首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


STUDIES ON THE LEAF OF AMARANTHUS RETROFLEXUS (AMARANTHACEAE***): MORPHOLOGY AND ANATOMY
Authors:David G Fisher  Ray F Evert
Institution:Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706
Abstract:The leaf of Amaranthus retroflexus L. was examined with the light microscope to determine its vasculature and the spatial relationship of the vascular bundles to the mesophyll. Seven leaf traces enter the petiole at the node and form an arc that continues acropetally in the petiole as an anastomosing system of vascular bundles. Upon entering the lamina, the arc of bundles gradually closes and forms a ring of anastomosing bundles that constitutes the primary vein, or midvein, of the leaf. As the midvein progresses acropetally, branches of the bundles nearest the lamina diverge outward and continue as secondary veins toward the margin on either side of the lamina. Along its course the midvein undergoes a gradual reduction in number of bundles until only one remains as it approaches the leaf tip. Tertiary veins arise from the secondaries, and minor veins commonly arise from all orders of major veins, as well as from other minor veins. All of the major veins are associated with rib tissue, although the ends of the tertiaries may resemble minor veins, which are completely encircled by chlorenchymatic bundle sheaths and mesophyll cells that radiate out from the sheaths. A specialized minor vein, the fimbrial vein, occurs just inside the margin of the leaf. Most of the mesophyll cells—the so-called “Kranz mesophyll cells”—are in direct contact with the bundle sheaths, but some—the so-called “nonKranz mesophyll cells”—lack such contact. Non-Kranz mesophyll cells are especially prominent where they form a network of mostly horizontally oriented cells just above the lower epidermis. Guard cells of both the upper and lower epidermis are spatially associated with nonKranz mesophyll cells.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号