THE OPEN CONDUPLICATE CARPEL OF AKEBIA QUINATA (BERBERIDALES: LARDIZABALACEAE) |
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Authors: | Willard W. Payne James L. Seago |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Illinois, Urbana |
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Abstract: | Anatomical studies of the carpel of Akebia quinata Decaisne show that it is open at the apex. This carpel is interpreted in this study as a primitively unsealed, conduplicate megasporophyll of the type that is well known among such primitive ranalean genera as Drimys, Bubbia, Degeneria, Schisandra, etc. This interpretation is complemented by other primitive character states of the Akebia flower and carpel, including free organs, laminar stamens, an only slightly modified stigmatic crest, laminal placentation of the many ovules, suture-like closure of the ovary wall below the stigmatic crest, and maturation of the carpel to produce a moist, dehiscent follicle. These features indicate relative primitiveness of the Lardizabalaceae among the families of the Berberidales. |
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