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DIOECY IN BAUHINIA RESULTING FROM ORGAN SUPPRESSION
Authors:Shirley C Tucker
Institution:Department of Botany, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 70803
Abstract:Bauhinia malabarica and B. divaricata have both been reported to have dimorphic flowers; floral development of these species has been investigated and compared using SEM. B. malabarica is subdioecious, with three types of flowers: perfect, staminate, and carpellate. Individual trees usually have only one type of flower. Perfect and carpellate flowers have similar initiation of floral organs; each has five sepals, five petals, two whorls of five stamen primordia and a carpel primordium. The carpels of carpellate flowers do not differ from those of perfect flowers throughout development. Both have a gynophore or stipe and a cuplike hypanthium. Stamen development diverges markedly after mid-development: the perfect flowers have ten stamens in two whorls, the outer with longer filaments than the inner. All stamens have anthers, which are covered abaxially with abundant inflated trichomes. Carpellate flowers have a circle of short cylindrical staminodia, each bearing a few hairs, about the base of the carpel on the rim of the hypanthium. Heteromorphy in B. malabarica is effected by suppression of stamen development, even though the usual number of stamen primordia is initiated. Suppression of stamens occurs at midstage in development in carpellate flowers of B. malabarica, and is complete. In B. divaricata nine stamen primordia are released from suppression in late stage, undergo intercalary growth and form a staminodial tube around the carpel stipe. The dimorphy in B. divaricata is expressed late in bud enlargement as divergent rates of growth in the carpel in the two morphs.
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