Compound Leaves (Palmate, Pinnate, Leaflet)
Compound vs. Simple Leaves
Leaves
can be compound or simple. Here’s the difference:
Drawing courtesy of Judy Mason
Compound
leaves are divided, made up of leaflets that are completely separate from each other.
On
the other hand, simple leaves have a single leaf surface.
Compound leaves
generally come in two patterns, palmate and pinnate.
This one is palmate. Palmate leaflets connect to a central
spot, like fingers to your palm.
California Buckeye – drawing © John Muir Laws
This one is pinnate. Pinnate leaflets
connect along both sides of the leaf stalk, like quills on a feather.
Black Walnut – drawing © John Muir Laws
Tricky
questions and answers
Is
this leaf simple or compound?
Cut Leaf Geranium – Photo © Keir Morse
There
are deep divisions in the leaf but the divisions don’t go all the way to the
central vein or leaf stalk, so it doesn’t divide into completely separate
leaflets. This is a simple leaf.
American Vetch – Photo © Keir Morse
Each leaf grows from a bud on the
stem. If we saw buds at the base of each
leaf surface above, then we’d be looking at simple leaves connecting to a
stem. However, since we see no buds
here, the whole thing is a single leaf, making it a compound leaf.
Examples
of Compound Leaves
Ferns
have pinnate compound leaves.
Coastal Wood Fern – drawing courtesy Linda Bae Miller
This lupine has palmate compound leaves.
Arizona Lupine – photo © Keir Morse
Poison Hemlock leaves are twice pinnate, because each
leaflet is divided into leaflets.
Poison Hemlock – drawing © John Muir Laws
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