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1.
Anatomical observations were made on 1-, 2-, and 3-yr-old plants of Yucca whipplei Torr, ssp. percursa Haines grown from seed collected from a single parent in Refugio Canyon, Santa Barbara, California. The primary body of the vegetative stem consists of cortex and central cylinder with a central pith. Parenchyma cells in the ground tissue are arranged in anticlinal cell files continuous from beneath the leaf bases, through the cortex and central cylinder to the pith. Individual vascular bundles in the primary body have a collateral arrangement of xylem and phloem. The parenchyma cells of the ground tissue of the secondary body are also arranged in files continuous with those of the primary parenchyma. Secondary vascular bundles have an amphivasal arrangement and an undulating path with frequent anastomoses. Primary and secondary vascular bundles are longitudinally continuous. The primary thickening meristem (PTM) is longitudinally continuous with the secondary thickening meristem (STM). Axillary buds initiated during primary growth were observed in the leaf axils. The STM becomes more active prior to and during root initiation. Layers of secondary vascular bundles are associated with root formation.  相似文献   

2.
Lotus fibers are the isolated helical secondary cell wall thickenings from tracheary elements of lotus (Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn) petioles. In this study the anatomical characteristics of lotus petioles and microstructures of tracheary elements were studied using light microscopy (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results show that vascular bundles of lotus petioles are scattered throughout ground tissue. Their tracheary elements are of various sizes and there are several patterns of secondary wall thickening present. However, only secondary thickening in a ribbon-like helical pattern can be drawn out from the petiole to form lotus fibers for subsequent utilization. Study of the microstructure of the tracheary elements reveals that there are two pit structures present in the end walls in addition to pits with intact pit membranes: those with porose or web-like remnants pit membrane and those that lack pit membranes. This is an indication of the transitional stage between tracheids and vessel elements. This study provides supportive evidence that lotus fibers are found in both helically thickened tracheids and helically thickened primitive vessels.  相似文献   

3.
The phloem of most fossil plants, including that of Sphenophyllum, is very poorly known. Sphenophyllum was a relatively small type of fossil arthrophyte with jointed stems bearing whorls of leaves ranging in form from wedge or fan-shaped to bifid, to linear. The aerial stem systems of the plant exhibited determinate growth involving progressive reduction in the dimensions of the stem primary bodies, fewer leaves per whorl, and smaller and simpler leaves distally. The primary phloem occurs in three areas alternating in position with the arms of the triarch centrally placed primary xylem. Cells of the primary phloem, presumably sieve elements, are axially elongate with horizontal to slightly tapered end walls. In larger stems with abundant secondary xylem and secondary cortex or periderm, a zone of secondary phloem occurs whose structure varies in the three areas opposite the arms of the primary xylem, as opposed to the three areas lying opposite the concave sides of the primary xylem. The axial system of the secondary phloem consists of vertical series of sieve elements with horizontal end walls. In the areas opposite the protoxylem the parenchyma is present as a prominent ray system showing dilation peripherally. Sieve elements in the areas opposite the protoxylem arms have relatively small diameters. In the areas between the protoxylem poles the secondary phloem sieve elements have large diameters and are less obviously in radial files, while the parenchyma resembles that of the secondary xylem in these areas in that it consists of strands of cells extending both radially and tangentially. An actively meristematic vascular cambium has not been found, indicating that this layer changed histologically after the cessation of growth in the determinate aerial stem systems and was replaced by a post-meristematic parenchyma sheath made up of axially elongate parenchyma lacking cells indicative of being either fusiform or ray initials. A phellogen arose early in development in a tissue believed to represent pericycle and produced tissue comparable to phellem externally. Normally, derivatives of the phellogen underwent one division prior to the maturation of the cells. Concentric bands of cells with dark contents apparently represent secretory tissue in the periderm and cell arrangements indicate that a single persistent phellogen was present. Sphenophyllum is compared with other arthrophytes as to phloem structure and is at present the best documented example of a plant with a functionally bifacial vascular cambium in any exclusively non-seed group of vascular plants.  相似文献   

4.
Anomalous secondary thickening occurs in the main axis of Bougainvillea spectabilis as a result of a primary thickening meristem which differentiates in pericycle. The primary thickening meristem first appears in the base of the primary root about 6 days after germination and differentiates acropetally as the root elongates. It begins differentiating from the base of the hypocotyl toward the shoot apex about 33 days after germination. The primary thickening meristem is first observable at the base of the first internode about 60 days after germination. It then becomes a cylinder in the main axis of the seedling. No stelar cambial cylinder forms in the primary root, hypocotyl, or stem because vascular cambium differentiation occurs neither in the pericycle opposite xylem points in the primary root nor in interfascicular parenchyma in the hypocotyl or stem. The primary vascular system of the stem appears anomalous because an inner and an outer ring of vascular bundles differentiate in the stele. Bundles of the inner ring anastomose in internodes, whereas those of the outer ring do not. Desmogen strands each of which is composed of phloem, xylem with both tracheids and vessels, and a desmogic cambium, differentiate from prodesmogen strands in conjunctive tissue. The parenchymatous cells surrounding desmogen strands then differentiate into elongated simple-pitted fibers and thick-walled fusiform cells that are about the same length as the primary thickening meristem initials.  相似文献   

5.
Catasetinae consist of five genera of pseudobulbous Orchidaceae of the Neotropics. Anatomy is characterized by sunken, three-celled foliar hairs, mostly tetracytic stomatal apparatuses, superficial stomata, homogeneous mesophyll, foliar fibre bundles, collateral vascular bundles in a single row, xylem and phloem sclerenchyma associated with vascular bundles in leaves, conical, and rough-surfaced silica bodies adjacent to vascular bundle sclerenchyma; epidermal cells of pseudobulbs with heavily thickened outer walls, pseudobulb ground tissue of assimilatory and water-storage cells, scattered vascular bundles in pseudobulbs, and sclerenchyma and stegmata associated only with phloem of pseudobulbs; roots with thin-walled velamen cells and tenuous spirals of cell wall material, distinctive epivelamen cells, thin-walled exodermal cells and vascular tissue embedded in parenchyma. Except for mucilaginous idioblasts that occur in Mormodes and Cycnoches , there are few outstanding anatomical differences among the five genera. Thus, there are few anatomical characteristics of phylogenetic value. The monophyly of Catasetinae is supported by the presence of sunken foliar hairs. Our results support a close relationship between Clowesia and Catasetum , and between Mormodes and Cycnoches. Among the outgroups Pteroglossaspis is especially distinctive.  相似文献   

6.
Comparative vegetative anatomy and systematics of Vanilla (Orchidaceae)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Vanilla is a pantropical genus of green-stemmed vines bearing clasping (aerial) and absorbing (terrestrial) roots. Most vanillas bear normal, thick foliage leaves; others produce fugacious bracts. Seventeen species, including both types were studied. Foliage leaves of Vanilla are glabrous, have abaxial, tetracytic stomatal apparatuses, and a homogeneous mesophyll. Species may or may not have a uniseriate hypodermis. Crystals occur in the foliar epidermises of some species, but all species have crystalliferous idioblasts with raphides in the mesophyll. Vascular bundles in leaves are collateral and occur in a single series alternating large and small. Sclerenchyma may or may not be associated with the vascular bundles. Scale leaves may be crescent or C-shaped and usually have abaxial stomatal apparatuses. A hypodermis may or may not be present; the mesophyll contains raphide bundles in idioblasts. Vascular bundles are collateral and occur in a single row sometimes aligned close to the adaxial surface. They may or may not be associated with sclerenchyma. Stems of leafy vanillas show a sclerenchyma band separating cortex from ground tissue; stems of leafless vanillas do not show a sclerenchyma band. Ground tissue of the stem may consist solely of assimilatory cells or mixed assimilatory and water-storage cells. In some species centrally located assimilatory cells are surrounded by layers of water-storage cells. A uniseriate hypodermis is present in all stems. Sclerenchyma may completely surround the scattered collateral vascular bundles, occur only on the phloem side, or be absent. Both aerial and terrestrial roots are notable for their uniseriate velamen the cell walls of which may be unmarked or ornamented with anticlinal strips. Exodermis is uniseriate; the cells vary from barely thickened to strongly thickened. Only the outer and radial walls are thickened. Cortical cells of aerial roots generally have chloroplasts that are lacking from the same tissue of terrestrial roots. Raphide bundles occur in thin-walled cortical idioblasts. Endodermis and pericycle are uniseriate; pericycle cells are all ?-thickened opposite the phloem. Cells of the endodermis are either ?- or ∪-thickened opposite the phloem. Vascular tissue may be embedded in thin- or thick-walled sclerenchyma or in parenchyma. Metaxylem cells are always wider in terrestrial than in aerial roots of the same species. Pith cells are generally parenchymatous but sclerotic in a few species.  相似文献   

7.
盾叶薯蓣根状茎的发育解剖学和组织化学研究   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
盾叶薯蓣根状茎顶端的生长点由鳞片包被,其衍生细胞分化为原表皮、基本分生组织和散生的原形成层束,以后分化为表皮、基本组织和散生的维管束构成的初生结构。根状茎顶端下方的原表皮内存在初生增厚分生组织,其细胞不断向内分裂和其衍生细胞的体积增大使根状茎能够迅速增粗。分化完成的根状茎主要由周皮、基本组织和散生的维管束构成。周皮由木栓层、木栓形成层和栓内层组成;基本组织由薄壁细胞组成;维管束属于有限维管束。薯蓣皂甙主要存在于基本组织薄壁细胞中。原分生组织和原形成层不含薯蓣皂甙,维管束的木质部和韧皮部中的韧皮纤维也无薯蓣皂甙的分布,韧皮部的生活细胞和维管束鞘细胞有薯蓣皂甙的积累。近顶端的基本分生组织细胞内薯蓣皂甙不形成液滴,随着细胞分裂逐渐停止,细胞内开始形成含薯蓣皂甙的液滴,反映皂甙是在成熟细胞内积累。其中,有小型维管束分布的基本组织中薯蓣皂甙的积累与分布最丰富,两年生根状茎中薯蓣皂甙的含量比一年生的高。  相似文献   

8.
濒危植物海南风吹楠营养器官解剖结构特征   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
该研究采用石蜡切片和光学显微技术,对海南风吹楠营养器官的解剖结构及其对环境的适应性进行了探讨。结果表明:海南风吹楠为典型异面叶,叶片中脉发达,中部分化出髓,上表皮外侧具角质层,内侧具1层内皮层,下表皮外侧无角质层,有气孔器分布,气孔器为双环型,略下陷;栅栏组织3~4层细胞,海绵组织4~6层细胞。茎的初生结构中表皮轻微角质化,维管束为外韧型,8~10个初生维管束围绕髓排列为1轮;茎的次生结构中,表皮外部角质层加厚,维管柱紧密排列连成环状,次生韧皮部和次生木质部发达,形成层细胞3~5层。根的初生结构中表皮细胞外壁加厚,外皮层细胞体积大,形状不规则,内侧具1层形成层,内皮层具凯氏带,初生木质部为多原型,呈辐射状排列。根的次生结构中木栓层细胞5~6层,木栓层内侧具1层木栓形成层,栓内层细胞3层。海南风吹楠营养器官具有一定耐阴和耐旱结构特征,同时与其生活的热带雨林沟谷中高温荫湿的环境相适应。  相似文献   

9.
Littlefield , Larry J., and Roy D. Wilcoxson . (U. Minnesota, St. Paul.) Studies of necrotic lesions in corn stalks . Amer. Jour. Bot. 49(10): 1072–1078. Illus. 1962.—In 3-day-old necrotic lesions in corn stalks caused by Fusarium graminearum, ground parenchyma cells were discolored and small amounts of a dark substance were present in the cells. The walls of phloem cells were also slightly discolored and a small amount of dark substance was present in the xylem cells. In older lesions the discoloration of parenchyma and phloem cells was more intense; many of the cells contained occluding substances; many phloem protoplasts collapsed, and xylem cells were partially to completely occluded. The occluding substance filling the cells appeared to be translocated from the lesion into the vessel elements extending beyond the lesion so that the bundles appeared as long, dark streaks in the stalk. The occluding substance in xylem, but not in phloem or parenchyma, stained with ruthenium red, a result indicating presence of pectin. Pectinase, however, did not remove the occluding substance. The pectinase dissolved the parenchyma cells in healthy tissues but not in the necrotic lesions. Necrosis in naturally infected plants began as small lesions, but the parenchyma cells quickly dissolved leaving the vascular bundles free of ground parenchyma. No occlusions were found in the central vascular system; a few xylem cells in the peripheral vascular system were occluded with the same substance observed in artificially inoculated plants. Phloem was entirely destroyed by the pathogen. The necrosis prevented upward movement of dye solution in the stalk, but did not measurably affect transpiration, probably because the lesions were not large. Yield was reduced in plants when lesions involved more than 50% of the tissue in inoculated internodes. Smaller lesions had no effect on yield.  相似文献   

10.
The leaf of Pyrossia longifolia (Burm.) Morton, an epiphytic fern known to exhibit CAM, was examined by light and electron microscopy. The relatively thick leaf contains a single-layered epidermis, “water-storage” tissue, and a reticulate vascular system embedded in mesophyll tissue not differentiated into palisade and spongy layers. Mesophyll is composed of large, slightly elongate cells each with a thin, parietal layer of cytoplasm and a large central vacuole. The chloroplast-microbody ratio in mesophyll cells indicates that Pyrossia may be a high photorespirer and thus similar in that sense to C3 plants. Mesophyll is separated from the vascular tissue by a tightly-arranged layer of endodermal cells with Casparian strips. The inner layer of mesophyll cells and the endodermal cells lack suberin lamellae. The collateral veins contain sieve elements, tracheary elements, pericycle and vascular parenchyma cells, the latter conspicuously larger than the sieve elements. The vascular parenchyma is the only cell type in the leaf which contains plastids with a peripheral reticulum. The parenchymatic elements of the leaf are connected by plasmodesmata, all of which lack neck constrictions and sphincters, or sphincter-like structures. The connections between sieve elements and adjacent parenchymatic elements are pore-plasmodesmata characterized by prominent wall thickenings on the parenchymatic-element side of the wall. The distribution and relative frequencies of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the leaf indicate photoassimilates may move either symplastically or by a combination of symplast and apoplast from the mesophyll to the site of phloem loading in the veins.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The structure of the phloem was studied in stem and leaf ofArtemisia afra Jacq., with particular attention being given to the sieve element walls. Both primary and secondary sieve elements of stem and midvein have nacreous walls, which persist in mature cells. Histochemical tests indicated that the sieve element wall layers contained some pectin. Sieve element wall layers lack lignin. Sieve elements of the minor veins (secondary and tertiary veins) lack nacreous thickening, although their walls may be relatively thick. These walls and those of contiguous transfer cells are rich in pectic substances. Transfer cell wall ingrowths are more highly developed in tertiary than in secondary veins.  相似文献   

12.
Phloem histology in the petioles of two genera of Pennsylvanian ferns is detailed from coal balls collected at various localities in North America. Both Ankyropteris and Anachoropteris have primary phloem that completely surrounds the central xylem trace and is separated from it by a parenchymatous sheath. Ankyropteris contains very narrow (about 13.5 μm diam) sieve elements and a few strands of phloem parenchyma. End walls are either horizontal or slightly oblique and sieve areas as well as scattered individual pores have been observed. Anachoropteris phloem contains two different sizes of sieve elements. Small sieve elements that surround the C-shaped trace are similar to those seen in Ankyropteris. Larger elements (approximately 50–120 μm in diam) are present only within the C-shaped trace, and are elongate (up to 2.5 mm) with very oblique end walls. Sieve areas on these large cells are conspicuous, 5–8.5 μm in diam and aggregated into groups. The cell wall within each sieve area appears to be composed of criss-crossed fibrillar material. Phloem anatomy in these two ferns is compared to that previously described in other Carboniferous vascular cryptogams, as well as that known from extant plants.  相似文献   

13.
Using data obtained through anatomy and morphology, we used cladistics to examine the monophyly of Senghas's proposed classification of Maxillaria cushion plants and his placement of Mormolyca ringens. Trignidium obtusum was chosen as the outgroup. Leaves have multicellular hairs sunken in crypts, primarily anomocytic or primarily tetracytic stomatal apparatuses, homogeneous mesophyll, and scattered fibre bundles. Three types of adaxial hypodermis were observed: (1) water-storage cells, (2) fibre bundles scattered among water-storage cells, and (3) fibre bundles scattered among chlorenchymatous cells. Abaxial hypodermis of fibre bundles occurs in several Maxillaria species and in Trigonidium obtusum. At the midvein of the leaf, adaxial mesophyll cells of most species are anticlinally extended and empty, and the abaxial mesophyll is usually collenchymatous. Vascular bundles are collateral and usually in a single series. Pseudobulb epidermal cell walls are thin, or outer walls are thickened. Ground tissue consists of water-storage and assimilatory cells with vascular bundles and associated lacunae scattered throughout. Roots are velamentous and exodermal cell walls are usually n-thickened with tenuous bands of scalarifom thickenings on longitudinal walls. Tilosomes may be plaited, baculate, or spongy. Endodermal cell walls are usually U-thickened and pericycle cell walls are usually O-thickened opposite phloem sectors. Stegmata line the periphery of the thickened pericycle cells opposite phloem sectors in M. picta. Pith may be parenchymatous or sclerenchymatous. According to our phylogenetic analysis, Mormolyca ringens is consistently nested within the cladistic structure of Maxillaria. Therefore, Maxillaria likely is paraphyletic if Mormolyca ringens is recognized as generically distinct. It appears that Senghas's subgroup divisions of the unifoliate pseudobulbous maxillarias may also be artificial.  相似文献   

14.
Infection of Rosa woodsii by some members of the order Hymenoptera results in neoplasmic outgrowths on the leaves. One type of outgrowth produces a spherical swelling (leaf gall) while the other has extensive hair-like proliferations (hairy gall). The anatomy and ultrastructure of these galls were examined by light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The leaf gall cells were considerably larger than normal cells, lacked well-developed chloroplasts and were loosely arranged with prominent intercellular spaces. Vascular bundles were scattered throughout the gall tissue. The upper three cell layers of the leaf gall tissue resembles a periderm, having many suberin lamellae. The suberin lamellae were often traversed by pores which may represent incomplete plasmodesmata. Phenolic compounds were commonly seen both in the normal and gall cells. A layer of internal cells of the hairy galls have remarkably thickened cell walls, presumably due to the deposition of cellulosic substances. Unlike leaf galls, the epidermal cells of the hairy galls were not heavily cuticularized and no periderm was found. The hair-like outgrowths present on the outer surface of these galls had a central vascular bundle. The epidermis of the outgrowths also had thickened cell walls, and trichomes occurred on the outer surface. The structural modifications brought about by the insect invasion in these two galls are compared and their roles in gall formation are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
骆驼蓬营养器官的旱生结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
 骆驼蓬是生长在荒漠或盐碱地区的旱生植物,具有显著的旱生结构特征。主根粗壮,其中柱周围产生2或3轮呈同心环状排列的异常维管束。这种异常结构对旱生植物具有重要的生态学意义。茎肉质,其皮层、韧皮部,尤其是髓内具有发达的贮水薄壁组织细胞。叶片肉质,光滑无毛。其表皮细胞的外切向壁有较厚的角质层,表面具皱纹状突起。气孔器与表皮细胞平齐,面积较大,而密度较小。栅栏组织发达,为环栅型,包围着发达的贮水组织。叶脉维管束不发达。其叶表面积与体积之比远比中生植物小。根据以上营养器官形态结构特征,可以认为骆驼蓬是典型的多浆汁旱生植物。  相似文献   

16.
In stems of Ricinus communis and leaves of Kalanchoë daigremontiana, rapidly growing tumors were induced by the wild type strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58 and A281 (p35 Sgusint). Transformed cells, monitored by histochemical β-glucuronidase (GUS) staining, showed GUS activity in K. daigremontiana tumors in up to 100% of the tissue. In R. communis tumors, however, GUS activity was patchy, probably due to interference in gus expression from highly active phenolic compounds. Functionality of the sieve elements within the vascular bundles of the tumor and their connection with host stem bundles were shown by applying fluorescein to source leaves as a tracer of phloem-mobile solutes. The transport pathway within the tumor and the mechanism of phloem unloading were investigated by iontophoretic injection of Lucifer yellow CH into sieve tubes. Apparent symplastic solute unloading into parenchyma cells was confirmed by localizing common primary pit fields by staining them with aniline blue. In spite of the evidence for symplastic unloading, the activity of acid cell wall invertase (CWI) was about tenfold higher in tumor than in the adjacent host stem tissue. These results indicate primary independence of phloem unloading of CWI in tumors.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of the secondary pulvinus of Robinia pseudoacacia has been examined together with ultrastructural features of motor cells both in open and closed pulvini, to identify ultrastructural changes associated with leaflet movement. Pulvini have a central vascular core bordered by thick-walled collenchyma cells, which in turn are surrounded by several layers of cortical parenchyma cells. Cortical motor cells exhibit ultrastructural features similar to those reported in homologous cells of other pulvini. The vacuolar compartment contains two kinds of vacuoles: nontannin vacuoles, which change both in number and size during leaflet movement, and tannin vacuoles, which may act as an ion reservoir. No differences in wall thickness were found between flexor and extensor motor cells. Thick walls of collenchyma cells show numerous pits with plasmodesmata through which the phloem parenchyma cells and the inner cortical motor cells are connected. Tannin vacuoles and calcium oxalate crystals are common inclusions of phloem parenchyma cells. The tissue arrangement and the occurrence of pits with plasmodesmata in the central cylinder cells provide evidence of symplastic continuity through the central cylinder between the extensor and flexor regions of the motor organs. The greater amplitude of Robinia leaflet movements may be related to the extension of motor regions, the scarcity of lignification in the central vascular core, and the thin flexor walls.  相似文献   

18.
The vascular system in the stems of Nymphaea odorata and N. mexicana subgenus Castalia, and N. blanda subgenus Hydrocallis consists of continuing axial stem bundles with eight being the usual number. The stem bundles are concentric and xylem maturation is mesarch. Xylem elements consist of tracheids with spirally or weakly reticulated secondary wall thickenings. The phloem is made up of companion cells and short sieve tube members with simple sieve plates that are nearly transverse. At the node each leaf is supplied with two lateral leaf traces and a median leaf trace. A root trace is also present and supplies a series of adventitious roots borne on the leaf base. Flowers and vegetative buds develop directly from the apical meristem and occupy leaf sites in a single genetic spiral. Each flower or vegetative bud is related to a leaf through specific spatial and vascular association. The related leaf is separated from the related flower by three members of the genetic spiral and occupies an adjacent orthostichy. Vascular tissue for the related flower arises from the inner surfaces of the four stem bundles supplying leaf traces to the related leaf and extends through the pith to the flower or vegetative bud via a peduncle fusion bundle. The vascular system organization in the investigated species of Castalia and Hydrocallis is not typically monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous, nor can it be considered transitional between them. The ontogeny of the vascular system is similar to typical dicotyledons and the investigated species of Nymphaea can, therefore, be considered to represent highly specialized and modified dicotyledons.  相似文献   

19.
Alfalfa Stem Tissues: Cell-wall Development and Lignification   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Alfalfa stems contain a variety of tissues with different patternsof cell-wall development. Development of alfalfa cell wallswas investigated after histochemical staining and with polarizedlight using light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy.Samples of the seventh internode, from the base of stems grownon cut stems, were harvested at five defined stages of developmentfrom early internode elongation through to late maturity. Internodeseven was elongating up to the third sample harvest and internodediameter increased throughout the entire sampling period. Chlorenchyma,cambium, secondary phloem, primary xylem parenchyma and pithparenchyma stem tissues all had thin primary cell walls. Pithparenchyma underwent a small amount of cell-wall thickeningand lignification during maturation. Collenchyma and primaryphloem tissues developed partially thickened primary walls.In contrast to a recent report, the formation of a ring shaped,lignified portion of the primary wall in a number of cells inthe exterior part of the primary phloem was found to precedethe deposition of a thick, non-lignified secondary wall whichwas degradable by rumen microbes. In numerous xylem fibres fromthe fourth harvest date onwards, an additional highly degradablesecondary wall layer was deposited against a previously depositedlignified and undegradable secondary wall. The pattern of lignificationobserved in alfalfa stem tissues suggests that polymerizationof monolignols by peroxidases at the luminal border of the primarycell wall creates an impermeable zone which restricts lignificationof the middle lamella region of tissues with thick primary walls.Copyright1998 Annals of Botany Company Alfalfa,Medicago sativaL., stem tissue, cell wall, development, lignification, degradation.  相似文献   

20.
A study was made of the ontogeny of the achene of Polygonum pensylvanicum L. from fertilization to maturity. The proembryo is classified as the Polygonum Variation, Asterad Type. Cotyledons are initiated three days after anthesis, and by the fifth day procambium is present in the embryo axis. At approximately seven days after anthesis, the embryo begins to curve and occupy a marginal position in the ovary. By ten days the first foliage leaf primordium is initiated at the stem apex of the embryo. At maturity the embryo consists of two cotyledons, a plumule composed of the stem apex and one leaf primordium, and a hypocotyl with a well-developed radicle. Endosperm nuclei begin to divide before the first division of the zygote. Cell wall formation begins in the endosperm at the micropylar end of the embryo sac and proceeds toward the chalazal region. By the fifth day the endosperm is completely cellular, except for a basal projection; and a peripheral meristem has been established. At approximately ten days the peripheral meristem ceases periclinal cell division and becomes the aleurone. At the time of fertilization the ovary wall has its full complement of cell layers. The walls of the outermost cells elongate and become convoluted. Subsequent thickening and lignification of these cell walls produce the hard epicarp of the mature achene.  相似文献   

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