Pinnate
Encyclopedia : P : PI : PIN : Pinnate
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Botanically, the term describes an arrangement of discrete structures (such as leaflets, veins, lobes, branches, or appendages) arising at multiple points along a common axis. For example, once-divided leaf blades having leaflets arranged on both sides of a rachis are pinnately compound leaves. Many palms (notably the feather palms) and most cycads and grevilleas have pinnately divided leaves. Most species of ferns have pinnate or more highly divided fronds, and ferns the leaflets are typically referred to as "pinnae" (singular "pinna"). Plants with pinnate leaves are sometimes colloquially called "feather-leaved".
pinnatifid – leaves with pinnate lobes that are not discrete, remaining sufficiently connected to each other that they are not separate leaflets.
paripinnate – pinnately-compound leaves in which leaflets are born in pairs along the rachis without a single terminal leaflet; also called "even-pinnate".
imparipinnate – pinnately-compound leaves in which there is a lone terminal leaflet rather than a terminal pair of leaflets; also called "odd-pinnate".
bipinnate – pinnately-compound leaves in which the leaflets are themselves pinnately-compound; also called "twice-pinnate".
tripinnate – pinnately-compound leaves in which the leaflets are themselves bipinnate; also called "thrice-pinnate".
The fish, Platax pinnatus, is known as the pinnate spadefish or pinnate batfish.
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