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Growth and Development of the Banana Plant: II. The Transition from the Vegetative to the Floral Shoot in Musa acuminata cv. Gros Michel
Authors:BARKER  W G; STEWARD  F C
Institution:Department of Botany, Cornell University Ithaca, N.Y.
Abstract:The changes that occur in the shoot apex of the banana, as itpasses from the vegetative to the flowering stage, are described.The crucial events occur well before floral primordia are evident,and they require a redistribution of activity in the variousgrowing regions. The vegetative shoot apex is in a central depressionin the rhizome; there is virtually no internodal growth in theaxis, the most active growth is in the leaf bases; vegetativebuds do not form in the leaf axils but only appear adventitiouslyfar from the tip of the shoot. With the onset of flowering thisis changed; growth in the axis itself, previously suppressed,occurs and flower buds arise as primordia in the axils of subtendingbracts. The bracts do not show the market growth in their baseswhich is so characteristic of leaves. Thus, the shoot apex risesto the level of the rhizome and then above it; as it does so,its tip changes in shape from a broad flattened some to a pointedcone. At the transitional stage, more activity occurs in thecells of the mantle, or tunica, which now consists of 3 to 4layers over the central dome. Below, in the central or mothercell zone of the corpus, which was quiescent in the vegetativeshoot, the cells spring into greater activity, becoming moreprotoplasmic and stain more deeply. Directly below this regionin the rib meristem, cells show transverse divisions. Bractprimordia occur high on the flanks of the apex, and, thoughthey originate in the manner of leaves, their subsequent growthis different. Flower primordia occur even in the axils of bractsclose to the shoot tip. Thus, the problem now is to designatethe source, nature, and mode of action of the stimuli whichinitiate and control this quite different distribution of growthin the floral, as contrasted with the vegetative, shoot. Thesignificance of the previously more quiescent central, or mothercell zone, of the apex as the source of such stimuli, is stressed.Thus, flowering first requires that the limiting controls whichapply to the vegetative shoot be released, and, secondly, thatthe apex of the shoot, rather than the leaf base, becomes themain centre of growth and development.
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