My watch list
my.bionity.com  
Login  

Bud



  In botany, a bud is an undeveloped or embryonic shoot and normally occurs in the axil of a leaf or at the tip of the stem. Once formed, a bud may remain for some time in a dormant condition, or it may form a shoot immediately.

The buds of many woody plants, especially in temperate or cold climates, are protected by a covering of modified leaves called scales which tightly enclose the more delicate parts of the bud. Many bud scales are covered by a gummy substance which serves as added protection. When the bud develops, the scales may enlarge somewhat but usually just drop off, leaving on the surface of the growing stem a series of horizontally-elongated scars. By means of these scars one can determine the age of any young branch, since each year's growth ends in the formation of a bud, the formation of which produces an additional group of bud scale scars. Continued growth of the branch causes these scars to be obliterated after a few years so that the total age of older branches cannot be determined by this means.   In many plants scales are not formed over the bud, which is then called a naked bud. The minute underdeveloped leaves in such buds are often excessively hairy. Such naked buds are found in shrubs like the Sumac and Viburnums and in herbaceous plants. In many of the latter, buds are even more reduced, often consisting of undifferentiated masses of cells in the axils of leaves. A terminal bud occurs on the end of a stem and lateral buds are found on the side. A head of cabbage (see Brassica) is an exceptionally large terminal bud, while Brussels sprouts are large lateral buds.

Since buds are formed in the axils of leaves, their distribution on the stem is the same as that of leaves. There are alternate, opposite, and whorled buds, as well as the terminal bud at the tip of the stem. In many plants buds appear in unexpected places: these are known as adventitious buds.

Often it is possible to find a bud in a remarkable series of gradations of bud scales. In the buckeye, for example, one may see a complete gradation from the small brown outer scale through larger scales which on unfolding become somewhat green to the inner scales of the bud, which are remarkably leaf-like. Such a series suggests that the scales of the bud are in truth leaves, modified to protect the more delicate parts of the plant during unfavorable periods.

Types of buds

Since buds are short, embryonic stem tips, composed of resting leaves or flowers or both, they can be useful in the identification of plants and are often used for winter identification of woody plants. There are a few commonly used terms applied to buds by botanists:

Accessory - An extra bud produced on ether side of an axillary bud.
Adventitious - Used to describe a bud that develops some place other than a stem node. From roots or crown tissue or rhizomes.
Axillary - When the buds are located in the axil of a leaf.
Dormant - Non growing buds, where growth is delayed due to winter or dry conditions.
Flower bud - A stem tip with embryonic flowers. Magnolia, Cherry.
Lateral - Produced on the sides of the stems instead of at the ends.
Leaf bud - A stem tip containing embryonic leaves.
Mixed bud - Having both embryonic flowers and leaves.
Naked - Not covered by a scaly covering.
Pseudoterminal - Used for lateral buds that take over the function of the terminal buds, Common in persimmon.
Reproductive - Having embryonic flowers.
Scaly - Also called 'covered buds' which have bud scales that cover the embryonic flowers and/or leaves.
Terminal - Buds at the ends of stems.
Vegetative - Buds of embryonic leaves.

Bud scars are also often used for identification too; they are the scars left on stems after the buds have fallen away from the stems.

Within zoology

The term bud (as in budding) is used by analogy within zoology as well, where it refers to an outgrowth from the body which develops into a new individual. It is a form of asexual reproduction limited to animals or plants of relatively simple structure. In this process a portion of the wall of the parent cell softens and pushes out. The protuberance thus formed enlarges rapidly while at this time the nucleus of the parent cell divides (see: mitosis, meiosis). One of the resulting nuclei passes into the bud, and then the bud is cut off from its parent cell and the process is repeated. Often the daughter cell will begin to bud before it becomes separated from the parent, so that whole colonies of adhering cells may be formed. Eventually cross walls cut off the bud from the original cell.

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bud". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 does not support some functions on Chemie.DE