- Ramification (botany)
Ramification, in botany, is the divergence of the stem and limbs of a
plant into smaller ones, i.e. trunk intobranch es, branches into increasingly smaller branches, etc. Gardeners stimulate the process of ramification throughpruning , thereby makingtree s,shrub s and other plants bushier and denser.Short
internodes (the section of stem between nodes, i.e. areas where leaves are produced) help increase ramification in those plants that form branches at these nodes. Long internodes (which may be the result of over-watering, the over-use offertilizer , or a seasonal "growth spurt") decrease a gardener's ability to induce ramification in a plant.A high degree of ramification is essential for the creation of
topiary as it enables the topiary artist to carve a bush or hedge into a shape with an even surface. Ramification is also essential to practitioners of the art of bonsai as it helps recreate the form and habit of a full-size tree in a small tree grown in a container.The pruning practices of
coppicing andpollarding induce ramification by removing most of a tree's mass above the root. Fruit tree pruning increases the yield oforchards by inducing ramification and thereby creating many vigorous, fruitful branches in the place of a few less-fruitful ones.References
* [http://aob.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/91/5/559 Annals of Botany 91: 559-569, 2003]
* [http://www.lcbsbonsai.org/Newsletter/BasicBotany/Part08_PlantHormones.htm Plant Hormones]
* [http://www.lcbsbonsai.org/Newsletter/BasicBotany/Part09_HormonesLight&Flowering.htm Hormones, Light and Flowering]
* [http://www.web-books.com/Classics/Nonfiction/General/DaVinci/DaVinciC9P1.htm Leonardo DaVinci's "Botany for painters"]
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