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1.
The vascular system of the leaf of Amaranthus retroflexus L. was examined quantitatively, and plasmolytic studies were carried out on it to determine the solute concentration in cells of the phloem at various locations in the leaf. The proportion of phloem occupied by sieve tubes varies considerably with vein size and leaf size. Collectively, the cross-sectional area of sieve tubes of all tributaries at their points of entry into either a secondary or midvein far exceeds the total cross-sectional area of sieve tubes at the bases of those major veins. In addition, the total volume of sieve tubes in the “catchment area” of a secondary vein is much greater than total sieve-tube volume of the secondary vein itself. The plasmolytic studies revealed the presence of positive concentration gradients in the sieve tubes of the lamina from the minor veins and tips of the secondaries to the bases of the secondaries and from the tip to the base of the midvein. The C50 (the estimated mannitol concentration plasmolyzing, on the average, 50% of the sieve-tube members) was 1.5 m for minor veins and tips of secondary veins and 1.1 m for the bases of secondaries; 1.3 m for the tip of the midvein and 0.6-0.7 m for the midvein in the basal third of the lamina.  相似文献   

2.
Leaves of the Princeton and a variegated clone of Coleus blumei Benth. were examined with the light microscope to determine the course of their vasculature and the spatial relationship between the mesophyll, bundle sheath, and vascular tissues. In Princeton clone leaves two leaf traces enter the petiole at the node and quickly branch to form an arc of bundles which undergo further divisions as well as fusions in the distal half of the petiole. The anastomosing arc of bundles reaches its greatest complexity in the base of the midvein, where its lateral-most bundles unite and diverge outward to form secondary veins. As the midvein bundles continue acropetally, they gradually fuse more and divide less until only a single bundle remains, from which secondaries and smaller veins branch. Major (ribbed) veins include not only the midvein and secondaries but also tertiary and quaternary veins. Decreasing vein size is accompanied by increasing direct contact between vascular and photosynthetic tissues. Minor veins, which make up 86% of the total vein length, are completely surrounded by photosynthetic bundle sheaths and mesophyll consisting of palisade and spongy parenchyma. Statoliths occur in a layer of cells just outside the phloem of the petiole-midrib axis and secondary veins. Functional hydathodes are present at the apices of the marginal teeth. The overall organization of tissues in variegated leaves differs little in either the green or albuminous areas from corresponding (but always green) regions of Princeton leaves. Chloroplasts are lacking in mesophyll, bundle-sheath, and most guard cells of the albuminous region but are present in guard cells which are within 1 mm of green areas.  相似文献   

3.
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.  相似文献   

4.
The vascular system for the two lodicules in a floret of Dactylis glomerata L. was studied in serial sections. The floret stele contained a few modified tracheary elements and xylem transfer cells enveloped by a phloem of squat sieve-tube members and intermediary cells. A single sieve tube and associated phloem parenchyma exited the right and left sides of the stele and upon nearing the base of each lodicule branched and formed the minor veins of the lodicule. The minor veins underwent limited branching and anastomosing to form a small three-dimensional system which described an arc during its ascent in the adaxial portion of each lodicule. The sieve tubes in the minor veins extended halfway up the lodicule and contained short sieve-tube members with transverse, slightly oblique, or lateral simple sieve plates. The associated phloem parenchyma cells were intermediary cells, companion cells, and less intimate parenchyma cells. Intermediary cells terminated the minor veins and touched the distal ends of the terminal sieve-tube members, which lacked distal sieve plates. Although the transverse area of the sieve-tube members remained constant up the lodicule, the transverse area of the associated phloem parenchyma fluctuated.  相似文献   

5.
The minor veins and contiguous tissues of mature leaves of Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh. were examined with the electron microscope to determine the ultrastructural characteristics of the component cells and to determine the structure, distribution, and frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types. In addition, plasmolytic studies were carried out to determine the solute concentrations of the various cell types of the minor veins and contiguous tissues. The cells comprising the mesophyll and bundle sheath contain all the components typical of photosynthetic cells. Paraveinal mesophyll cells and bundle-sheath cells have fewer microbodies and smaller chloroplasts than do palisade parenchyma cells. Vascular parenchyma and companion cells tend to intergrade with one another structurally but can be distinguished from one another by their characteristic plastids. The mature, enucleate sieve-tube member is lined by a parietal layer of cytoplasm consisting of plasmalemma, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, plastids, and P-protein. Plasmodesmata occur along all possible routes from the palisade parenchyma cells to the sieve tubes of the minor veins, and their frequency increases with increasing proximity to the sieve-tube members. Plasmolytic studies revealed that the paraveinal mesophyll cells had a higher C50 (estimated mannitol concentration plasmolyzing, on the average, 50% of a given cell type) than any other cell type of the leaf. Concentration gradients existed along the palisade cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route as well as along the paraveinal mesophyll cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route. Considering the frequency of plasmodesmata along these routes, it is conceivable that photosynthate diffuses from palisade cells to the companion cells along concentration gradients. Within the minor veins, the C50 was higher for sieve-tube members than for either companion cells or vascular parenchyma cells, indicating that loading of the sieve tubes is an active, energy-dependent process.  相似文献   

6.
Mature field- and growth-chamber-grown leaves of Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh. were examined with light and scanning electron microscopes to determine their vasculature and the spatial relationships of the various orders of vascular bundles to the mesophyll. Three leaf traces, one median and two lateral, enter the petiole at the node. Progressing acropetally in the petiole these bundles are rearranged and gradually form as many as 13 tiers of vascular tissue in the petiole at the base of the lamina. (Most leaves contained seven vertically stacked tiers.) During their course through the midrib the tiers “unstack” and portions diverge outward and continue as secondary veins toward the margin on either side of the lamina. As the midvein approaches the leaf tip it is represented by a single vascular bundle which is a continuation of the original median bundle. Tertiary veins arise from the secondary veins or the midvein, and minor veins commonly arise from all orders of veins. All major veins–primaries, secondaries, intersecondaries, and tertiaries–are associated with rib tissue, while minor veins are completely surrounded by a parenchymatous bundle sheath. The bundle sheaths of tertiary, quaternary, and portions of quinternary veins are associated with bundle-sheath extensions. Minor veins are closely associated spatially with both ad- and abaxial palisade parenchyma of the isolateral leaf and also with one or two layers of paraveinal mesophyll that extend horizontally between the veins. The leaves of growth-chamber-grown plants had thinner blades, a higher proportion of air space, and greater interveinal distances than those of field-grown plants.  相似文献   

7.
The vascular system of the Hordeum vulgare L. leaf consists of multiple longitudinal strands interconnected by transverse bundles. In any transverse section, the longitudinal strands can be categorized into three bundle types: small, intermediate, and large. Individual longitudinal strands intergrade structurally from one bundle type into another as they descend the leaf. At their distal ends, they have the anatomy of a small bundle. As they descend the leaf, most intergrade into intermediate bundle and then into large bundle types. All strands with large bundle anatomy extend basipetally into the stem. Typically, the other longitudinal strands, which do not intergrade structurally into large bundles, do not enter the sheath, but fuse with other longitudinal strands above the junction of the blade with the sheath. Despite the decrease in number of longitudinal bundles entering the sheath, an increase takes place in the total crosssectional area of sieve tubes and tracheary elements. A linear relationship exists between leaf width and total bundle number in the blade but not in the sheath. Moreover, a linear relationship exists between cross-sectional area of vascular bundles and both total and mean cross-sectional area of tracheary elements and thin-walled sieve tubes.  相似文献   

8.
王永  何顺志 《广西植物》2015,35(4):476-486
采用制作叶脉标本和透明叶标本的方法,对贵州产28种2变种小檗属植物叶脉特征进行比较研究。结果表明:贵州小檗属植物的脉序类型有5种:半达缘羽状脉、花环状半达缘羽状脉、简单弓形羽状脉、花环状弓形羽状脉和混合型。叶脉分支一般有五级:1一级脉构架均为羽状脉,粗度有很粗、粗、中等粗细和纤细四种类型,分支方式包括单轴分支和合轴分支;2粗二级脉构架中有分支达缘或分支均不达缘,与中脉夹角变化各异,内二级脉存在或缺失,细二级脉半达缘、真曲行或简单弓形,间二级脉类型复杂多变但频度种间有差异;3三级脉贯串型、结网型或分支型;4四、五级脉网状或自由分支且常混合在一起。脉间区从发育差到良好,小脉从不分支到不均等分支等各种类型均有,叶缘末级脉缺失、不完整、钉状和环状。大部分种类叶缘具齿,每1cm齿数目和齿内腺点的特性等特征在不同种类间有区别,具有鉴定价值,但齿其它特征复杂多变或种间区别较小,同时齿内脉性状也不稳定。此外,齿的有无会对脉序类型产生影响。小檗属植物叶脉类型存在种间差异,具有重要的分类学价值,叶脉类型的变化和复杂程度显示了该属植物的进化特点;叶齿的有无和齿特征具有分类学和系统学意义。基于叶脉特征的研究结果并结合重要的外部形态学特征编制了贵州小檗属植物的分种检索表。研究结果可为小檗属植物分类寻找新的依据并探讨其系统学意义。  相似文献   

9.
The leaf and stem of the potato plant (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Russet Burbank) were studied by light microscopy to determine their morphology and vasculature; scanning electron microscopy provided supplemental information on the leaf's morphology. The morphology of the basal leaves of the potato shoot is quite variable, ranging from simple to pinnately compound. The upper leaves of the shoot are more uniform, being odd pinnate with three major pairs of lateral leaflets and a number of folioles. The primary vascular system of the stem is comprised of six bundles, three large and three small ones. The three large bundles form a highly interconnected system through a repeated series of branchings and arch-producing mergers. Two of the three large bundles give rise to short, lateral leaf traces at each node. Each of the small bundles in the stem is actually a median leaf trace which extends three internodes before diverging into a leaf. The three leaf traces enter the petiole through a single gap; thus the nodel anatomy is three-trace unilacunar. Upon entering the petiole, each of the laterals splits into an upper and a lower lateral. Whereas the upper laterals diverge entirely into the first pair of leaflets, the lower laterals feed all of the lateral leaflets through a series of bifurcations. Prior to their entering the terminal leaflet, the lower laterals converge on the median bundle to form a single vascular crescent which progresses acropetally into the terminal leaflet as the midvein, or primary vein. In the midrib, portions of the midvein diverge outward and continue as secondaries to the margin on either side of the lamina. Near the tip of the terminal leaflet, the midvein consists of a single vascular bundle which is a continuation of the median bundle. Six to seven orders of veins occur in the terminal leaflet.  相似文献   

10.
S. H. Russell  R. F. Evert 《Planta》1985,164(4):448-458
The vascular system of the Zea mays L. leaf consists of longitudinal strands interconnected by transverse bundles. In any given transverse section the longitudinal strands may be divided into three types of bundle according to size and structure: small, intermediate, large. Virtually all of the longitudinal strands intergrade structurally however, from one bundle type to another as they descend the leaf. For example, all of the strands having large-bundle anatomy appear distally as small bundles, which intergrade into intermediates and then large bundles as they descend the leaf. Only the large bundles and the intermediates that arise midway between them extend basipetally into the sheath and stem. Most of the remaining longitudinal strands of the blade do not enter the sheath but fuse with other strands above and in the region of the blade joint. Despite the marked decrease in number of longitudinal bundles at the base of the blade, both the total and mean cross-sectional areas of sieve tubes and tracheary elements increase as the bundles continuing into the sheath increase in size. Linear relationships exist between leaf width and total bundle number, and between cross-sectional area of vascular bundles and both total and mean cross-sectional areas of sieve tubes and tracheary elements.  相似文献   

11.
The histogenesis of the leaf venation in Trifolium wormskioldii was followed, using whole cleared leaflets and transverse and paradermal microtome sections. Mature leaflets are about 8 mm in length. The midvein precambium appears in leaflets 100 μ in length; secondary vein procambium is first seen in 230 μ leaflets; procambium of minor veins first appears in leaflets 400-600 μ in length. Phloem is apparent before xylem, in midvein, secondary veins, and minor veins. Vein endings are initiated and they mature last. No evidence was found to support the theory of “vein breakage.” In the greenhouse 24 days elapsed from leaf initiation to exposure of leaf tips; 6 more days elapsed until full leaf expansion.  相似文献   

12.
In this brief review an attempt has been made to discuss some of the important features of the vascular anatomy of angiospermous leaves, especially those related to assimilate transport. Accordingly, emphasis has been placed on the small or minor veins, which are closely related spatially to the mesophyll, and which play a major role in the uptake and subsequent transport of photosynthates from the leaf. The small veins are enclosed by bundle sheaths that intervene between the mesophyll and vascular tissues and greatly increase the area for contact with mesophyll cells. In the minor veins of dicotyledonous leaves, parenchymatic cells having organelle-rich protoplasts and numerous cytoplasmic connections with sieve elements dominate quantitatively. It is these so-called intermediary cells that apparently are directly involved with the loading of assimilates into the sieve elements. In the maize leaf the small and intermediate bundles have two types of sieve tubes, relatively thin-walled ones that have numerous cytoplasmic connections with companion cells, and thick-walled ones that lack companion cells but have numerous connections with vascular parenchyma cells. The companion cell-sieve tube complexes are virtually isolated symplastically from other cells of the vascular bundle and from the bundle sheath. Thick-walled sieve tubes similar to those in the maize leaf have been recorded in the leaves of other grasses.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The vascular system of the leaves of Saccharum officinarum L. is composed in part of a system of longitudinal strands that in any given transverse section may be divided into three types of bundle according to size and structure: small, intermediate, and large. Virtually all of the longitudinal strands intergrade, however, from one type bundle to another. For example, virutually all of the strands having large bundle anatomy appear distally in the blade as small bundles, which intergrade into intermediates and then large bundles as they descend the leaf. These large bundles, together with the intermediates that arise midway between them, extend basipetally into the sheath and stem. Most of the remaining longitudinal strands of the blade do not enter the sheath but fuse with other strands above and in the region of the blade joint. Despite the marked decrease in number of bundles at the base of the blade, both the total and mean cross-sectional areas (measured with a digitizer from electron micrographs) of sieve tubes and tracheary elements increase as the bundles continuing into the sheath increase in size. Linear relationships exist between leaf width and total bundle number, and between cross-sectional area of vascular bundles and both total and mean cross-sectional areas of sieve tubes and tracheary elements.  相似文献   

15.
Citrus vein-enation virus-induced tumors on leaves, thorns, stems, and roots of Citrus auranti-folia (Christm.) Swingle and C. jambhiri Lush. were investigated. Leaf vein tumors are initiated as cytological abnormalities of phloem fiber primordial cells adjacent to protophloem sieve tubes. The tumors then enlarge through hyperplasia of the affected fiber primordia. The mesophyll and epidermal tissues on the abaxial side of affected veins divide less prolifically and contribute to the tumor mass. Leaf vein tumors are determinate, like the protophloem where they originate, and cease enlarging as the leaf matures. Most thorn tumors are initiated in fiber primordia and develop similarly to vein tumors. Stem tumors and some thorn tumors develop from affected cells of the procambial tissue that lies between the metaxylem and metaphloem of vascular bundles. The cambium which differentiates in these areas is composed of affected cells and produces large amounts of abnormal xylem tissue. The resulting woody tumors are indeterminate like the cambium and secondary xylem.  相似文献   

16.
Sieve tubes in metaphloem of palm stems function throughout the life of the plant and merit close investigation. A stem of Sabal palmetto estimated to be 50 years old was sampled extensively. Variation in length of sieve-tube elements throughout this stem was measured and is discussed. In the metaphloem of individual vascular bundles companion cells are not sharply differentiated from other phloem parenchyma cells. Definitive callose deposits and slime are normally absent from mature sieve tubes, even in fixed material. Otherwise no conspicuous structural features which might account for the longevity of sieve tubes can be discerned. Occlusion of phloem strands after leaf fall is initially by callose deposition on sieve plates followed immediately by tylosoid formation. Similar sampling of Cocos nucifera, Washingtonia robusta and to a lesser extent Archontophoenix alexandrae confirmed these results except for quantitative differences.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
R. F. Evert  W. Eschrich  W. Heyser 《Planta》1978,138(3):279-294
Small and intermediate (longitudinal) vascular bundles of the Zea mays leaf are surrounded by chlorenchymatous bundle sheaths and consist of one or two vessels, variable numbers of vascular parenchyma cells, and two or more sieve tubes some of which are associated with companion cells. Sieve tubes not associated with companion cells have relatively thick walls and commonly are in direct contact with the vessels. The thick-walled sieve tubes have abundant cytoplasmic connections with contiguous vascular parenchyma cells; in contrast, connections between vascular parenchyma cells and thin-walled sieve tubes are rare. Connections are abundant, however, between the thin-walled sieve tubes and their companion cells; the latter have few connections with the vascular parenchyma cells. Plasmolytic studies on leaves of plants taken directly from lighted growth chambers gave osmotic potential values of about-18 bars for the companion cells and thin-walled sieve tubes (the companion cell-sieve tube complexes) and about-11 bars for the vascular parenchyma cells. Judging from the distribution of connections between various cell types of the vascular bundles and from the osmotic potential values of those cell types, it appears that sugar is actively accumulated from the apoplast by the companion cell-sieve tube complex, probably across the plasmalemma of the companion cell. The thick-walled sieve tubes, with their close spatial association with the vessels and possession of plasmalemma tubules, may play a role in retrieval of solutes entering the leaf apoplast in the transpiration stream. The transverse veins have chlorenchymatous bundle sheaths and commonly contain a single vessel and sieve tube. Parenchymatic elements may or may not be present. Like the thick-walled sieve tubes of the longitudinal bundles, the sieve tubes of the transverse veins have plasmalemma tubules, indicating that they too may play a role in retrieval of solutes entering the leaf apoplast in the transpiration stream.  相似文献   

19.
Quantitative data on sieve tubes in foliar terminal veins (vein endings) were added to the meager published information from only five dicot species. Correlations with other minor vein configurations were also explored. Leaf samples from ten species of dicots (Oxalis nelsonii, O. pes-capri, O. rubra, O. stricta [Oxalidaceae], Caesalpinia pulcherrima. Glycine max, Trifolium repens [Leguminosae], Ampelamus albidus [Asclepidaceae], Eupatorium rugosum [Asteraceae], and Polygonum convolvulus [Polygonaceae]) were selected for two quantitative procedures: 1) a survey of the arrangement of terminal veins and distribution of sieve tubes in terminal veins in 100 areoles per species using stained leaf clearings; and 2) a search for correlations of sieve tube distribution with number and branching patterns of terminal veins, and with sizes of areoles using image analysis. Two Oxalis species (O. pes-capri and O. stricta) had the smallest areoles and virtually no sieve tubes in any terminal vein. Polygonum convolvulus, at the other extreme, had sieve tubes extending to the tips of most terminal veins. The other species had various intermediate sieve tube configurations. The data indicate that species with few or no sieve tubes associated with their terminal veins, regardless of the number of terminal veins per areole, have smaller areoles. These results may have implications regarding the entry of leaf photosynthates into the vascular system.  相似文献   

20.
Minor veins and contiguous tissues of the Spinacia oleracea leaf were analyzed by electron microscopy to determine the characteristics of the component cells and the structure, distribution, and frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the leaf. Mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells contain components typical of photosynthetic cells although the latter cell type contains smaller chloroplasts and fewer mitochondria and microbodies than the mesophyll cells. In addition, the mesophyll cells contain numerous invaginations of the plasmalemma bordering the chloroplasts and evaginations of the outer membrane of the opposing chloroplast envelope. In places, these membranes appear continuous with each other. The minor veins consist of tracheary elements, xylem parenchyma cells, sieve-tube members, companion and phloem parenchyma cells, and other cells simply designated vascular parenchyma cells. The companion and phloem parenchyma cells are typically larger than the sieve-tube members with the companion cells containing a much denser cytoplasm that the phloem parenchyma. Cytoplasmic connections occur along all possible routes from the mesophyll to the sieve-tube members and consist of either simple or branched plasmodesmata between parenchymatic elements or pore-plasmodesmata between the sieve-tube members and parenchyma cells. The highest frequency of plasmodesmata occurs between the sieve-tube members and companion cells, although the value is essentially the same as between the various parenchymatic elements of the phloem. Compared to several previously studied species, the frequency of plasmodesmata between cell types of the spinach leaf is low. These results are discussed in relation to apoplastic vs. symplastic solute transport and sieve-tube loading in this species.  相似文献   

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