Title of article :
Unusual Metaxylem Tracheids in Petioles of Amorphophallus (Araceae) Giant Leaves
Author/Authors :
HEJNOWICZ، ZYGMUNT نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
-406
From page :
407
To page :
0
Abstract :
Background and Aims Petioles of huge solitary leaves of mature plants of Amorphophallus resemble tree trunks supporting an umbrellalike crown. Since they may be 4 m tall, adaptations to water transport in the petioles are as important as adaptations to mechanical support of lamina. The petiole is a cylindrical shell composed of compact unlignified tissue with a honeycomb aerenchymatous core. In both parts numerous vascular bundles occur, which are unique because of the scarcity of lignified elements. In the xylemic part of each bundle there is a characteristic canal with unlignified walls. The xylem pecularities are described and interpreted. Material Vascular bundles in mature petioles of Amorphophallus titanum and A. gigas plants were studied using light and scanning electron microscopy. Key Results The xylemic canal represents a file of huge metaxylem tracheids (diameter 55-200 (mu)m, length >30 mm) with unlignified lateral walls surrounded by turgid parenchyma cells. Only their end walls, orientated steeply, have lignified secondary thickenings. The file is accompanied by a strand of narrow tracheids with lignified bar-type secondary walls, which come into direct contact with the wide tracheid in many places along its length. Conclusions The metaxylem tracheids in A. petioles are probably the longest and widest tracheids known. Only their end walls have lignified secondary thickenings. Tracheids are long due to enormous intercalary elongation and wide due to a transverse growth mechanism similar to that underlying formation of aerenchyma cavities. The lack of lignin in lateral walls shifts the function of ʹpipe wallsʹ to the turgid parenchyma paving the tracheid. The analogy to carinal canals of Equisetum, as well as other protoxylem lacunas is discussed. The stiff partitions between the long and wide tracheids are interpreted as structures similar to the end walls in vessels.
Keywords :
protoxylem lacuna , metaxylem , lignification , A. gigas , Amorphophallus titanum , tracheid length , Apoplasm , cohesion-tension theory , petiole
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Record number :
118587
Link To Document :
بازگشت