
|

BOTANY
Botany is the scientific study of plants, or multicellular organisms,
that carry on photosynthesis. As a branch of biology,
botany sometimes is referred to as plant science or plant
biology. Botany includes
a wide range of scientific subdisciplines that study the structure,
growth, reproduction, metabolism, development, diseases, ecology
and evolution of plants. The study of plants is important because
they are a fundamental part of life on Earth, generating food, oxygen,
fuel, medicine and fibers that allow other life forms to exist. Through
photosynthesis they absorb carbon dioxide, a waste product generated
by most animals and a greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming.
As
with other forms of life, plants can be studied at many different
levels. One is the molecular level, which is concerned with the biochemical,
molecular and genetic functions of plants. Another is the cellular,
tissue and organelle (a discrete structure of a cell that has a specialized
function) level, which studies the anatomy and physiology of plants;
and the community and population level, which involves interactions
within a species, with other species and with the environment.
Historically,
botanists studied any living being that was not an animal. Although
fungi, algae and bacteria now are members of other kingdoms, according
to the currently accepted classification system, they usually still
are studied in introductory botany classes.
The ancient Greeks were
among the first to write about plants in a scientific way. In the
fifth century B.C.E., Empedocles believed plants not only had a soul,
like animals, but also had reason and common sense. Aristotle believed
plants ranked between animals and inanimate objects. Aristotle’s
pupil Theophrastus wrote two books about plants that still were in
use in the 15th century. The Swedish physician-turned-botanist Carl
Linné is considered
the father of the systematic naming system (nomenclature), which
he invented in the 18th century and still is used to give scientific
names to all species, plant and otherwise.
Plants always have been
convenient organisms to study scientifically because they did not
pose the same ethical dilemmas as the study of animals or humans.
The Austrian monk Gregor Mendel wrote the first laws of inheritance,
a set of primary tenets relating to the transmission of hereditary
characteristics from parent organisms to their children, in the 1850s
after crossing pea plants in his garden. Nearly a century later,
Barbara McClintock discovered “jumping genes” and
other details about inheritance by studying maize plants.
Subdisciplines of Botany
Agronomy and crop science: This is an agricultural science
dealing with field crop production and soil management.
Algology
or phycology: This is the study of algae.
Bacteriology: This
is the study of bacteria (also considered part of microbiology).
Bryology: This is the study of mosses and liverworts.
Mycology: This is the
study of fungi.
Paleobotany: This is the study of plant fossils.
Plant anatomy and
physiology: This is the study of the structure and function of plants.
Plant
cell biology: This is the study of the structure and function of
cells.
Plant genetics: This is the study of genetic inheritance in
plants.
Plant pathology: This is the study of diseases in plants.
Pteridology: This is the study
of ferns and their relatives.
An undergraduate degree in botany prepares
students for professional employment or for graduate studies. A degree
in botany also provides the foundation for further study and careers
in applied fields of plant pathology, forestry, crop production,
horticulture, genetics and plant breeding, plant biotechnology and
environmental monitoring and control. Among the careers available
to a person who enjoys the outdoors are positions as an ecologist,
taxonomist, conservationist, forester and plant
explorer. A person
with a mathematical background might find biophysics, developmental
botany, genetics, modeling or systems
ecology to be exciting fields.
Someone with an interest in chemistry might become a plant
physiologist,
plant biochemist or molecular
biologist. People fascinated with microscopic
organisms often choose microbiology, phycology or mycology. On a
larger scale, ornamental horticulture and landscape
design requires
artistic use of plant form and color. And a person concerned about
the world food supply might study plant
pathology (diseases) or plant
breeding.
Related Links
http://www.botany.org/bsa/careers
Careers in Botany, Botanical Society of America
http://www.botany.org/newsite/education
Plant Education, Teaching and Outreach, Botanical Society of America
http://www.exploratorium.edu/ls/infosources/BotanyInfo.html
Botany: Web Information Sources for Educators, Exploratorium Learning
Studio
http://www.nbii.gov/education/botany.html
Botany teacher resources, National Biological Information Infrastructure
|
 |