PULSE, in Botany

in botany, common name for members of the Fabaceae (Leguminosae), a large plant family, called also the pea, or legume, family. Numbering about 650 genera and 17,000 species, the family is third largest, after the asters and the orchids. Some botanists divide the Fabaceae into three or more separate families, but most species share certain common and easily recognizable features. The leaves are usually compound; the fruit is a legume (a type of pod); and the blossoms may have an irregular butterflylike (papilionaceous) shape. Typically, the flowers have 10 stamens, and the corolla and the calyx are formed of 5 petals and 5 sepals, respectively. Some species have thorny branches.

The Fabaceae include herbs, shrubs, and trees distributed throughout the world in a great variety of forms. Arboreal species occur in temperate and, frequently, in tropical zones, where epiphytic and climbing forms also thrive. Many leguminous shrubs and trees inhabit desert and semiarid regions, usually forming the characteristic vegetation—e.g., the acacias of the S African bushveld and of Australia, and the mesquite of the American Southwest.

The Pulses and Their Uses

Economically, the family is second only to the grasses in importance. Legumes provide valuable and nutritive foods because the food stored for the embryo in the seed (e.g., the pea) is rich in protein. In many regions, especially where meat is scarce or expensive, legumes—notably peas, beans, lentils, peanuts, carob, and soybeans—are staples of the diet. The Fabaceae are equally important as fodder and forage plants; clover, alfalfa, vetch, lupine, beggarweed, lespedeza, sainfoin, and soybeans are among the numerous valuable types.

These food and forage legumes are chief among the plants used as "green manure" (see manure). Nitrogen-fixing bacteria dwelling in nodules of the roots of most legumes fix free nitrogen from the air into the nitrogenous compounds needed by all forms of life for building proteins (see nitrogen cycle). Rotation of leguminous crops with nonleguminous crops has long been a standard agricultural practice; the soil is enriched when their roots are left to decay after harvesting.

The pulse family also provides gums and resins (e.g., tragacanth, copal, and acacia and carob gums), dyes and tannins (e.g., from the indigo plant, logwood, brazilwood, and types of acacia and broom), timber (e.g., rosewood, locust, honey locust, and acacia), medicines (e.g., from tamarind, licorice, and senna), perfume oils (e.g., from acacia, black locust, broom, and sweet pea), vegetable oils (e.g., soybean and peanut oils), and other commercial items such as flavorings, fibers, and insecticides.

In many parts of the world native species of the Leguminosae are of great importance locally, if not commercially. Often every part of the plant finds some use: the pods and leaves for food, beverages, and forage; the wood and stems for building purposes, fiber, and household items; and the leaves, blossoms, and bark for domestic remedies. The blossoms of many of the Leguminosae are excellent honey sources. Species that grow in arid climates are particularly valuable because of the scarcity of other fodder, food, and timber crops; they are also important to wildlife for forage and cover. Native Americans have cultivated bean plants since antiquity and still rely on breadroot, redwood, mesquite, and many other species for food and other products.

Among the native North American trees cultivated for shade or for their beautiful springtime blossoms are the locusts, the honey locust, the yellowwood, the redbud, and the acacias. The mimosas, sennas, laburnums, poincianas, Old World acacias, shrubby brooms, and wisteria have been introduced for the same purpose. The American lupines, the Old World sweet pea, and numerous types of clover are among the cultivated herbaceous species. In all, members of over 140 genera of the Leguminosae are grown for ornament. Furze from Europe and the kudzu vine from Asia have been introduced for erosion control (the latter has become a noxious weed). The locoweeds and lupines of the western states are among the plants poisonous to livestock.

See articles on individual plants.

Classification

The pulse family is classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Rosales.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Pulse in Botany  - 47 results

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32. PULSE FAMILY. Order LEGUMINOSAE. 352. Its petals displayed: s, standard...give the principal sorts. 351. Papilionaceous corolla of Locust. I. TRUE PULSE FAMILY. Corolla really papilicionaceous, and the standard outside, wrapped...
...wild in thickets and shrubberies. III. Of trees which are cultivated in pleasure gardens and orchards. IV. Of cereals and pulse, and the plants which grow in the field with them. V. Of garden herbs and pot herbs. VI. Of umbelliferous plants. VII...
...investigated the circulatory system; the walls of the arteries and veins; compared the pulse at different ages and under different bodily conditions. In the province of botany no real advancement was made at that time in Alexandria. General interest in...
...doing so sought to reinscribe botany with a masculine identity. At the turn of the century botany was associated positively with...profundity of the subject: What is botany at this present hour? Little...nerve that oscillates, or a pulse that throbs, in sign of growth...
...grains. The pea family. Related to the roses is the great pulse family in which the pod-bearing plants of the world are classified. The lower genera of pulses have more or less regular flowers with radial symmetry, but...of a plant if it shows the butterfly-shaped blossom. The pulse family as a whole, however, is a group based rather upon...
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journal articles on: Pulse in Botany  - 21 results

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...becoming more commonly used among adolescents and young adults. Botany and Appearance According to Bloomquist (1971) and Doorenbos...reduces salivation, increases the heart rate, respiration, pulse rate, and systolic blood pressure, and may increase appetite...
...defined by the Trinity Peninsula and Botany Bay Groups; the Target Hill Province...in the Median Tectonic Zone. Intense pulses of adakitic plutonism that overlapped...This coincided with the Early Cretaceous pulse of large-scale extension in the Central...
...historically--but in the regions single long pulse of population growth and decline." From...New Look at an Old Problem. Economic Botany 54 (1): 7-42. Johannessen, C...Maize Continues in Guatemala. Economic Botany 36 (1): 84-99. Kahn, E. J...
...represented was, like homeopathy and medical botany, no more nor less than a "shadow of...of . . . the wet sheets action on the pulse and the respiration in health". Johnson...applying the wet sheet he could induce the pulse of a healthy man, who had just taken...in a wet sheet might have lain. Their pulses fell by an average of 27.7 beats per...
...remarkable. Every reader who still has a pulse should feel it quicken at the prospect of opening its pages. But not many pulses stir. These days the poem barely clings...is more than respectable. So is his botany. His sensibility is earthy and repeatedly...Should you weary of ornithology and botany, Tolson will entertain you with a variety...
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magazine articles on: Pulse in Botany  - 4 results

 
 
...texture petrifies: first it contracts into a high raw pulse eked out by piccolos, piano, and harp; then it fans...to do with Artaud. It takes its title-metaphor from botany (Rush-beds), and Xenakiss note speaks of sieves...
...Japanese continent in Pulse (01), Kurosawas most...prefigure the buried sun on Pulses blackened horizon, just...prefigures the occupants of Pulses "forbidden rooms...films so concerned with botany, forestry, and the...Forbes in 1964. 2001 Pulse (Kairo) Title translates...
...nature. This human fear of all that is not us is the electric pulse of Alexis Rockmans paintings, the seductive bass line of his...natures hierarchies and relationships. Obsessed with zoology and botany from childhood, he grounds his extrapolations in science and...
...bloomer) she wrote. I see, wrote Bradley. You? Studied botany. Now botanist. As soon as she read this, Samantha stomped...hand towel and a bottle of seltzer, Samantha was gone. His pulse quickened. He scanned the room as best he could, but she was...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Pulse in Botany  - 6 results

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PULSE , in botany in botany, common name for members of the Fabaceae...mesquite of the American Southwest. The Pulses and Their Uses Economically, the family...left to decay after harvesting. The pulse family also provides gums and resins...
POD , in botany or legume, dehiscent fruit of a member of the family Leguminosae ( pulse family). At maturity the pod splits along its two seams and releases the enclosed seeds...
LOCUST , in botany in botany, any species of the genus Robinia, deciduous trees or shrubs of the family Leguminosae ( pulse family) native to the United States and Mexico. The locusts have...
MIMOSA , in botany mimo s , any tree, shrub, or herb of the genus Mimosa of the family Leguminosae ( pulse family), chiefly tropical plants. They usually have feathery foliage and rounded clusters of fragrant pinkish flowers atop the...
MESQUITE , in botany misket , mes ket, any plant of the genus Prosopis, leguminous spiny trees or shrubs of the family Leguminosae ( pulse family), native to tropical and subtropical regions. The seed pods of P. juliflora, a common mesquite...
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