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FLORAL ORGANOGENESIS IN FIVE GENERA OF THE MARANTACEAE AND IN CANNA (CANNACEAE)
Author(s) -
Kirchoff Bruce K.
Publication year - 1983
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.1537-2197.1983.tb07878.x
Subject(s) - bract , sepal , biology , whorl (mollusc) , primordium , petal , gynoecium , botany , calyx , stamen , perianth , anatomy , inflorescence , genus , pollen , biochemistry , gene
The paired flowers of all species of the Marantaceae studied, except Monotagma plurispicatum , are produced through the division of an apical meristem with a tunica‐corpus structure. The solitary flowers of M. plurispicatum develop from a similar meristem which does not bifurcate. The paired flowers of Canna indica are produced in the axil of a florescence bract through the formation of a bract and an axillary flower on the side of the primordium which gives rise to the largest flower of the pair. The sequence of organ initiation for both families is: calyx, corolla and inner androecial whorl, outer androecial whorl, gynoecium. The sequence of sepal formation is opposite in the two families. In the Cannaceae it leads directly into the spiral created by the formation of the other organs, while in the Marantaceae the sequence of sepal formation follows a spiral opposite to that of the other floral organs. The members of the corolla and inner androecial whorl separate from common primordia. In general these common primordia separate into a petal and an inner androecial member through the initiation of two growth centers, at the same level, in the dorsal and ventral flanks of the primordium. In Ischnosiphon elegans and Pleiostachya pruinosa the stamen is initiated at a lower position than the petal in the ventral flank of the common primordium. A similar pattern of initiation is described for the callose staminode in Marantochloa purpurea and Canna indica . This pattern is interpreted as a variation on the more generalized pattern of inner androecial formation found in the other genera.

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