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CONSTANCY OF RELATIVE VOLUMES OF ZONES IN SHOOT APICAL MERISTEMS IN CACTACEAE: IMPLICATIONS CONCERNING MERISTEM SIZE, SHAPE, AND METABOLISM
Author(s) -
Mauseth James D.,
Niklas Karl J.
Publication year - 1979
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.1537-2197.1979.tb06303.x
Subject(s) - meristem , biology , pith , apex (geometry) , tunica , volume (thermodynamics) , botany , shoot , apical cell , anatomy , cell , physics , genetics , quantum mechanics
The volumes and dimensions of shoot apical meristem zones were determined for 21 species in 10 genera of the Cactaceae. If the volumes of the central‐mother‐cell zone (CMCZ), the peripheral zone (PZ), and the pith‐rib meristem (PRM) are expressed as percentages of the total volume of the corpus, then they are remarkably constant (CMCZ = 11.1% of the volume of the corpus, PZ = 61.2% and PRM = 27.1%) regardless of the relative size of the apical meristems. The relative volume of the tunica decreases, however, as the whole apex increases. The zones have variable shapes, and whereas the PZ and PRM are always trapezoidal in longitudinal section, in apices with large volumes, these zones have a flatter, more flaring shape than they have in smaller apices. Thus large apices are flatter and less hemispherical than are small apices. The CMCZ, however, maintains a constant shape and is always relatively hemispherical regardless of its volume. A hypothesis that relates all of these shape and volume relationships as an integrated growth sequence is proposed.

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