Les nectaires extrafloraux pédicellés chez l’Ailanthus glandulosa

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 683-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielle Clair-Maczulajtys ◽  
Gérard Bory

Extrafloral nectaries are present on the first leaves appearing when the buds open. Located at the base of the petiole, they are stalked and have an apical pore. They are initiated early on the margins of leaf primordia. These organs are interpreted as reduced stipules consisting of one axis with its vascular system with the extremity occupied by a nectary. A viscous and clear nectar is extruded from the pore. Without vascularization, there is never an apical gland. Stalked nectaries are also observed on the adaxial surface of the lamina. Described as teratological events, they correspond to the deviation of a vein perpendicular to the plane of the leaf. For aerial organs these nectaries show clearly the close connection between the vascular system and the glandular extremity. The tissue structure of these stalked nectaries is similar to that of the marginal nectaries. The morphological and physiological signification of these structures is discussed.

1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugh M. Dale

The shoot apex consists of a few initial cells at the tip of a thimble devoid of leaf initials for at least 100 μ. Leaf primorida are initiated from the superficial layer of cells, whereas branch buds arising among the; very youngest leaf primordia are produced deeper in the apex. Chinks occur where three or more cell walls come together. The tissue of the stem for the first 200 μ has no internodes. Two squamulae intervaginales lie on the adaxial surface of each leaf with which their development is associated. Internodes are initiated by the longitudinal growth and division of cells from the bottom of the leaf insertion disks. Cells of the young node divide longitudinally to increase the diameter of the nodal disk and to split the intercalary meristem into segments. Internodes are thus initiated with lacunae. Cells destined to become wood vacuolate at the seventh leaf whorl. Scalariform thickenings are produced but quickly disintegrate along with the rest of the xylem cells leaving a lacuna in the center of the stem. The bast surrounding the central xylem differentiates only slightly, beginning at the 20th leaf whorl, whereas the leaf traces and vertical cortical strands are apparent in younger tissue.


A method whereby the apical meristem of the fern Dryopteris aristata Druce can be partially isolated from the adjacent lateral organs and tissues is described. This procedure has been adopted as a means of investigating growth and morphogenesis at the shoot apex. The technique involves the severance of the incipient vascular tissue which originates immediately below the apical meristem; the isolated meristem is thus seated on a plug of growing medullary parenchyma. Leaf primordia can be similarly isolated. Meristems treated in this way are capable of growth. They develop into short vasculated shoots bearing leaves. The nutrients sustaining this growth must reach the apical meristem from below by diffusing through medullary parenchyma at the base of the isolated terminal region. Above the parenchymatous region a solenostelic vascular system is present in the new axis; this is in marked contrast to the dictyostelic configuration of the parental shoot below. On the further growth of the isolated meristem leaves are produced and the stele becomes dictyostelic. The new leaves, of which as many as fourteen have been observed after 11 weeks’ growth, show the normal phyllotactic arrangement, and this is continuous with that of the main shoot below. The procedure adopted has the effect of removing the physiological dominance of the apical meristem relative to the main shoot; thus numerous large buds develop on the lateral segments of the parental shoot but none on the isolated terminal region. The growth of isolated leaf primordia is very limited. The vascular system develops as a solenostele, foliar gaps are not formed in the region of confluence with the shoot stele, axillary buds are developed, and the leaf apex becomes directed outwards. These several features are in marked contrast to the normal development. The isolated lateral segments are also capable of further growth. The experimental procedure adopted involves the severance of the vascular tissues at various levels. An account is given of new and hitherto unrecorded morphological developments observed in these segments. Interesting features include the formation of large solenostelic buds, the solenostelic development of isolated meristeles, medullation of meristeles and the induction of a polycyclic stelar condition, in one instance by a process of cambium-like activity. These are all in marked contrast to the normal development of the intact shoot. The data which have been obtained are discussed with special reference to the path of translocation of nutrients to the terminal meristem and to leaf primordia, morphogenetic processes at the shoot apex, the factors influencing the differentiation of the vascular system, and theories of shoot formation and constitution. The results of these experiments give no support to phytonic theories but emphasize the difference in potentiality for development between shoot and leaf primordia. In this connexion the factors which determine the shape and system of segmentation of the apical initials of shoot and leaf are seen to require further investigation. The hypotheses that lateral buds are inhibited by substances proceeding from the apical meristem, that the initial differentiation of vascular tissue can be attributed to the basipetal diffusion of a substance or substances from the actively growing apical meristem, and that under conditions of tensile stress incipient vascular tissue undergoes a parenchymatous development, are supported by the data of these experiments. The observations afford a clear indication of the diversity of the morphogenetic activity in the growing region. Nutritional, mechanical and other factors are seen to be important in influencing the distribution of tissues during development. The view entertained by comparative morphologists that the vascular system in ferns is of a highly conservative nature and therefore of great value in phyletic studies is to some extent opposed by the data of these experiments. But notwithstanding the several unusual vascular configurations produced as a result of the experimental treatment, there is eventually a return to the typical vascular arrangements of the normal shoot. There is thus a need for harmonizing the data of the causal and phyletic aspects. The more thoroughly the operation of morphogenetic factors extrinsic to the specific hereditary substance is understood, the more critical will be the selection of criteria of comparison for phyletic purposes.


1972 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 65 ◽  
Author(s):  
JW Patrick

The sequence of vascular differentiation in the shoot of the main tiller of Triticum aestivum L. was reconstructed from seriai transverse sections of shoot apices made at various stages of development. The pattern of initiation and development of the pro- cambial strands was confirmed. The provascular bundles of the pith plexus arose independently and developed acropetally from the base of the future node. Early dif- ferentiation of proto-phloem and -xylem in the main procambial strands proceeded bidirectionally up the leaf primordia and down the stem from a site of initiation isolated from other differentiated vascular elements. Further development was basipetal from the tip of the primordia, and the rate of differentiation of the sieve elements was sufficient to maintain phloem continuity across the intercalary meristems of the laminae, sheaths, and internodes. Within the developing nodes sieve tube differentiation in the cross-linking strands lagged behind that of the leaf traces they interconnected, and this may influence the movement of photoassimilate from a recently expanded leaf to the apex.


2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 1085-1093 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Madeleine Ray ◽  
Gar W. Rothwell ◽  
Ruth A. Stockey

Early Cretaceous fossilized leaves assignable to the extinct seed plant order Bennettitales occur within an exceptionally diverse Early Cretaceous (Valanginian) flora of anatomically preserved plant fossils at Apple Bay on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. One of the bennettitalean leaf types has an entire margin, with laminae that are attached near the adaxial surface of the midvein. Leaves are 10–15 mm wide with an adaxial surface that shows distinct corrugations, and a midrib that is exposed adaxially. The vascular system of the midrib consists of a crescent-shaped ring of collateral bundles. Lateral veins diverge from midrib at ∼90°, are typically simple but occasionally branch at base of the lamina. Vein density is 12–15 per cm. Leaves are hypostomatic with syndetocheilic stomata that are randomly oriented between veins. Internal anatomy consists of an adaxial hypodermis of closely-spaced isodiametric cells, mesophyll that is differentiated into adaxial palisade and abaxial spongy zones, and collateral bundles that show a distinct bundle sheath with bundle sheath extensions. This novel combination of characters represents the diverse bennettitalean genus Nilssoniopteris. Nilssoniopteris corrugata new species is only the second species of the genus for which internal anatomy is preserved. This species increases the known variation of bennettitalean leaf anatomy, and reinforces our appreciation for the global distribution of bennettitalean seed plants during the Mesozoic.


2014 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elżbieta Weryszko-Chmielewska ◽  
Małgorzata Stpiczyńska

The undertaken investigations (SEM, LM) concentrated on the distribution and the anatomy of osmophores emitting a characteristic odour of inflorescence of <i>Amorphophallus rivieri</i> Durieu. The osmophores situated at the top part of spadix (appendix), secreted a strong fragrance during the whole period of blooming, whereas those located on the stamens, in the apical and in the middle part of the spatha produced a weaker smell. The fragrance at the basis of spatha was undetectable although both the secretion and the tissue structure characteristic for osmophores located on the adaxial surface of the remaining part of the spatha were observed. The gland tissue consisted of the epidermis and of several layers of subepidermal parenchyma. The epidermis was covered by a thin, striated cuticle or sticks of wax. Moreover, there was also a small number of stomata covered with a smooth cuticle. The cells of osmophores stained intensively with neutral red. They contained numerous lipid drops, which presumably are carriers of the secreted fragrance substances. The cells of subepidermal layers were filled up with starch grains in the appendix and stamens. A considerable quantity of starch was also observed in the deeper layers of parenchyma in the spatha. The pattern of osmophores distribution corresponds with the localization of these inflorescence fragments, which emit heat, as showed in the literature.


1985 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-113
Author(s):  
L. K. Bombina

Systemic scleroderma, like other diseases of the rheumatic circle, is characterized by a progressive disorder of the connective tissue structure, which underlies damage to the vascular system, as well as various organs and tissues [1, 2].


Author(s):  
W. Bernard

In comparison to many other fields of ultrastructural research in Cell Biology, the successful exploration of genes and gene activity with the electron microscope in higher organisms is a late conquest. Nucleic acid molecules of Prokaryotes could be successfully visualized already since the early sixties, thanks to the Kleinschmidt spreading technique - and much basic information was obtained concerning the shape, length, molecular weight of viral, mitochondrial and chloroplast nucleic acid. Later, additonal methods revealed denaturation profiles, distinction between single and double strandedness and the use of heteroduplexes-led to gene mapping of relatively simple systems carried out in close connection with other methods of molecular genetics.


Author(s):  
H.W. Deckman ◽  
B.F. Flannery ◽  
J.H. Dunsmuir ◽  
K.D' Amico

We have developed a new X-ray microscope which produces complete three dimensional images of samples. The microscope operates by performing X-ray tomography with unprecedented resolution. Tomography is a non-invasive imaging technique that creates maps of the internal structure of samples from measurement of the attenuation of penetrating radiation. As conventionally practiced in medical Computed Tomography (CT), radiologists produce maps of bone and tissue structure in several planar sections that reveal features with 1mm resolution and 1% contrast. Microtomography extends the capability of CT in several ways. First, the resolution which approaches one micron, is one thousand times higher than that of the medical CT. Second, our approach acquires and analyses the data in a panoramic imaging format that directly produces three-dimensional maps in a series of contiguous stacked planes. Typical maps available today consist of three hundred planar sections each containing 512x512 pixels. Finally, and perhaps of most import scientifically, microtomography using a synchrotron X-ray source, allows us to generate maps of individual element.


Author(s):  
A. E. Hotchkiss ◽  
A. T. Hotchkiss ◽  
R. P. Apkarian

Multicellular green algae may be an ancestral form of the vascular plants. These algae exhibit cell wall structure, chlorophyll pigmentation, and physiological processes similar to those of higher plants. The presence of a vascular system which provides water, minerals, and nutrients to remote tissues in higher plants was believed unnecessary for the algae. Among the green algae, the Chaetophorales are complex highly branched forms that might require some means of nutrient transport. The Chaetophorales do possess apical meristematic groups of cells that have growth orientations suggestive of stem and root positions. Branches of Chaetophora incressata were examined by the scanning electron microscope (SEM) for ultrastructural evidence of pro-vascular transport.


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