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DEVELOPMENTAL STUDIES OF ELODEA CANADENSIS MICHX.: I. MORPHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT AT THE SHOOT APEX

 

作者: Hugh M. Dale,  

 

期刊: Canadian Journal of Botany  (NRC Available online 1957)
卷期: Volume 35, issue 1  

页码: 13-24

 

ISSN:0008-4026

 

年代: 1957

 

DOI:10.1139/b57-004

 

出版商: NRC Research Press

 

数据来源: NRC

 

摘要:

The shoot apex consists of a few initial cells at the tip of a thimble devoid of leaf initials for at least 100 μ. Leaf primorida are initiated from the superficial layer of cells, whereas branch buds arising among the; very youngest leaf primordia are produced deeper in the apex. Chinks occur where three or more cell walls come together. The tissue of the stem for the first 200 μ has no internodes. Two squamulae intervaginales lie on the adaxial surface of each leaf with which their development is associated. Internodes are initiated by the longitudinal growth and division of cells from the bottom of the leaf insertion disks. Cells of the young node divide longitudinally to increase the diameter of the nodal disk and to split the intercalary meristem into segments. Internodes are thus initiated with lacunae. Cells destined to become wood vacuolate at the seventh leaf whorl. Scalariform thickenings are produced but quickly disintegrate along with the rest of the xylem cells leaving a lacuna in the center of the stem. The bast surrounding the central xylem differentiates only slightly, beginning at the 20th leaf whorl, whereas the leaf traces and vertical cortical strands are apparent in younger tissue.

 



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