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COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT OF SECRETORY CAVITIES IN THE TRIBES AMORPHEAE AND PSORALEEAE (LEGUMINOSAE: PAPILIONOIDEAE)
Author(s) -
Turner Glenn W.
Publication year - 1986
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.1537-2197.1986.tb08564.x
Subject(s) - biology , primordium , apex (geometry) , tribe , anatomy , botany , biochemistry , sociology , gene , anthropology
The tribes Amorpheae and Psoraleeae of the Leguminosae (Papilionoidae) share the characteristics of one‐seeded fruits and gland‐dotted foliage. Because of this, they traditionally have been considered closely related (either a single tribe or two closely related tribes). However, Barneby (1977) has suggested that the Amorpheae and Psoraleeae are not close but previously had been combined on the basis of a superficial resemblance. This paper describes the structure of the secretory cavities responsible for the gland dots. Approximately 50% of the species of each tribe were surveyed for cavity structure with leaflet clearings. Eight species were then chosen for developmental studies of their glands. Several distinct kinds of secretory cavities are present in these plants. Trabeculate cavities (found only in the Psoraleeae) are traversed by many elongated cells. This type of cavity and nontrabeculate cavities of the Psoraleeae initiate with localized dorsiventral elongation of protodermal cells to form a hemispherical protuberance on the leaf primordium surface. Development proceeds with separation of the cells of a protuberance along their lateral walls facing the protuberance center. As the leaf expands, the protuberance sinks until its apex is flush with the leaf surface. The result is a cavity lined by an epithelium of modified epidermal cells. Trabeculate cavities have more cells in the initial protodermal bump than nontrabeculate “epidermal” cavities, and the central cells of the protuberance are not involved in epithelium formation, but become separated from other cells on all lateral sides, transversing the cavity as trabeculae. Cavities of the Amorpheae are all nontrabeculate and subepidermal. They initiate with periclinal divisions of protodermal cells that result in two cell layers. The exterior layer differentiates into epidermis, while the interior layer divides to produce a small spherical group of cells (“epithelial initials”). Schizogeny occurs in the center of these cells to produce an epithelium‐lined cavity. Previous studies of cavity development in the Amorpheae described lysigenous and schizo‐lysigenous cavities for most species. These early reports are reviewed, and the possible role of preparation artifacts in producing images of lysigenous development in general is discussed.

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