Tag: botany
Questions Related to botany
Herbarium is used to
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Map distribution of plants
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Study plant taxonomy
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Study molecular taxonomy
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All of the above
Which of the following is preserved in their three-dimensional structure?
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Mosses
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Lichens
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Conifer cones
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None of the above
Herbarium is a store house of collected plant specimens that are dried, pressed and preserved on sheets. Mosses, Lichens and Conifer cones are preserved in the form of herbarium sheets, in their two-dimensional structure.
We can get data for floristic study from
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Genomic library
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Gene bank
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Museum
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Herbarium
The floristic study is the study related to the distribution of plants. A herbarium is a collection of preserved plant specimens. It gives the permanent record of plant specimen. The specimens are stored with a data label. The label describes useful information including the plants' scientific name, the origin of the collection, the date and time of collection and the name of the collector. Herbariums are essential for the study of plant taxonomy, the study of geographic distributions and the stabilizing of nomenclature. Herbaria may also be a repository of viable seeds for rare species.
The repository of plant taxonomy and systematics is
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Red data book
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Herbarium
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Botanical garden
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Genomic library
A herbarium is a collection of preserved plant specimens. It gives the permanent record of plant specimen. These specimens may be whole plants or plant parts. These are in a dried form mounted on a sheet. The specimens are stored with a data label. Herbariums are essential for the study of plant taxonomy, the study of geographic distributions and the stabilizing of nomenclature. Herbaria may also be a repository of viable seeds for rare species and new taxonomy
Lectotype is
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Duplicate of holotype.
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Specimen described along with holotype.
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Specimen cited by author without making one hlotype.
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Specimen cited by author from original material for nomenclature type when there is no holotype.
Lectotype refers to the new specimen selected among the original material collected to serve as holotype when the author didn't designate a holotype. It means the type which is declared later from the original material if the type specimen is not described, missing or damaged.
The standard size of herbarium sheet is
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42 cm, 29 cm
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41 cm, 29 cm
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41 cm, 28 cm
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40 cm, 30 cm
A herbarium is a collection of dried plant specimens carefully preserved and labelled. Plant collections are essential for taxonomic researchers because they serve as voucher specimens. They also help to identify the family. Once mounted and deposited in the herbarium, the collections are referred to as herbarium specimens. Mounting is the process by which a specimen is attached to an herbarium sheet and a label affixed to the lower right corner. Specimens are mounted on sheets of standard size herbarium paper 42 cm x 29 cm.
Labels are pasted on the herbarium sheets over
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Right hand top
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Right hand bottom
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Left hand top
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Left hand bottom
Labels are pasted on the herbarium sheets over the right-hand bottom. The label should indicate the information about the locality, altitude, habit, date, and time of collection, the name of collector, common name, complete scientific name etc.
The common fungicide used in preventing growth of fungus on herbarium specimens is
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Copper sulphate
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Lime
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Mercuric chloride
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Both A and B
The common fungicide used in preventing growth of fungus on herbarium specimens is mercuric chloride. It is highly toxic compound that volatilizes slightly at ordinary temperature and appreciably at 100 degrees Celsius. Mercuric chloride is corrosive to mucous membranes and used as a topical antiseptic and disinfectant.
The standard size of herabrium sheet is :
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$ 29 \times 41.5 cm $
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$ 15 \times 30 cm $
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$ 21 \times 36 cm $
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$ 25 \times 38 cm $
A herbarium sheet is a collection of preserved plant specimens. These specimens may be whole plants or plant parts which are usually in dried form mounted on a sheet of standard size 29 × 41.5 cm.
Isotype is a specimen
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Duplicate of holotype
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Described along with holotype
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Nomenclature type when the original is missing
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Cited by author when there is no holotype
- A holotype is an original specimen used in herbarium sheet.
- An Isotype is referred to as the duplicate specimen of the holotype.
- A paratype is a specimen described along with holotype.
- A lectotype is cited by the author when there is no holotype.