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1.
InMazus pumilus, all the floral appendages are initiated in acropetal sequence in the second cell layer (except stamens) of the floral primordium by periclinal divisions. The actinomorphic calyx tube is formed due to zonal growth. The zygomorphy in corolla is evident from the inception of petal primordia which arise sequentially as independent units in order of one anterior, a pair of anterio-lateral followed by a pair of posterio-lateral. Later these primordia exhibit differential growth because of which zygomorphy becomes more pronounced. The upper corolla tube is formed by interprimordial growth and lower corolla tube by zonal growth. Stamens are initiated in the third layer of the floral apex. Unlike sepals and petals, in the development of stamens (4) underlying cells of corpus also contribute. Posterior stamen is absent. The stamens become epipetalous because of interprimordial and zonal growth in the common region below the bases of petals as well as stamens. The two carpel primordia arise as crescent shaped structures which become continuous due to interprimordial growth. The ovary is formed by a ring of zonal meristem. The style develops later between stigma and ovary because of intercalary growth. The residual apex grows vertically along with the ovary and forms the septum of the ovary. All the floral appendages exhibit similar pattern of histogenesis and early growth suggesting thereby the appendicular nature of these appendages.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The formation of capitulum inflorescence with two different types of floret is an interesting issue in floral biology and evolution. Here we studied the inflorescence, floral ontogeny and development of the everlasting herb, Xeranthemum squarrosum, using epi‐illumination microscopy. The small vegetative apex enlarged and produced involucral bracts with helical phyllotaxy, which subtended floret primordia in the innermost whorl. Initiation of floret primordia was followed by an acropetal sequence, except for pistillate peripheral florets. The origin of receptacular bracts was unusual, as they derived from the floral primordia rather than the receptacular surface. The order of whorl initiation in both disc and pistillate flowers included corolla, androecium and finally calyx, together with the gynoecium. The inception of sepals and stamens occurred in unidirectional order starting from the abaxial side, whereas petals incepted unidirectionally from the adaxial or abaxial side. Substantial differences were observed in flower structure and the development between pistillate and perfect florets. Pistillate florets presented a zygomorphic floral primordium, tetramerous corolla and androecium and two sepal lobes. In these florets, two sepal lobes and four stamen primordia stopped growing, and the ovary developed neither an ovule nor a typical stigma. The results suggest that peripheral pistillate florets in X. squarrosum, which has a bilabiate corolla, could be considered as an intermediate state between ancestral bilabiate florets and the derived ray florets.  相似文献   

4.
Development of female flowers in Zelkova serrata was observed using epi-illuminated microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, with particular attention given to placentation. After the inception of staminodial primordia, the floral apex becomes flat, and the first and subsequently the second carpel primordia appear at opposite comers of the pistil primordium. Inside each carpel primordium a fossette forms. Through differential growth this depression becomes clear and the carpel wall encircles one side of the future placental region. The placental region is detectable even in early stages, but clear signs of ovule inception appear late when the placental region is elevated onto one side of the ovary wall by intercalary growth. Although the relative size of the two carpels varies among flowers, the placental position always appears to be the border between the two carpels and the floral apex. This suggests that the placentation of Zelkova is parietal. The ovule position in tricarpellate ovaries also suggests an evolutionary derivation from ovaries with parietal placentation. Parietal placentation appears to be the original condition in Urticales.  相似文献   

5.
侧柏雌球果及其胚珠的发育   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
观察了侧柏(Platycladus orientalis(L.)France)胚珠的发育过程及后期球果苞片的结构变化。在北京,雌球果原基7月分化。通常一个球果有4对苞片,中部两对可育,靠球果顶端一对各产生一枚胚珠,其下一对各两枚。胚珠的发育顺序是向顶的,下部可育苞片腑部的两枚胚珠源于同一原基。胚珠原基分化成珠心和珠被,在发育过程中,珠被逐渐包围珠心,最后形成2烧瓶状的胚珠。11月至次年1月,球果处  相似文献   

6.
侧柏雌球果及其胚珠的发育   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Seed cone in Platycladus orientalis (L.) France consists of four or five pairs of decussate bracts. Usually, two pairs of the fertile bracts in the middle of the cone subtend six ovules, which initiate in an acropetal manner. Only one ovule presents on each of the upper fertile bract, while two ovules initiate from a common primordium in the axil of lower bracts. In Beijing, most female cones initiated in July. All parts of the cone formed before dormancy, which occurred during November to the next January. After pollination in March, bract morphology changed dramatically; intercalary growth of the bract base formed a conspicuous protuberance, in which inverted vascular system developed. Furthermore, ovules on different pairs of bracts initiated in an acropetal manner and two ovules in each lower fertile bract initiated from a common primordium, which was different from the basipetal initiation of ovules and independently formed single ovule as reported by Takaso in Calltris.  相似文献   

7.
The initiation and development of the floral organs of Brassica napus L. (cv. Westar) were examined using the scanning electron microscope. After transition of the vegetative apex into an inflorescence apex, flower primordia were initiated in a helical phyllotactic pattern. The sequence of initiation of the floral organs in a flower bud was that of sepals, stamens, petals and gynoecium. Of the four sepal primordia, the abaxial was initiated first, followed by the two lateral and finally the adaxial primordium. The four long stamens were initiated simultaneously in positions alternating with the sepals. The two short stamens were initiated basipetal to and outside the long stamens, and opposite the lateral sepals. The petals arose on either side of the two short stamens and the gynoecium was produced from the remainder of the apex. During development, the sepal primordia curved sharply at the tips and tightly enclosed the other organs. Stamen primordia developed tetralobed anthers at an early stage while filament elongation occurred just prior to anthesis. A unique pattern of bulbous cells was present on the abaxial surface of the anther. Growth of petal primordia lagged relative to the other floral organs but expansion was rapid prior to anthesis. The gynoecium primordium was characterized by an invagination early in development. At maturity, there was differentiation of a papillate stigma, an elongated style and a long ovary marked externally by sutures and divided internally by a septum. Distinct patterns of cuticular thickenings were observed on the abaxial and adaxial surfaces of the petals and stamens and on the surface of the style. The patterns were less obvious on the sepals and ovary. Stomata were present on both surfaces of the mature sepals, on the style and restricted areas on the abaxial surface of the anthers and nectaries but were absent from the petals, the adaxial surface of the stamens and the ovary. No hairs were present on any of the floral organs.  相似文献   

8.
Flowers of Pseudowintera traversii (Buchan.) Dandy possess a terminal unicarpellate gynoecium. The present study of carpel morphogenesis was initiated for the purposes of (1) providing additional developmental documentation of the occurrence of terminal carpels in the Winteraceae and (2) comparing the mode of initiation and development of the ascidiate terminal carpel of P. traversii with the essentially conduplicate terminal carpel of Drimys lanceolata. Following its axillary origin, the floral apex of P. traversii initiates 2–3 connate sepals, 5–6 petals, 4–15 stamens, and usually a single terminal carpel, in acropetal succession. Bicarpellate gynoecia may occur with a frequency of up to 15 % on a given plant. The floral apex is zonate and shows increased expression of its zonation during later stages of floral development. The terminal carpel is ascidiate from inception and originates as a cylindrical growth around the entire circumference of the floral apex; transformation of the floral meristem into a carpel primordium terminates apical growth of the floral axis. Carpel growth continues to be cylindrical and is mediated by a ring of marginal and submarginal initials at its summit. Earlier and more extensive division of initials and their derivatives on the dorsal rim causes the primordium to become canted adaxially, shifting the apical cleft to a subterminal adaxial position. Continued marginal meristematic activity results in closure of the cleft as well as elevation and elaboration of the stigmatic crests. Five to seven bitegmic ovules are initiated at the same time as crest elaboration and arise in two rows from the adaxial (laminar) position. Carpel maturation is signified by tannin deposition and oil cell differentiation, beginning at the base and proceeding acropetally; carpel margins bordering the cleft are the last to differentiate. Carpel procambialization is continuous and acropetal from inception, with the dorsal median bundle differentiating before the ventral strands. The significance of occasional bicarpellate flowers is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Flowers of Peperomia species are the simplest structurally of any of the members of the Piperaceae. The spicate inflorescences form terminally and in axillary position; in each, the apex first is zonate in configuration with a two-layered tunica while 3-4 leaves are initiated. Later, when the inflorescence apical meristem begins bract initiation, the biseriate tunica persists, but zonal distinctions diminish and the apex can be described in terms of a simple tunicacorpus configuration. The inflorescence apex aborts after producing 30-40 bracts in acropetal succession an abscission layer forms across the base of the apex, and the meristem dries and drops off. Bracts are produced by periclinal divisions in T2 (and occasionally also in the third layer as well); the later-formed floral apices arise by periclinal divisions in T2 and the third layer. Each floral apex is at first a long transverse ridge in the axil, perpendicular to the long axis of the inflorescence. This establishes bilateral symmetry in the flower, which persists throughout subsequent growth. The floral meristem becomes saddle-shaped, and two stamen primordia are delimited, one at either end and lower than the central floral apex. A solitary carpel is initiated abaxially, and soon forms a circular rim which heightens as a tube with an apical pore. Within the open carpel, a solitary ovule is initiated from the entire remains of the floral apical meristem; it, hence, is terminal in the flower, and its placentation is basal. Carpellary closure in P. metallica results from accelerated growth of the abaxial lip, and the two margins become appressed. Species differ greatly as to whether the abaxial or the adaxial lobe predominates in late stages of carpel development. In P. metallica, the receptive portion of the stigma forms from the shorter lobe which is overtopped. Stigmatoid tissue forms internal to the receptive stigma. The prevailing bilateral floral symmetry, absence of a perianth, and the spicate inflorescence are features which distinguish Peperomia (and Piperaceae) from the magnolialian line of angiosperms.  相似文献   

10.
The inception and development of the sterile floral appendages of Potamogeton richardsonii have been re-investigated with a refined dissection technique (Sattler, 1968) and improved microtechnical methods (Feder and O'Brien, 1968). The results obtained by Sattler (1965) are confirmed, i.e., the sterile appendages are initiated at the flanks of the floral apex before the stamen primordia are formed. Consequently, they may be homologized with tepals or perianth members, although in the mature flower they are inserted at the stamen connective, due to growth between and at the base of each developing tepal and stamen. Each carpel arises as a radial primordium which becomes peltate immediately after its inception. One ovule primordium is initiated at the cross-zone. The stigma becomes bilobed. A slight outgrowth develops at the abaxial side of the style. The floral apex has a two-layered tunica. The primordia of the tepals, carpels, and ovules arise by periclinal divisions in the second tunica layer, whereas the stamen primordia are initiated by periclinal divisions in the corpus and second tunica layer. Variation in floral pattern, especially with regard to the number of appendages, has been observed in flowers near the tip of the inflorescence axis.  相似文献   

11.
为了揭示寒兰的成花机理,利用石蜡切片和花芽实体解剖记录了濒危植物寒兰花芽分化和发育的过程,并着重观察唇瓣和合蕊柱早期及中期的发育(在合蕊柱伸长之前)。结果表明:寒兰花芽分化沿着花序轴从下往上可分为4个阶段:花序原基分化,花原基分化,花被片分化和合蕊柱形成。唇瓣分化分为3个阶段:褶片分化,侧裂片分化和色块形成。唇瓣侧裂片和褶片产生较晚,与退化雄蕊可能没有关系。在合蕊柱形成过程中,首先分化出花药,随后分化产生中心皮顶部,侧心皮顶部,并形成花柱道,最终分化出蕊喙和黏盘。  相似文献   

12.
The inferior ovary of Boottia cordata, Ottelia alismoides, and their hybrid is appendicular in nature, the carpels are congenitally only slightly connate, and they are unsealed. All floral organs except the sepals originate from common primordia in the female and bisexual flowers. A flat residual floral apex is pressnt. There is a vestigial superior ovary of three ontogenetically fused carpels in the male flower of Boottia cordata. The hybrid is intermediate in many characteristics and has partially fertile stamens and staminodia. The sequence of development in all flowers is acropetal. These plants appear to be related to the Butomaceae and they show evolutionary tendencies parallel to those in the Nymphaeaceae.  相似文献   

13.
Zippelia begoniaefolia Bl., a monotypic species having characteristics of both Piperaceae and Saururaceae, has racemes of about 20 small flowers lacking a perianth, each with six free stamens and a four-carpellate syncarpous gynoecium. The inflorescence apical meristem initiates bracts acropetally and helically, each of which subtends a later initiated single floral apex; there are no “common” primordia. The six stamens are initiated as two lateral pairs and two solitary successive primordia, the latter two opposite in median sagittal positions. Four carpel primordia are initiated as a lateral pair and two successively initiated in the median sagittal plane. This order of organ inception is unique among Piperaceae and Saururaceae. Intercalary growth below carpellary attachment raises them up on a common cylindrical base that becomes the syncarpous ovary, covered with unique glochidiate hairs and containing a single basal ovule. The free portions of the carpels become the reflexed papillate stigmas. The floral vascular system has a single bundle at base that branches to supply the bract and flower traces. The floral vasculature is similar but not identical to that of Saururus (Saururaceae) and some Piper species (Piperaceae). Plesiomorphic character states of Zippelia that are shared with Saururus include hypogyny, free stamens, cleft stigma, and a similar floral groundplan. Synapomorphies, derived shared character states that unite Zippelia with Piperaceae, include syncarpy, solitary ovule, basal placentation, fused ventral carpellary bundles, and a double vascular cylinder in the stem. Cladistic analysis aligns Zippelia with Piperaceae because they share apomorphies, and because Zippelia shares only plesiomorphies with Saururus.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of a 180° displacement from the normal vertical orientation on longitudinal growth and on the acropetal and basipetal movement of 14C-IAA was investigated in Avena sativa L. and Zea mays L. coleoptile sections. Inversion inhibits growth in intact sections (apex not removed) and in decapitated sections supplied apically with donor blocks containing auxin. Under aerobic conditions, inversion inhibits basipetal auxin movement and promotes acropetal auxin movement, whereas under anaerobic conditions, it does not influence the movement of auxin in either direction. Inversion retards the basipetal movement of the peak of a 30-minute pulse of auxin in corn.

The inversion-induced inhibition of basipetal auxin movement is not explained by an effect of gravity on production, uptake, destruction, exit from sections, retention in tissue, or purely physical movement of auxin. It is concluded that inversion (a) inhibits basipetal transport, the component of auxin movement that is metabolically dependent, and as a result (b) inhibits growth and (c) promotes acropetal auxin movement.

  相似文献   

15.
The inflorescence of Dracontium polyphyllum consists of 150 – 300 flowers arranged in recognisable spirals. The flower has 5 – 6 (90% of observed specimens), or 7 broad tepals enclosing 9 – 12 stamens (occasionally 7) inserted in two whorls. The gynoecium is trilocular (90% of observed specimens) or tetralocular. The tetralocular gynoecia are found at random among the trilocular gynoecia. Each locule encloses an ovule inserted in an axile position, in the median portion of the ovary. Each carpel has its own stylar canal. However, in the upper portion of the style, there is only one common stylar canal. Floral organs are initiated in an acropetal direction in the following sequence: tepals, stamens, and carpels. During later stages of development, the tepals progressively cover the other floral organs. The first floral primordia are initiated on the upper portion of the inflorescence. During early stages of development, the floral primordia have a circular shape. The tepals are initiated nearly simultaneously. During later stages of development, the first whorl of stamens develops in alternation with the tepals and is followed by a second whorl of stamens. The trilocular or tetralocular nature of the ovary is clearly visible during early stages of development of the gynoecium. Recent molecular studies show that Anaphyllopsis A. Hay and Dracontium L. are closely related. However, although pentamerous flowers have been observed in Anaphyllopsis, the developmental morphology of the flower of Dracontium is different from that of Anaphyllopsis.  相似文献   

16.
Three morphological problems were investigated in three species of the Nyctaginaceae: epiphylly, phyllotaxis and placentation. Epiphylly, which occurs in Bougainvillea spectabilis , is the result of ontogenetic displacement resulting from the activity of an intercalary meristem at the base of the floral bract and the floral bud. Floral development of Bougainvillea spectabilis was compared with that of Boerhaavia diffusa and Mirabilis jalapa . Considerable variation occurs with regard to the number and arrangement of stamens. Five stamens are initiated simultaneously, alternate to the petals, in Mirabilis . In Bougainvillea , eight stamens arise sequentially at divergence angles suggestive of a 3/8 spiral. No developmental evidence was found to support the derivation of the eight stamens from a two whorled pentamerous androecium. Boerhaavia normally has only two stamens which most frequently are initiated toward opposite sides of the floral apex, but may also be formed in a 2/5 to 3/8 divergence. In some flowers only one or three stamens are formed. The gynoecium is formed in the same way in all three species: growth occurs in a crescent-shaped zone at the periphery of the floral apex thus producing the gynoecial wall. The single ovule, which is basal in the mature gynoecium, is formed from the gradual upgrowth and transformation of the floral apex and is developmentally terminal. Even the two-layered tunica is maintained as the floral apex is transformed into the ovule primordium. If 'carpel' is defined traditionally as a folded megasporophyll which bears and encloses ovule(s) then carpels are not present in the gynoecia of the three species studied. If 'carpel' is re-defined as an appendage which encloses ovule(s), then the gynoecia of the Nyctaginaceae are carpellate. However, the ovules remain cauline regardless of which definition is adopted.  相似文献   

17.
The flowers of mangrove Rhizophoraceae (tribe Rhizophoreae) are adapted to three different pollination mechanisms. Floral development of representative species of all four genera suggests that the ancestral flower of the tribe was unspecialized, with successively initiated whorls of separate sepals, petals, antisepalous stamens, and antipetalous stamens; at its inception, the gynoecium had a united, half-inferior ovary and separate stigmatic lobes. This developmental pattern is found in Rhizophora mangle (wind-pollinated) and Ceriops decandra (insect-pollinated). In Kandelia, all floral organs distal to the sepals are initiated simultaneously, and there has apparently been an evolutionary amplification in the number of stamens to about six times the number of petals. Explosive pollen release evolved independently in C. tagal and in Bruguiera. In the former, all stamens belong to one whorl and arise simultaneously upon a very weakly differentiated androecial ring primordium. In Bruguiera, the androecial ring is pronounced, and two whorls of stamens arise upon it; the primordia of the antisepalous whorl arise first but are closer to the center of the apex than the antipetalous stamen primordia. The antisepalous stamens bend toward and are enclosed by the petals early in development. In all genera, the inferior ovary develops by zonal growth of receptacular tissue; additional intercalary growth above the placenta occurs in Bruguiera. In general, floral specialization is accompanied by an increase in the width of the floral apex compared to the size of the primordia, increasing fusion of the stylar primordia, and decreasing prominence of the superior portion of the ovary. Apparent specializations of petal appendages for water storage, including the presence of sub-terminal hydathodes (previously unreported in any angiosperm), were found in two species in which flowers remain open during the day but were absent from two species normally pollinated at night or at dawn. Distinctive tribal characteristics that may aid in phylogenetic analysis include the mode of development of the inferior ovary; the aristate, bifid, usually fringed petals that individually enclose one or more stamens; the intrastaminal floral disc; and the initially subepidermal laticiferous cell layer in the sepals and ovary.  相似文献   

18.
Floral anatomy is described in ten genera of Bromeliaceae, including three members of subfamily Bromelioideae, three Tillandsioideae, and four genera of the polyphyletic subfamily Pitcairnioideae (including Brocchinia, the putatively basal genus of Bromeliaceae). Bromeliaceae are probably unique in the order Poales in possessing septal nectaries and epigynous or semi-epigynous flowers. Evidence presented here from floral ontogeny, vasculature, and the relative positions of nectary and ovules indicates that there could have been one or more reversals to apparent hypogyny in Bromeliaceae, although this hypothesis requires a better-resolved phylogeny. Such evolutionary reversals probably evolved in response to specialist pollinators, and in conjunction with other aspects of floral morphology of Bromeliaceae, such as the petal appendages of some species. The ovary is initiated in an inferior position even in semi-epigynous or hypogynous species. The ovary of all so-called hypogynous Bromeliaceae is actually semi-inferior, because the septal nectary is infralocular; in these species the nectaries have a labyrinthine surface and many vascular bundles. Brocchinia differs from most other fully epigynous species in that each carpel is secretory at the apex and reproductive, rather than secretory, at the base.  相似文献   

19.
The early ontogeny of the pinnately, palmately, and ternately compound leaves in the Lardizabalaceae was studied by SEM. The leaf primordium of each of the three leaf types emerges as an identical short protrusion on the shoot apex; the leaf primordium produces the first leaflet initials laterally on its margin. Successive acropetal growth of the leaf axis and the following inception of the leaflet primordia are responsible for the pinnately compound leaf, whereas short basipetal growth accompanied with initiation of two or more pairs of leaflet initials results in a palmately compound leaf. If no elongation of the leaf axis nor additional inception of leaflet primordia occur during early ontogeny, a ternate leaf ensues.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Members of Rubiaceae are generally characterized by an inferior ovary. However, Mitrasacmopsis is cited in the literature as having a semi-inferior to superior ovary. It has previously been hypothesized that the gynoecial development of Rubiaceae with semi-inferior to superior ovaries takes place in the same way as in Gaertnera, one of the most commonly cited rubiaceous genera with a superior ovary. To test this hypothesis, a floral ontogenetic study of Mitrasacmopsis was carried out with special attention paid to the gynoecial development. METHODS: Floral ontogeny and anatomy of Mitrasacmopsis were examined using scanning electron and light microscopy. KEY RESULTS: At an early developmental stage, a concavity becomes visible in the centre of the floral apex simultaneously with the perianth initiation. A ring primordium surrounding this concavity expands vertically forming the corolla tube (early sympetaly). Stamen primordia develop inside the corolla. From the bicarpellate gynoecium only two carpel tips are visible because the ovary is formed by a gynoecial hypanthium. In the basal part of each carpel, a placenta primordium is initiated. Two septa divide the ovary into two locules. In each locule, the placenta becomes mushroom shaped and distinctly stalked. Eventually, the inferior ovary of Mitrasacmopsis develops into a beaked capsule. Only very late in the fruiting stage, the continuously expanding ovary is raised above the insertion point of the persistent calyx, changing the ovary position of Mitrasacmopsis from basically inferior to secondarily semi-inferior. CONCLUSIONS: Mitrasacmopsis follows an epigynous pattern of floral development. However, the presence of a prominent beak in the fruiting stage gives the whole ovary a semi-inferior appearance. This kind of secondarily semi-inferior ovary is shown to be different from the secondarily superior ovary observed in Gaertnera.  相似文献   

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