Publication | Open Access
Anatomical Differences of Axillary Bud Development in Blind Nodes and Normal Nodes in Peach
11
Citations
7
References
1996
Year
BotanyAnatomyRipeningPlant Growth RegulatorAnatomical DifferencesBud InitiationPlant DevelopmentAxillary Bud InitiationPost-harvest PhysiologyPlant CytologyHorticultural SciencePlant BiologyBud DifferentiationBlind NodesMorphogenesisPlant HistologyBiologyAxillary Bud DevelopmentPattern FormationDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMedicinePlant Physiology
Actively growing shoots of peach [ Prunus persica (L.) Batsch] were collected every 2 weeks throughout the 1989 growing season. The samples were sectioned longitudinally and transversely to observe axillary bud initiation, which occurred in all samples collected. Differentiation of axillary bud meristems from early season samples (mostly normal nodes) included apical and prophyll formation, with procambium connected to the stem procambium. Little to no differentiation of such structures occurred in the late-season samples (mostly blind nodes). Other results suggest that blind node formation is a consequence of a lack of bud differentiation rather than a failure of bud initiation.
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