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Comparative vegetative anatomy and systematics of Cymbidium (Cymbidieae: Orchidaceae)
Authors:TOMOHISA YUKAWA FLS  and WILLIAM LOUIS STERN FLS
Institution:Tsukuba Botanical Garden, National Science Museum, Tsukuba 305–0005, Japan; Department of Botany, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611–8526, USA
Abstract:The genus Cymbidium (Orchidaceae) exhibits distinctive ecological diversification and occurs in terrestrial, epiphytic, and lithophytic life forms. One species, Cymbidium macrorhizon , lacks foliage leaves and has a strongly mycoparasitic existence. Correlation between habitat differentiation and anatomical characters was tested for 21 species of Cymbidium and its putative sister groups. Although hypostomaty characterizes the genus, C. canaliculatum shows amphistomaty. Ecological preference of this species indicates that amphistomaty is likely adapted to intensive insolation. Four types of subepidermal foliar sclerenchyma were found. Two forest floor species, C. goeringii and C. lancifolium as well as the mycoparasitic C. macrorhizon , do not have this sclerenchyma. In this genus, development of sclerenchyma is correlated with the degree of epiphytism. Palisade mesophyll evolved in Cymbidium section Cymbidium . As members of this section grow on isolated trees in tropical lowland forests or on rocks, the differentiation of palisade tissue is probably correlated with immigration to high light habitats. With the exception of C. macrorhizon , stegmata were found in leaves and stems of Cymbidium . Furthermore, a few epiphytic species have stegmata in their roots; this is a curious feature rarely found in vascular plants. Subterranean rhizomes characterize terrestrial species, while ageotropic roots are found in some epiphytic species. Cymbidium macrorhizon shows peculiar features such as degeneration of stomata, anomocytic stomata, and lack of stegmata and sclerenchyma. This set of character transformations is probably correlated with the evolution of mycoparasitic existence. © 2002 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society , 2002, 138 , 383–419.
Keywords:ageotropic roots  epiphytism  life form  mycoparasite  stegmata  tilosomes
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