Results 11 to 20 of about 36 (31)

A COMPARATIVE ANATOMICAL STUDY OF THE STEMS OF CLIMBING PLANTS FROM THE FOREST REMNANTS OF MARINGA, BRAZIL ESTUDIO ANATOMICO COMPARATIVO DE LOS TALLOS DE PLANTAS TREPADORAS DE LOS REMANENTES FORESTALES DE MARINGA, BRASIL

open access: yesGayana: Botanica, 2008
Climbing plants differ from self-supporting plants, such as shrubs and trees, in a range of characteristics, most notable are the mechanical properties of the stem. Liana stems as Pereskia aculeata Mill. (Cactaceae), Pisonia aculeata L.
Willian A. L. Lopes   +4 more
doaj  

Nuevo método para la interpretación ontogénica de tallos con variantes cambiales

open access: yesLilloa, 2016
In this contribution is proposed a method for generating hypotheses on the ontogeny of stems with cambial variants. First, the topic of stems with cambial variants are summarized. Then the main production and modifying processes of the stem tissues are reviewed: Cell Division associated and non-associated to meristems; Enlargement, including the ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Cambial variant development in Serjania meridionalis (Sapindaceae, Paullinieae)

open access: yesDarwiniana, nueva serie, 2014
M. Lucía Borniego, Pablo A. Cabanillas
openaire   +1 more source

Stem anatomy of Grewia caffra (Malvaceae): an uncommon cambial variant in the order Malvales

Plant Systematics and Evolution, 2021
The genus Grewia comprises about 300 species widely distributed in Africa, Asia, and Australia. Most of its species are shrubs and small trees, but three species are climbers having stems with four prominent wings. We studied the structure of juvenile and mature stems of Grewia caffra to clarify the anatomical background of the wing formation.
Gugu Gama, Alexei Oskolski
openaire   +1 more source

MENISPERMACEAE WOOD ANATOMY AND CAMBIAL VARIANTS

IAWA Journal, 2007
Menispermaceae are comprised almost entirely of lianas. Study of its wood anatomy is of interest for understanding adaptation to the liana habit. We set out here to present a general overview of Menispermaceae wood. The wood anatomy of 77 species of 44 genera, representative of an tribes and from an continents, is described.
Frédéric M.B. Jacques   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

Structure of the secondary xylem and development of a cambial variant in Serjania mexicana (Sapindaceae)

IAWA Journal, 2021
Summary The lianas in the family Sapindaceae are known for their unique secondary growth which differs from climbing species in other plant families in terms of their cambial variants. The present study deals with the stem anatomy of self-supporting and lianescent habit, development of phloem wedges, the ontogeny of cambial variants
Kishore S. Rajput   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cambial Variant in the Stem of Serjania Corrugata (Sapindaceae)

IAWA Journal, 2006
The establishment of the cambial variant and the development of the stem of Serjania corrugata Radlk. (Sapindaceae) was analyzed. In the early stages of development, the stem is lobed, with five lobes and five furrows in cross section. Around the fourth internode, each lobe has a vascular arc with one or two more developed central vascular bundles, two
Gabriel U.C. Araújo, Cecilia G. Costa
openaire   +1 more source

An eocene fossil tree with cambial variant wood structure

Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 1991
Abstract Fossil wood with “anomalous structure” is reported from the Eocene of Louisiana and Texas. Superficially the wood appears to have diffuse (foraminate) included phloem, but what appear to be bundles of included phloem are bundles of parenchyma surrounding structures that resemble traumatic canals.
F.M. Hueber   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

The rise and evolution of the cambial variant in Bignonieae (Bignoniaceae)

Evolution & Development, 2009
SUMMARYCambial variants represent a form of secondary growth that creates great stem anatomical diversity in lianas. Despite the importance of cambial variants, nothing is known about the developmental mechanisms that may have led to the current diversity seen in these stems.
Pace, M, Lohmann, LG, Angyalossy, V
openaire   +2 more sources

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