Autor: |
Andruchow-Colombo, Ana1,2,3 (AUTHOR) ana.andruchow.colombo@gmail.com, Pozner, Raúl3,4 (AUTHOR), Abarzúa, Ana M.5 (AUTHOR), Escapa, Ignacio H.2,3 (AUTHOR) |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
International Journal of Plant Sciences. Mar/Apr2024, Vol. 185 Issue 2, p159-176. 18p. |
Abstrakt: |
Premise of research. The southern conifer family Podocarpaceae inhabits wet environments and is highly diverse in its vegetative and megasporangiate structures. The Podocarpaceae are today divided into a tropical clade and a prumnopityoid clade. We study the morphology and anatomy of leaves and megasporangiate cones at postpollination and the maturity of two native Patagonian Podocarpaceae, Saxegothaea conspicua (tropical clade) and Lepidothamnus fonkii (prumnopityoid clade). We aim to add to the knowledge of the South American Podocarpaceae and to interpret their unique morphologies to aid in our understanding of the deep and cryptic fossil record of the family and its relationships with other conifer families. Methodology. Specimens of S. conspicua and L. fonkii were collected in natural and cultivated populations of southern Chile and imaged using different macro- and microscopic techniques, including epifluorescence, bright-field, and scanning electron microscopy. Pivotal results. Leaf and megasporangiate cone anatomy and morphology are described in detail for both species. For S. conspicua , we observed a helical to slightly planate leaf arrangement with leaf reorientation, expanded leaves without accessory transfusion tissue, an apparent lack of vascularization of the epimatium (which is bikeeled and does not surround the ovule completely), and nonsaccate pollen germinating on the bract toward the protruding nucellus. For L. fonkii , we observed the absence of leaf hypodermis and resin canals, the presence of a micropylar hook in the ovule and seed integument, bisaccate pollen germinating within the ovule, cone bracts reduced in number and size, and a basal receptacle-like structure. Conclusions. Leaf arrangement in Saxegothaea shows an intermediate condition between the primary helical phyllotaxis common in the family and the secondary planate arrangement seen in most podocarps with expanded leaves. Lepidothamnus fonkii was determined to have a false receptacle (i.e., a receptacle-like structure originated from vegetative basal bracts rather than by sterile ovuliferous complexes). The presence of a false receptacle in L. fonkii is a morphological novelty in Podocarpaceae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
GreenFILE |
Externí odkaz: |
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