Spine (botany)
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A spine is a rigid, pointed surface protuberance or needle-like structure on a plant, presumably serving as a defense against attack by predators. Examples include the spines of a hawthorn, the needles of a cactus, or the prickles of a shrub like the rose are all spines. Although spines generally serve as a passive defense mechanism, in some species they can be hollow and contain poisonous substances that cause lasting pain or even paralysis, and in others, may be barbed and detach readily, sticking to whatever brushes against them.
[edit] Plant spines and thorns
Botanists use several terms somewhat loosely when referring to spine- or needle-like structures on plants; however, the following differences are typically distinguished:
- Prickle – a sharp outgrowth from the epidermis, also called an emergence and usually involving some subdermal tissue as well; see also hair.
- Spine – a modified stipule or sharp branchlet found in a leaf axil or on the margin of a leaf.
- Thorn – Sharp outgrowth from a stem other than at a node; a modified stem.
- The seta (bristle) is a similar plant structure.
Thorns and prickles, most notably those on roses, are common literary symbols for the hidden dangers or woes of something beautiful or pleasant, as in "Every rose has its thorn". Roses lack true thorns since their prickles emerge from the epidermis rather that the pericycle. Growth from the pericycle would make it a modified stem and therefore a thorn. Some roses have been bred not to have prickles.
[edit] References
- Esau, K. 1965. Plant Anatomy, 2nd Edition. John Wiley & Sons. 767 pp.
- Llamas, K. A. 2003. Tropical Flowering Plants. Timber Press, Portland. 423 pp.da:Torn
de:Dorn (Botanik) es:Púa fr:Épine nl:Doorn (plant) pl:Cierń pt:Espinho (botânica)

