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TYPES OF CAMBIAL ACTIVITY AND WOOD ANATOMY OF STYLIDIUM (STYLIDIACEAE)
Authors:Sherwin Carlquist
Institution:Claremont Graduate School, Pomona College, and Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont, California, 91711
Abstract:Three types of cambial activity, two hitherto unreported, are described for Stylidium. The four species of sect. Rhynchangium of subgenus Nitrangium have woody cylinders in upright stems. In these a cambium formed beneath the endodermis produces a determinate quantity of fibers, vessel elements, and interxylary phloem strands toward the inside but no derivatives toward the outside; this was correctly reported by Van Tieghem and Morot (1884a) but doubted by subsequent workers. The same species have lignotubers in which a cambium produces contorted xylem (mostly vessels) to the inside, phellem toward the outside. In S. glandulosum and S. laricifolium a cambium formed beneath the endodermis produces an indeterminate quantity of xylem (fibers and vessel elements) and interxylary phloem toward the inside, nothing toward the outside. The xylem is rayless and lacks axial xylem parenchyma. These three modes of cambial activity represent innovations within Stylidiaceae. The family has a wholly herbaceous ancestry if one can judge from the total lack of cambial activity in vascular bundles.
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