lehtoputki
Lehtoputki is a term from Finnish botanical terminology used to describe the leaf’s vascular tissue—the network that transports water, minerals, and organic nutrients through the leaf. The name translates roughly to "leaf tube." In most leaves the lehtoputki consists of vascular bundles aligned along the leaf axis, typically forming a central midrib with branching veins. In dicot leaves the venation is reticulate, while monocots often show parallel venation. Each vascular bundle contains xylem toward the upper side and phloem toward the lower side, sometimes with surrounding supportive tissue.
The primary functions are to conduct water and minerals from the stem via the xylem and to
Variation in the lehtoputki affects photosynthetic efficiency, drought tolerance, and leaf stiffness. In Finnish botanical literature