phytomorph

English

Etymology

phyto- + -morph

Noun

phytomorph (plural phytomorphs)

  1. (rare) The representation of a plant in art.
    • 2018, Jules Janick, Arthur O. Tucker, Unraveling the Voynich Codex, Springer, →ISBN, page 144:
      The approach was to match proper names of identified phytomorphs with the names of plants in dialects of Nahuatl (Tucker and Talbert 2013).
  2. (rare, botany) A specific morphology of a phytolith.
    • 1995, Salvatore A. Engel-Di Mauro, A Phytolith Analysis of Buried Soils in the Young Loess Sequence of Hungary:
      Interpretational Criteria During the initial stages of counting, it became apparent that some of the phytomorphs observed do not conform to established classification schemes.
  3. (obsolete, paleontology) A hypothetical alga-like organism once thought to have had a symbiosis with some extinct fenestrid bryozoans, in an attempt to explain their unusual morphologies.
    • 1946, National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on a Treatise on Marine Ecology and Paleoecology, Report:
      Various features of the phytomorphs were illustrated, described, and discussed in some detail in the paper, and their similarity to various living algae were pointed out.
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