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FASCIATION AND DICHOTOMOUS BRANCHING IN ECHINOCEREUS (CACTACEAE)
22
Citations
5
References
1978
Year
BotanyAnatomyPlant DevelopmentPlant ReproductionRib MeristemRare EventsMorphological EvidenceCell DivisionMorphologyMorphogenesisPlant TaxonomyWood FormationPlant HistologyBiologyPattern FormationDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologySymbiosisMedicinePlant PhysiologyCrest Meristems
In Echinocereus reichenbachii dichotomous branching and fasciation (cresting) are rare events. Both were found together in only a few of many populations investigated and are interpreted as variants of a single phenomenon. They may occur at any stage of shoot development, but crest meristems arise most commonly on young branches among clusters of normal shoots. Sometimes they appear on unbranched young plants or seedlings, very rarely on older shoots. Dichotomy results from the division of an apical meristem into equal parts each of which functions independently, producing a forked shoot. Fasciation involves the extension of a single meristem into an apical ridge. The product is a flabellate shoot that becomes undulate if growth along the summit continues. In longisection linear meristems appear similar to radial sections of normal shoots; in median sagittal section they have a much extended central mother cell zone within which the cell pattern resembles a rib meristem. Although crest meristems become sluggish or even inactive with age, localized renewed growth may occur spontaneously or be induced by injury. In this species the random production of normal shoots from crest meristems (defasciation) was not observed, but if much or all of such a meristem is removed, branches may arise from lateral areoles, and these are always normal. It seems, therefore, that whatever induces fasciation in E. reichenbachii originates in and is restricted to the apical meristem and its immediate vicinity.
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