*Acanthaceae family)
a genus of shrubs and perennial herbs, the majority of which have spiky leaves and are *xeromorphic. Certain species are grown for their aesthetic value. The *corolla's upper lip is absent. It is said that the ornamentation on Corinthian column capitals is patterned after A. spinosus leaves. There are 30 species recognized, distributed throughout Africa, Asia, and southern Europe (A. mollis grows in bear breech), as well as mangrove swamps in Asia (A. illicifolius).



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Botanical Terms - acaulescent
used on plants with no stem at all, a very short stem, or a stem that is buried.



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Botanical Terms - accessory pigments
In *photosynthesis, pigments that can absorb light energy and pass the electrons they emit to *primary pigments


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