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INCREASE IN CELL WALL SURFACE AREA DURING ENLARGEMENT OF CAMBIAL DERIVATIVES IN ABIES CONCOLOR
Author(s) -
Wilson Brayton F.
Publication year - 1963
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.1537-2197.1963.tb10639.x
Subject(s) - tracheid , xylem , phloem , biology , vascular cambium , cell plate , cambium , anatomy , sieve (category theory) , botany , cell wall , biophysics , cell division , cell , cytokinesis , genetics , mathematics , combinatorics
W ilson , B rayton F. (U. California, Berkeley). Increase in cell wall surface area during enlargement of cambial derivatives in Abies eoncolor . Amer. Jour. Bot. 50(1): 95–102. Illus. 1963.— Dimensions of fusiform cells (tracheids and sieve cells) and ray cells were measured from samples of the 1960 xylem and phloem increment of 5 trees felled at monthly intervals from April through July, 1960. Calculations using these measurements gave the magnitude, direction and rate of increase in cell wall surface area during enlargement. Although 14 times more tracheids than sieve cells were produced, both cell types enlarged mostly in a radial direction (up to 400%) at the same rate (20–33 × 10 3 μ 2 wall surface area/day) to the same final size. Fusiform cambial cells doubled their wall area between successive periclinal divisions. Calculations showed that ⅞ of this increase was in the radial walls of the daughter cells at a rate comparable to that in enlarging tracheids and sieve cells; the other ⅞ was from cell plate formation at an estimated rate of 187–327 × 10 3 μ 2 /day. Enlargement of derivatives in the radial direction largely determined the amount of increase in wall area. Besides radial enlargement, tracheids also elongated (up to 13%) and phloem cells enlarged tangentially (sieve cells up to 36%; pholem ray cells up to 60%). The relationships of enlarging tracheids and xylem ray cells are discussed, and it is suggested that slippage may occur between the developing walls.