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Silica and Ash in Native Plants of the Central and Southeastern Regions of the United States
Authors:LANNING, F. C.   ELEUTERIUS, L. N.
Affiliation:* Department of Chemistry, Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA
"{dagger}" Botany Section, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory Ocean Springs, Mississippi 39564, USA
Abstract:Ash and silica contents and depositional patterns were determinedfor different tissues of 11 plants growing in the southeasternand central parts of the USA. Silica content was high in theleaves, sheaths and inflorescences of the grasses studied, especiallyso in the inflorescence of the C3 grass, Stipa comata Trise.and Rupr. The ash content was especially high in leaves of Polymniauvedalia L., which are also high in calcium. Calcium depositionwas largely in trichomes and in veins of the leaf. Energy-dispersiveX-ray analysis showed that the distribution of the element siliconis closely related to certain epidermal structures such as ridges,cell walls, rows of irregularly-shaped structures lying lenghthwisealong the leaf, dumb-bell shaped structures and trichomes. Thesestructures also correspond to the phytoliths left behind afterdecay of the plant. The C3 grasses differed from the C4 in thatthey showed oval structures and produced correspondingly ovalphytoliths. Silicified trichomes (particularly in the C3 grasses)and long, narrow, silica fibres were common in the inflorescencesof the grasses studied. These sharp particles could be irritatingto oesophageal and other tissues. Similar fibres in other grasseshave been implicated in certain cancers. High silicificationof the inflorescence structures might afford protection forthe seed, as reported for other grasses. C3 and C4 grasses, silica and ash content, scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray analysis, silicon distribution, spectra of elements in plants, trichomes, silica fibres, phytoliths
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