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LOSS OF FLORAL ORGANS IN ATELEIA (LEGUMINOSAE: PAPILIONOIDEAE: SOPHOREAE)
Author(s) -
Tucker Shirley C.
Publication year - 1990
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.1537-2197.1990.tb14465.x
Subject(s) - sepal , biology , gynoecium , petal , stamen , primordium , meristem , botany , pollen , gene , genetics , shoot
Ateleia herbert‐smithii is unique among legumes in being a wind‐pollinated tree; carpellate and staminate flowers are restricted to different trees. Development of the two floral morphs, however, is essentially the same except for smaller carpels in functionally staminate flowers and failure of pollen formation in the anthers of functionally carpellate flowers. The floral development of Ateleia herbert‐smithii is highly atypical among papilionoids and the tribe Sophoreae. Order of organ initiation is: sepals, solitary petal, carpel, and lastly all stamens in erratic order. Sepal order is unidirectional from the abaxial side, the normal pattern for papilionoids. Only one petal, the vexillum or standard, is initiated. Subsequent initiation is completely different from the usual unidirectional pattern of most papilionoids. A meristem ring forms, delimiting the solitary carpel centrally. Ten stamen primordia are initiated on the meristem ring, first laterally, then adaxially, and lastly abaxially. There is a tendency for antesepalous stamens to form before the antepetalous ones. The loss of four of the five petals is thought to alter drastically the subsequent organogeny as to position of organs and their order of initiation. Carpel initiation in Ateleia is precocious, but not uniquely so among legumes.

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