Morphology of flowering plants is an important topic in NEET Biology. It deals with the external structure of plants, especially the vegetative and reproductive parts. Knowledge of plant morphology is essential to understand adaptations, reproduction, and classification.
The study includes root, stem, leaf, flower, inflorescence, fruit, and seed morphology. NEET often asks identification, types, and formulas associated with these structures.
► Click “Download Now” next to your subject to access the free PDF.
♦ The Living World ⇒ Download Now
♦ Biological Classification ⇒ Download Now
♦ Plant Kingdom ⇒ Download Now
♦ Animal kingdom ⇒ Download Now
♦ Morphology of Flowering Plants ⇒ Download Now
♦ Anatomy of Flowerng Plants ⇒ Download Now
♦ Structural Organisation in Animals ⇒ Download Now
♦ Cell-The Unit of Life ⇒ Download Now
♦ Cell Cycle and Cell Division ⇒ Download Now
♦ Photosynthesis in Higher Plants ⇒ Download Now
♦ Respiration in Plants ⇒ Download Now
♦ Plant, Growth and Development ⇒ Download Now
♦ Sexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants ⇒ Download Now
♦ Human Reproduction ⇒ Download Now
♦ Reproductive Health ⇒ Download Now
♦ Principles of Inheritance and Variation ⇒ Download Now
♦ Molecular Basis of Inheritance ⇒ Download Now
♦ Human Health and Diseases ⇒ Download Now
♦ Strategies for Enhancement in Food Production ⇒ Download Now
♦ Microbes in Human Welfare ⇒ Download Now
♦ Biotechnology - Principles and Processes ⇒ Download Now
♦ Biotechnology and its Application⇒ Download Now
♦ Organisms and Populations ⇒ Download Now
♦ Ecosystem ⇒ Download Now
♦ Biodiversity and its Conservation ⇒ Download Now
♦ Environmental Issues ⇒ Download Now
♦ Body Fluid and Circulation ⇒ Download Now
♦ Excretory Products and Their Elimination ⇒ Download Now
♦ Locomotion and Movement ⇒ Download Now
♦ Neural Control and Coordination ⇒ Download Now
♦ Chemical Coordination and Intergration ⇒ Download Now
♦ Breathing and Exchange of Gases ⇒ Download Now
Definition:
The root is the usually underground, non-green part of a plant that anchors it and absorbs water and minerals.
Types of Roots:
Tap Root: Single main root with lateral branches.
Example: Carrot, Radish, Mango
Fibrous Root: Numerous roots arising from base of stem.
Example: Wheat, Grass
Special Roots (NEET Tips):
Aerial roots: Support (Ficus), Respiration (Rhizophora)
Adventitious roots: Arise from stem (Monstera)
Storage roots: Store food (Sweet potato)
NEET Formula / Points:
Tap root → Dicots, Fibrous root → Monocots
Root hairs → Increase surface area for absorption
Definition:
The stem is the ascending axis that bears leaves, flowers, and fruits and helps in transport of water and nutrients.
Types of Stems:
Herbaceous: Soft, green (Sunflower)
Woody: Hard and lignified (Mango)
Climbing / Tendril-bearing: (Cucurbita)
Modified stems: Rhizome (Ginger), Stolon (Strawberry), Bulb (Onion), Corm (Colocasia)
NEET Tips:
Modified stems → Important for vegetative propagation
Stem formula: Transport → Xylem (water) + Phloem (food)
Definition:
Leaves are lateral, green appendages of stem that perform photosynthesis.
Parts of Leaf:
Petiole: Stalk
Lamina / Blade: Expanded green part
Veins / Venation: Arrangement of vascular bundles
Types of Leaves:
Simple: Single blade (Rose, Mango)
Compound: Blade divided into leaflets
Pinnate: Leaflets on rachis (Neem)
Palmate: Leaflets arise from a single point (Silk cotton)
Leaf Formula (NEET):
Leaf = Lamina + Petiole + Stipules (if present)
Venation: Reticulate → Dicots, Parallel → Monocots
Special Leaves:
Spines: Defense (Cactus)
Tendrils: Climbing (Pea)
Storage leaves: Onion, Aloe
Definition:
Flower is the reproductive shoot of angiosperms that bears male and/or female organs.
Parts of Flower:
Calyx: Sepals
Corolla: Petals
Androecium: Stamens (Male)
Gynoecium / Carpel: Pistil (Female)
Flower Types (NEET Important):
Complete flower: Has calyx, corolla, androecium, gynoecium (Hibiscus)
Incomplete flower: Lacks one or more parts (Maize → male/female separate)
Unisexual: Male or female only (Papaya)
Bisexual / Hermaphrodite: Both male & female (Rose)
Symmetry:
Actinomorphic: Radial symmetry (Hibiscus)
Zygomorphic: Bilateral symmetry (Pea)
Inflorescence (NEET Tips):
Racemose: Main axis continues growth (Mustard)
Cymose: Main axis ends in flower (Calotropis)
Definition:
Fruit is the mature ovary containing seeds.
Types of Fruits:
Simple: From single ovary (Mango, Guava)
Aggregate: From many carpels of one flower (Strawberry, Raspberry)
Multiple: From inflorescence (Pineapple)
NEET Tips:
Fruit = Ovary + Seed
Seed dispersal mechanisms → Wind, Water, Animals (high-yield NEET topic)
Definition:
Seed is a mature ovule containing an embryo.
Parts of Seed:
Seed coat (Testa + Tegmen)
Embryo: Radicle, Plumule, Cotyledons
Endosperm: Food storage tissue
NEET Points:
Monocot seed: One cotyledon (Maize)
Dicot seed: Two cotyledons (Gram)
Embryo formula: Radicle + Plumule + Cotyledons
Roots: Tap → Dicots, Fibrous → Monocots
Leaves: Reticulate venation → Dicots, Parallel → Monocots
Flower Parts Formula: Flower = Calyx + Corolla + Androecium + Gynoecium
Inflorescence Formula: Racemose / Cymose
Fruit Formula: Fruit = Ovary + Seed
Seed Formula: Seed = Embryo + Endosperm + Seed coat
Mnemonic for Flower Parts:
“Cute Cats Always Groom” → Calyx, Corolla, Androecium, Gynoecium
Draw diagrams for roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and seeds for better retention.
Memorize types of leaves, roots, flowers, inflorescence, and fruits with examples.
Focus on monocot vs dicot differences – very high-yield for NEET MCQs.
Learn special structures: Tendrils, Spines, Aerial roots, Storage organs.
Morphology of flowering plants is a high-scoring topic in NEET Biology. Understanding roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits, and seeds with their formulas and examples is crucial.
With this StudentBro.in guide, students can efficiently revise plant morphology, formulas, and key NEET points, saving time and improving accuracy in exams.
Remember: Linking structure, function, and examples is the key to mastering Morphology of Flowering Plants for NEET.