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close this bookBetter Farming Series 02 - The Plant: the Stem; the Buds; the Leaves (FAO - INADES, 1976, 30 p.)
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentPreface
View the documentPlan of work
close this folderThe stem
View the documentWhere is the stem?
View the documentHow a stem is made
View the documentWhat the stem does
View the documentThe buds
close this folderThe leaves
View the document(introduction...)
close this folderHow a leaf is made
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentThe leaf-stalk
View the documentThe veins
View the documentThe shape of leaves
close this folderWhat are leaves for?
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentHow the leaf changes raw sap into elaborated sap
View the documentOrganic matter in the plant
View the documentThe plant breathes.
View the documentThe plant transpires.
close this folderSome practical applications
View the documentThe plant needs air and light
View the documentThe plant needs water
View the documentThe plant needs its leaves

How a stem is made

· The stem can be trailing, for example, that of a groundnut plant, or of a marrow, cucumber or melon.

Let us look at a groundnut plant. What do we see?


A groundnut plant

A groundnut plant has several stems.
They are easy to cut or crush between the fingers.
They are not hard.
The stems lie on the ground or are upright.

· The stem can be climbing, for example, that of the yam, bean, pea, and all the creepers.

Let us look at a yam plant.


What do we see?

· A yam plant may have several stems.

The stems lie on the soil.

If you push a stick into the ground beside a yam, the stems can be held upright, because they hold on to the stick.
The stem winds round the stick and climbs.

· The stems bear rather large green leaves and clusters of little flowers.

· The stem can be upright, for example, that of millet, maize, sorghum, cassava


Cotton, kapok tree or baobab.

Maize has only one seam.
The stem is upright.
It is harder than the stem of groundnuts or yams.

Trees: The stem is upright, very tall, very thick, hard.
It is called the trunk.

The trunk of a tree is its stem.

· The stem can be underground, for example that of garlic or onion.

Let us look at an onion.

What do we see?


An onion

· A very thick stem, in the ground; this is the onion.
· Long leaves come out of the stem.
· Roots grow in a ring at the base of the stem, at the base of the onion.
· These stems hold a lot of food.

HERBACEOUS STEMS AND WOODY STEMS

· The stems of groundnuts, yams, maize, millet, tomato and okra are green and pliable.

They can be bent without breaking.
They are like grasses.
They are called herbaceous stems.

· The stems of cotton, kapok trees, coffee, cocoa, of all trees, are hard.

They break if you try to bend them.
You have to strike hard to cut them with a machete.
They are called woody stems.

ANNUAL STEMS AND PERENNIAL STEMS

· The stems of groundnuts, maize, millet, tomato and okra last for only one year. They are called annual stems.

· The stems of the kapok tree, coffee, cocoa, the underground stem of yams, last for many years. They are called perennial stems.