A
The side or face away from the axis. Most commonly used here when referring to the lower margin of the phyllode. Synonym: Dorsal. Opposite to Adaxial.
Needle-shaped.
Tapering to a distinct but not protracted point, with more or less straight sides forming an angle of less than 90 degrees.
The side or face next to the axis. Most commonly used here when referring to the upper (gland-bearing) margin of the phyllode. Synonym: Ventral. Opposite to Abaxial.
In the form of a ring.
The flowering period, when flowers are fully expanded and functioning. Acacia flowers are considered to be at anthesis when the anthers are exserted.
Directed forward or upward. Most commonly used here with for hairs that are bent towards the apex of branchlets or phyllodes. Compare Retrorse.
Without leaves or phyllodes.
Tipped by a short, slender, flexible and often sharp point.
Pressed close or flat against another organ.
Bearing long, cobwebby, entangled hairs.
Treelike.
A small, well-defined area on a surface. Used here mainly to describe the area on the seed surface circumscribed by the pleurogram.
The expanded end of the funicle. Commonly there is a morphological discontinuity between the funicle and the aril, however, sometimes there is no clear distinction between the two and then the whole structure is referred to as the funicle/aril. See Exarillate and Funicle.
Bearing an awn or bristle at the tip.
As used here the term applies to the one-seeded segments of a pod which are separated from one another by deep constrictions of the pod valves.
Jointed; having joints where separation may occur naturally.
Growing upwards, with an angle of divergence of 16-45 degrees.
Not symmetric.
Tapering gradually to a narrow tip or base.
A rigid, woody modified stem with a +/- sharp point; unlike prickles axillary spines have a vascular trace. Axillary spines occur at nodes (together with a pair of scarious stipules) in a few Western Australian bipinnate-leaved species (very rarely found in phyllodinous taxa). Same as Thorn.
The central supporting structure (or imaginary line) around which various organs are developed, for example, peduncles borne on a raceme axis. Plural: Axes.
B
The term 'gland basal' usually means that the phyllode gland is located adjacent to the pulvinus (or within a few millimeters above the pulvinus).
One or more bracts located at base of the peduncles. These bracts are normally small and are commonly caducous; not all species of Acacia possess basal peduncular bracts. Not to be confused with Basal raceme bracts or Involucre.
One or more bracts located at base of raceme axis. These bracts enclose inflorescence buds; they are not common in Acacia. When present basal raceme bracts may be conspicuous but they commonly fall away as the racemes elongate (in which case their presence can be inferred by bract scars at the extreme base of the raceme axis: observe at x10 magnification). Not to be confused with Basal peduncular bracts.
In two vertical rows. Used here with reference to phyllodes that are continuous and decurrent and form narrow or broad wings on opposite side of the branchlet.
Deeply two-cleft or two-lobed, usually from the tip.
Two-forked.
Borne in pairs.
Twice pinnate, i.e. compound leaves comprising a central axis and (one to many) secondary axes arranged on opposite sides of it (leaflets are arranged on opposite sides of the secondary axes).
A short branch.
A reduced leaf or leaf-like structure associated with a flower or inflorescence.
As used here this term applies to the small bract that subtends each flower in the heads and spikes of most Australian species of Acacia. Bracteoles normally consist of a slender Claw and an expanded lamina.
Ultimate divisions of the branch.
C
Falling off early. Compare Deciduous.
A collective term for all the sepals of a flower.
Grey or white in colour due to a covering of short, fine hairs.
Pertaining to fruits.
Tough and firm but elastic and flexible, like cartilage.
Chestnut-coloured; dark reddish brown.
With a papery texture.
With a marginal fringe of hairs. Dim. Ciliolate.
Ash-coloured.
Used here to describe pods where they are curved or coiled within the plane of the suture (if curving normal to suture the term coiled is used).
Lemon yellow colour.
Club-shaped.
A group of individuals originating from a single parent plant by vegetative reproduction.
To wind into rings, one above another, with the opposite ends overlapping. The coils can be regular or irregularly formed, and may form a tight spiral. As used here this term is most commonly applied to pods with coils normal to the plane of the suture. See Circinnate.
A leaf divided into two or more leaflets. See Bipinnate and Pinnate.
As used here the term is applied to narrow, thick organs, especially phyllodes, which are subjectively judged as being intermediate between Flat and Sub-terete.
Of one colour. Use here for when the upper and lower surfaces of leaflets are uniform in colour and shade of colour.
Blending of one part into another. Used here with reference to phyllode nerves. Different from Contiguous.
Fusion of like parts, as the fusion of staminal filaments into a tube.
Adjoining or touching (but not blending). Used here with reference to the phyllode nerves. Different from Confluent.
Not jointed; not separating at maturity along a well-defined line of dehiscence. See Decurrent.
Twisted or bent.
New growth arising from a stump.
Heart-shaped, with a notch at the base.
With a leathery texture.
The collective name for all the petals of a flower.
Curled, wavy or crinkled. Used here with reference to hairs of the indumentum.
When similar parts are close together, as in phyllodes along branchlets or longitudinal nerves on plurinerved phyllodes.
With a hard, brittle texture.
Hooded or hood-shaped.
Having the shape of a knife-blade.
Having three sides and three angles, with the widest axis above the middle; length: width ratio >2: 1 to <12: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. See Obdeltate and Obtriangular .
Cup-shaped; nearly hemispherical, like an acorn-cup.
When an organ is continuously bent into an arc (but the ends not overlapping
A short, sharp point.
Tipped with a short, sharp point.
Cylinder-shaped; elongate (more than twice as long as wide) and round in cross-section. See also Spike.
D
Falling off; not persistent. Compare Caducous.
Spreading horizontally (of the reclining on the ground) but with the tips growing upwards.
Extending downward from the point of insertion, e.g. base of phyllodes that extend down along the branch as a wing (broad or narrow) or rib.
Bent abruptly downward.
The opening at maturity of pods.
Having three sides and three angles, with the widest axis below the middle; length: width ratio about 1: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. See Triangular.
Flowers pressed closely together in heads or spikes. Compare with Interrupted.
Sunk down, as if flattened from above.
Phyllode flattened in the horizontal plane (as opposed to being flattened in the vertical plane, which is what normally occurs in Acacia). In diaphyllodes the gland is found on the upper surface of the lamina, not on the upper edge as occurs in vertically flattened phyllodes.
Widely or loosely spreading.
Halved. The term is applied her with reference to phyllodes that have a +/- straight lower margin and a clearly convex upper margin.
With two forms.
In the form of a disk.
Resembling a disk.
Of different colours. Use here for when the upper and lower surfaces of leaflets are unlike in colour (commonly different shades of green).
When similar parts are not closely aggregated, as in longitudinal nerves of plurinerved phyllodes that are widely spaced.
Widely diverging or spreading apart.
Having structurally different upper and lower surfaces.
Covered with soft, fine hairs.
E
Without a bract.
With small prickles or spines.
Pertaining to soil.
Without a gland.
In the shape of an oval, i.e. broadest at middle with curved sides. Length to width ratio about 2: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. See Narrowly elliptic.
With a notch at the apex.
Peculiar to a specific geographic area.
Growing upwards, with an angle of divergence of less than 16 degrees.
The margin irregularly toothed, as if gnawed.
Without an aril.
Projecting beyond the surrounding parts, as bracteoles protruding beyond flower buds.
F
Sickle-shaped or scimitar-shaped. A term of varied application but as used here refers to phyllodes which are generally broadest near the middle, recurved, narrowed towards the apex and usually also the base. The upper margin of the phyllode is clearly convex and the lower margin clearly concave. See Sub-falcate.
A tight bundle or cluster. See Fasciculate.
Clustered from a common point. As used here phyllodes are considered fasciculate if 2 or more arise from a single point on the branchlet.
Rust-coloured.
Containing or resembling fibre.
Thread-like.
Fringed with minute hairs along the margin.
Split or cracked (used with reference to bark).
Fan-shaped.
Thick and pulpy; succulent.
Zig-zagged.
See Head.
With furrows or grooves, as occurs on the trunks of a few species such as A. coolgardiensis, A. catenulata and A. shirleyi.
Leaf-like; bearing leaves.
Crumbly.
sooty, or soot-coloured.
Spindle-shaped; broadest near the middle and tapered towards both ends.
G
Helmet-shaped.
Having the pepals united by their margins, at least at the base.
Having the sepals united by their margins, at least at the base.
In equal pairs like twins.
Swollen or enlarged on one side; a pouch-like enlargement of the base of an organ. Same as Gibbous.
Becoming glabrous, especially with age or maturity (i.e. defines the process).
Without hairs.
Small secretory structures (extra-floral nectaries) normally situated on the upper margin of phyllodes or leaf axes. See also Jugary gland, Interjugary gland and Petiolar gland.
Spherical (a 3 dimensional term). Same as Globose.
H
The environmental circumstances or kind of place where an organism occurs.
A spherical or obloid aggregation of flowers. When the flower cluster is elongated (cylindrical, i.e. more than twice as long as wide) it is called a spike.
Six-angled.
Hearing coarse, long hairs.
Minutely hirsute. Used here to describe an indumentum comprising short, straight, fine, spreading hairs.
Minutely hispid.
Translucent, almost like clear glass.
I
Overlapping like tiles or shingles on a roof.
Unequal sided.
Curved upwards or inwards. For phyllode shape sometimes a subjective distinction is made between shallowly and strongly incurved, and between straight and shallowly incurved. See also Curved and Recurved. The term incurved is also used for leaflets where the margins are curved inwards towards the upper side of the leaflet (rare in Acacia)
Not opening at maturity along definite lines or pores.
A covering of hairs.
Hardened.
Bent abruptly inwards or upwards.
The arrangement of the flowers and flowering axes. In Acacia the flowers are aggregated into globular or obloid heads or cylindrical spikes, these are borne on peduncles (peduncles rarely absent) which may simple or arranged in racemes or panicles.
Harmless; without a sharp point.
Used here with reference to Glands that are situated on upper surface of the rachis between successive pairs of pinnae, but located more than 1 mm below the insertion of the pinnae. One to several interjugary glands may be present; they may vary in size but are generally smaller than the jugary glands (which may co-occur on the same leaf).
The portion of a branchlet between adjacent nodes.
Individual flowers widely spaced so that the inflorescence axis (i.e. the receptacle) is clearly visible between at least the unopened flowers. Compare with Dense.
A space between. Used here mainly with reference to the space between adjacent longitudinal nerves of plurinerved phyllodes.
A ring of bracts subtending a flower or flower cluster. In Acacia involucres are found only in members of the former subg. Acacia (Vachellia). The involucre may occur anywhere along the peduncle, from the base to the apex; in the latter case it may be hidden by the flowers when heads or spikes are at anthesis.
J
Used here with reference to Glands that are situated on upper surface of the rachis of a multi-jugate leaf between, or up to 1 mm below, the base of a pair of pinnae (excluding the lowermost pair). Inter-jugary may co-occur on leaves with jugary glands. See also Glands.
L
The expanded portion, or blade, of a leaf or petal, etc. In Acacia this term is applied to the expanded apex found on many bracteoles and sometimes to the body of the phyllodes (excluding the pulvinus).
Wooly; densely covered with long, soft tangled hairs.
Lance-shaped. A term of varied application but as used here refers to a shape that is longer than wide with the broadest point below the middle, and with +/- curved sides. Length to width ratio more than 3: 1 A 2-dimensional shape. If length: width ratio is less than 3 then see Ovate.
Borne on or at the side.
The main axis of a compound leaf. In bipinnate-leaved species the leaf axis comprises the petiole and (if present) the rachis; it is terminated by the terminal seta.
The ultimate division of a compound leaf. Same as Pinnule.
Somewhat corky spots on the bark (these are small, pale-coloured and can be circular, lens-shaped or slit-like).
Invested with lenticels.
Resembling a line, i.e. long and narrow (more than about 9 times longer than wide) with parallel sides. A 2-dimensional shape. If length: width ratio is less than 9 then see Narrowly oblong or Oblong.
Like oblanceolate but very long and narrow.
Triangular but with length: width ratio 12: 1 or more. A 2-dimensional shape.
M
Farinaceous; powdery, dry and crumbly.
Thin, soft, flexible, and more or less translucent, like a membrane.
The number of parts within a set. Here used with reference to flowers, for example, 5-merous flowers have 5 petals and 5 sepals.
The central longitudinal nerve of the phyllode or petal.
Bark reddish and shedding in short, narrow shavings which curl back on themselves from each end and which remain attached to the stems for some time. While the colour of Minni Ritchi bark always has a reddish hue it may, depending upon the species, vary from deep red or purplish to coppery orange or salmon pink. With age the outer layers of bark often turn grey and in some species this may persist as a stocking around the base of stems or as patches along branches.
Cylindrical and constricted at regular intervals, giving a beaded necklace-like appearance, e.g. pods of A. coriacea. See Sub-moniliform.
With coloured spots or blotches.
A small point (usually brown, hard and sometimes sharp), found at tips of most phyllodes.
Tipped with a very small mucro.
Leaves possessing more than one pair of pinnae.
With 4 or more trunks or stems arising from ground level.
When used with reference to phyllodes - possessing many, fine, close, parallel nerves.
N
Elliptic but with length to width ratio 3: 1 or more.
Oblong but with length to width ratio 3: 1 to 9: 1.
Plants introduced from elsewhere, but now established.
Boat-shaped.
The arrangement of nerves or veins in an organ, as in phyllodes.
A strand of vascular tissue. Used here mostly in reference to the veins found on phyllodes.
Enclosed spaces created by anastomosing nerves that form the reticulum. See Anastomosing and Reticulum.
Shiny.
With knobs, as in protuberances formed by brachyblasts in A. tetragonophylla.
O
Cone-shape, with the attachment at the narrower end.
Having three sides and three angles, with the widest axis above the middle; length: width ratio about 1: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. See Cuneate and Obtriangular.
Inversely lanceolate, with the attachment at the narrower end. A 2-dimensional shape.
Spheroidal and flattened at the poles.
Slanting. In Acacia commonly applied to seeds in pods which are intermediate between longitudinal and transverse and phyllode apices or bases that are unequal-sided.
A short cylinder (not above twice as long as wide). Used here with reference to the shape of flower-heads. Same as Oblongoid. See Heads.
Rectangular (length to width ratio >1: 1 to <3: 1), with parallel sides. A 2-dimensional shape. If length: width ratio is 3 or more than see Linear or Narrowly oblong .
Inversely ovate, with the attachment at the narrower end (not as elongate as oblanceolate). Length: width ratio about 2. A 2-dimensional shape. See Oblanceolate
Inversely triangular. Having three sides and three angles, with the widest axis above the middle; length: width ratio about 2: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. See Cuneate and Obdeltate.
Circular. Length to width ratio 1: 1.
An opening or pore; usually used here with reference to the Glands (extra-floral nectaries) that have an opening located in the centre.
The swollen basal portion of the female reproductive organ with contains the ovules. Acacia flowers typically have a single ovary (rarely more) and this is terminated by the style (which often protrudes just beyond the stamens when flowers are at anthesis).
Egg-shaped in outline and attached at the broad end. Length: width ratio about 2. A 2-dimensional shape. If length: width ration is more than 3 then see Lanceolate.
An immature seed; the megasporangium and surrounding integuments of a seed plant.
P
A branched, racemose inflorescence (i.e. a raceme of racemes).
Small, elongated protuberances on the surface of an organ, usually an extension of one epidermal cell. Plural: Papillae.
The stalk of an inflorescence terminated by a head or a spike.
Target-shaped; a flat structure borne on a stalk which is attached to the lower surface rather than to the base or margin.
Nerves parallel to one another and arising from a main central axis as in minor nerves of phyllode diverging from midrib.
Five-angled.
With parts arranged in sets or multiples of five, as in flowers having 5 sepals.
Remaining attached to the plant beyond the expected time of falling.
Glands located on the upper surface of the petiole, between or below the point of insertion of the pinnae. Petiolar glands can be sessile or stipitate.
A leaf stalk. In bipinnate-leaved Acacias the petiole is the leaf stalk lying between the branchlet and the point of attachment of the first pair of pinnae; the base of the petiole is occupied by the pulvinus.
Abbreviated from phenomenology, recording the periodical phenomena of plants. As used here the term applies to the appearance of flowers and fruits.
A modified primary leaf axis which assumes the form and function of a leaf. A majority of Australian Acacia species possess phyllodes.
Having the form of a cap.
Covered with usually long and spreading, soft, weak, thin and clearly separated hairs.
In bipinnate-leaved Acacias the pinna represents one of the primary divisions of the leaf (they comprise the rachilla together with the leaflets it supports). Pinna are inserted on the petiole and (when present) the rachis, occurring as an opposite pair of pinnae, however, sometimes they are sub- opposite or alternate. Plural: Pinnae.
A compound leaf with leaflets arranged on opposite sides of a central main axis.
With a flat surface.
Flat on one side and convex on the other. Used here mainly for the few species having phyllodes which are flat above and convex below.
The fine line that circumscribes the areole that occurs on the opposite faces of the seeds. The pleurogram can be open (the opening always faces the hilum) or closed (in which case it is termed "continuous"); when open the pleurogram is commonly "u" shaped.
Folded back and forth longitudinally like a fan.
The fruit of Acacia, containing the seeds. (A usually dry, dehiscent fruit derived from one carpel that splits along two sutures.). Same as Legume.
Short, sharp-pointed, hardened outgrowths of the epidermis, with no vascular tissue connecting them to the branchlet.
Trailing or spreading along the ground but not rooting at the nodes.
With a white powdery coating (bloom) on the surface. This term is treated by many authors as equivalent to glaucous, but not here. See Scurfy.
Minutely hairy with a somewhat dense cover of very short, soft hairs.
Classically defined as the swollen base of the petiole; in Acacia the term is also applied to phyllodes. The pulvinus is present in very many Acacias but is not always overly pronounced. It is commonly yellowish and (at least when dry) transversely wrinkled, but is not always swollen, and is normally separated from the branch by a joint.
Marked with dots, depressions or translucent glands.
Minutely punctate.
Used in Acacia to describe prominent foliar glands that have relatively large orifices and well-defined rims that project beyond the margin, e.g. Acacia pustula.
With small blisters.
Q
Four-cornered; having four angles, which are usually right angles.
R
In Acacia this term refers to an inflorescence comprising pedunculate heads or spikes arranged along an unbranched common axis (the raceme axis). More correctly this structure should be termed a raceme of heads or spikes.
Inflorescences comprising Racemes.
The main axis of a structure, such as the a compound leaf or an inflorescence. In bipinnate-leaved Acacias the rachis is the leaf axis extending from the lowermost to the uppermost pair of pinnae; it is situated distal to the petiole and is terminated by the terminal seta.
The distal end of the peduncle upon which the flowers are inserted (in fruiting specimens the receptacle is normally marked with scars where flowers have fallen).
Curved downwards or outwards. For phyllode shape sometimes a subjective distinction is made here between shallowly and strongly recurved, and between straight and shallowly recurved. See also Curved and Incurved. The term recurved is also used for leaflets where the margins are curved backwards towards the underside or the leaflet. See also Revolute.
Bent backward or downward to some degree.
Bearing resin. Resin is a term applied to a group of oxydised hydrocarbons, solidified or hardened turpentine, and insoluble in water. Resin may or may not be sticky (i.e. viscid).
See Reticulum.
A network formed by anastomosing veins (as, for example, occurs on phyllodes of species such as A. neurocarpa). See Anastomosing and Nerve islands.
Directed backwards or downwards. Most commonly used here with for hairs that are bent towards the base of branchlets or phyllodes. Compare Antrorse.
Approaching a rhombic outline. See Trapeziform.
A main longitudinal vein in a structure, as in branchlets.
Stiff and inflexible.
With longitudinal fissures or cracks. Used here with reference to bark.
Having a small, terminal beak.
Beak-shaped.
Forming a smooth arc, like an arc of a circle. Like Obtuse except arc forming a wider angle.
Imperfectly developed (as applied here this term refers to structures, commonly phyllodes or racemes, that are extremely short).
Wrinkled.
S
Minutely roughened.
A thin, flat, dry, membranous, non-green (commonly brown) structure.
Climbing.
Thin-textured and dry, not green.
Irregularly arranged. Used here mainly with reference to phyllodes which are borne singly at each node, seemingly without an ordered pattern down the stem, i.e. not Whorled or Fasciculate.
Half trowel-shaped. Widest axis below the middle and having a +/- straight lower margin and an angled upper margin. A 2-dimensional shape.
A segment of the calyx. In Acacia sepals may be free (in which case they are often difficult to see) or united into a variously lobed cup.
See Sinuous.
Sitting upon the body that supports it, without a supporting stalk.
Bristly.
Woody plant, single- or multi-stemmed, more than 0.3 m tall and usually less than 3 m tall, erect, spreading or domed. Sometimes it is difficult to distinguish between Shrub, Sub-shrub and Tree.
S-shaped; doubly curved, like the letter S. Commonly applied to phyllodes. When the curves are very shallow a subjective distinctions must sometimes be made between Sigmoid and Curved or Straight.
Unbranched. As used here the term refers to Inflorescences where the peduncles arise directly from within the axil of the phyllodes (not inserted on a common axis, as occurs in racemes and panicles).
Curving in and out in a wavy or serpentine form. Same as Serpentenous.
Shaped like a spatula, with a rounded blade above gradually tapering to the base.
An elongated (cylindrical) aggregation of flowers along a receptacle at the distal end of the peduncle. See Head.
Hard, rigid and sharp-pointed structures (which readily pierce the skin upon touch); normally applied here to branchlets and stipules. Sometimes it is difficult to decide if the tips are Spinose or Sub-spinose.
Twisted in a continuous curve around a central axis.
With minute squamellae, i.e. small scales.
Star-shaped, as in hairs with several to many branches radiating from the base.
Infertile. Used here mainly with reference to plants bearing neither flowers nor fruits.
A stalk supporting a structure, such as the stalk attaching an ovary to the receptacle in some flowers.
Small appendages located on the branchlets at the base of phyllodes or leaves. In Australian Acacias stipules are commonly scarious, brown and very small, but in some species they are spinose; stipules are often caducous but rarely entirely wanting.
A pore or aperture in the epidermis, surrounded by two guard cells, which allows gaseous exchange.
Without a curve, bend or angle. Note. Sub-straight organs (including, for example, phyllodes that are overall straight except curved near the apex) are included within this definition.
Marked with fine parallel lines, as grooves or ridges.
Minutely strigose.
A prefix denoting slightly, somewhat, or almost.
Intermediate between Appressed and Patent (i.e. forming an angle of about 15-75 degrees with the surface).
Shallowly falcate (in sub-falcate phyllodes the upper margin is convex and the lower margin is shallowly concave).
Hairs very sparse, almost absent.
Approaching Moniliform. A loosely defined term applied here to pods with margins moderately to prominently constricted between the seeds and surfaces slightly to prominently swollen over the seeds. If the constrictions and swellings are simultaneously prominent, the term Moniliform is used.
Dwarf woody plant, single- or multi-stemmed, to 0.3 m tall and erect, spreading or domed (not to be confused with Prostrate).
Tips hard, rigid and often acute (but not piercing the skin upon touch); normally applied here to branchlets, stipules and phyllodes. Sometimes it is difficult to decide if the tips are Sub-spinose or Spinose.
Sub-rounded in cross-section (i.e. terete but slightly flattened horizontally or vertically). See Terete and Compressed.
Awl-shaped.
Three or more phyllodes arranged in an incomplete, horizontal or oblique, ring round the stem at the node. This somewhat loosely defined term accommodates phyllode arrangements intermediate between regular whorls and clearly scattered.
With longitudinal grooves or furrows.
Growing together in the same geographic area.
T
Slowly. Used here for pods that do not readily dehisce.
Round in cross-section; cylindrical. See Sub-terete.
With a checkered pattern; usually refers to bark.
Seed coat.
With four angles, as in quadrangular phyllodes.
With parts arranged in sets of multiples of four, as in flowers having 4 sepals.
Densely covered with matted, short hairs.
Slightly tomentose.
At a right angle to the longitudinal axis of a structure, e.g. seeds with their long axis at right angles to the long axis of the pod.
An asymmetrically four-sided figure, as a trapezium, almost the same as rhomboid.
Having three sides and three angles, with the widest axis below the middle; length: width ratio 2: 1 to <12: 1. A 2-dimensional shape. As used here the term Triangular is broadly defined to also include Cuneate, Deltate, Linear-triangular, Obdeltate, Obtriangular and Semi-trullate .
In three vertical rows. Used here with reference to phyllodes that are continuous and decurrent and form narrow or broad wings on three sides of the branchlet.
Three-cleft.
Three-angled.
Three-edged (triangular in cross-section).
Terminating very abruptly at the apex or base, as if cut-off square.
Bearing tubercles (i.e. small wart-like structures on the surface).
Top-shaped.
Swollen or inflated.
To turn in another direction so that parts are situated in a spiral curve.
U
Hooked at the tip.
Leaves possessing one pair of pinnae.
One-sided (as in an inflorescence with the flowers all on one side of the axis).
V
The opposite segments of dehiscent fruit which separate from one another at maturity. Used with reference to pods in Acacia.
A vein of secondary importance.
Shiny as though varnished.
Covered with minute wart-like elevations.
A ring-like arrangement (whorl) arising round the node on the branch; whorls are horizontal or less commonly oblique. In Acacia usually refers to phyllodes.
A structure which is very reduced.
W
See Verticillate.
A thin, flat margin bordering a structure.
Approaching the texture of wood.