PHYLLOTAXIS AND VASCULAR ORGANIZATION OF THE CARPELS IN MICHELIA FUSCATA |
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Authors: | Shirley C. Tucker |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 14, Minnesota |
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Abstract: | Tucker , Shirley C. (U. Minnesota, Minneapolis.) Phyllotaxis and vascular organization of the carpels in Michelia fuscata. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(1): 60–71. Illus. 1961.—Phyllotaxis pattern and vascular organization are closely related in the floral receptacle of Michelia fuscata (Magnoliaceae). The carpels arise in a spiral or helix. They are initiated alternately along each of 7, 8 or 10 helical parastichies according to a complex repetitive sequence. The pattern of the dorsal carpellary trace fusions is orderly for each of the 10 flowers investigated. The dorsal carpellary traces in each parastichy diverge from the same vascular sympodium. Among flowers one finds differing numbers of parastichies, differing angles of divergence, and varying sequences of parastichies which reflect the order of carpel initiation. The angle of divergence, although consistent for any 1 parastichy in a flower, can vary greatly between parastichies. The nature and importance of the organizers which determine appendage position at the apical meristem are considered. Changes in apical size, configuration, and activity are shown to be related to phyllotaxis. |
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