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ANATOMY AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOLISIA
Author(s) -
Boke Norman H.
Publication year - 1960
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1960.tb07095.x
Subject(s) - biology , primordium , botany , hilum (anatomy) , anatomy , zoology , genetics , gene
B oke , N orman H. (U. Oklahoma, Norman.) Anatomy and development in Solisia. Amer. Jour. Bot. 47(1): 59—65. Illus. 1960.–The genus Solisia contains a single species of small cacti which resemble certain mammillarias in having: pink, lateral flowers; milky juice; and dimorphic areoles. Adult specimens have elongate spiniferous areoles with an unusual sequence of spine initiation. The first four or five primordia appear at the posterior end of the areole meristem; the next are initiated near its center, after which initiation proceeds both acropetally and basipetally until the single, elliptical series of primordia is complete. A similar pattern of spine initiation occurs in Pelecyphora aselliformis, but this species differs markedly from S. pectinata in other respects. In seedlings of S. pectinata the areoles are broadly elliptical and spine initiation is strictly acropetal, a situation found in certain species of Mammillaria . Seeds of S. pectinata are black with a large hilum and a small perisperm. Since the perisperm has apparently been overlooked, it appears that only the black seed coat and relatively large hilum keep the species out of Mammillaria . If Buxbaum's postulates concerning the value of seed structure in tracing phylogeny in the Cactaceae are valid, S. pectinata must have diverged from the main line of evolution somewhere below Neobesseya . In that event, the species probably merits generic rank; otherwise, it seems preferable to return it to Mammillaria .

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