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A survey of stomatal movements and associated potassium fluxes in the plant kingdom

 

作者: C. M. Willmer,   J. E. Pallas Jr.,  

 

期刊: Canadian Journal of Botany  (NRC Available online 1973)
卷期: Volume 51, issue 1  

页码: 37-42

 

ISSN:0008-4026

 

年代: 1973

 

DOI:10.1139/b73-006

 

出版商: NRC Research Press

 

数据来源: NRC

 

摘要:

Histochemical tests for K+were carried out on the epidermis of aerial organs from plants which varied in evolutionary development (e.g., clubmosses, ferns, angiosperms) and general morphology (e.g., monocotyledons, succulent dicotyledons, woody dicotyledons). These tests made on epidermal tissue with open or closed stomata suggested that K+transport is implicated in stomatal movements regardless of the evolutionary level and the stomatal location in the plants investigated. In all species that displayed substantial stomatal opening, K+was detectable in the guard cells. With small stomatal apertures, K+was located in guard and subsidiary cells ofCommelina communisL. leaves andGlycine max. L. cotyledons. When stomata were closed, K+was detectable in the subsidiary cells of all the grass species,Kalanchoë pinnataPers.,C. communis, and, occasionally, in the epidermal cells surrounding the stomata of some ferns. A condition was also observed when virtually no K+was detectable in the guard or subsidiary cells ofC. communisleaves orG. maxcotyledons. Commonly, when stomata were closed, K+was not detectable in any cells of the epidermis. Exceptions were the "K+storage cells," trichomes and epidermal cells ofArachis hypogaeaL., and in the more primitive plants from and including the level of the ferns.

 

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