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Gynoecium and fruit histology and development in Eugeissona (Calamoideae: Arecaceae)
Authors:ALEXEY V F Ch BOBROV  JOHN DRANSFIELD FLS  MIKHAIL S ROMANOV  EKATERINA S ROMANOVA
Institution:1. Department of Biogeography, Geographical Faculty, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991, Russia;2. Herbarium, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 3AE, UK;3. Department of Dendrology, Main Botanical Garden nm. Tsitsin N. V. RAS, Botanicheskaya st., 4, 127276, Moscow, Russia;4. Botanical garden, Biological Faculty, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991, Russia
Abstract:The Malesian genus Eugeissona, with six species, is sister to all other Calamoideae, which are in turn sister to all other Arecaceae. The structure of its gynoecium and fruit is thus potentially of great interest in understanding gynoecium evolution in calamoid palms and in Arecaceae as a whole. The wall of the incompletely trilocular gynoecium of Eugeissona is thick and differentiated into several topographic zones, with a well‐developed vascular system even before pollination. During gynoecium and fruit development, the outer and inner epidermises are little specialized and form the exocarp and endocarp (obliterated in the mature fruit), respectively. In contrast, the mesophyll of the carpels differentiates strongly and is markedly specialized: four massive topographic zones are easily distinguished within the mesocarp. The peripheral zone of the mesocarp forms the body of the scales (a synapomorphy for Calamoideae). The second and the fourth zones are multilayered and parenchymatous with a massive derived vascular system in the former. The third zone of the mesocarp comprises a stout sclerenchymatous pyrene, made of fibre‐like sclereids, the innermost bundles of the derived vascular system and dorsal, ventral and lateral vascular bundles. The fruits of all other Calamoideae lack the sclerenchymatous pyrene and thus differ dramatically from Eugeissona fruits. The similarity of the processes of histogenesis during gynoecium and fruit development in Eugeissona with those in Nypa and borassoid palms, suggests these features could be plesiomorphic for the family. © 2012 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2012, 168 , 377–394.
Keywords:Borasseae  carpel wall structure  Nypa  pericarp anatomy  pyrene  scales  vasculature
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