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Liana Ecology Project
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Quantitative analyses establish the central vascular cylinder as the standard for wood-anatomy studies in lianas having compound stems (Paullinieae: Sapindaceae)
Journal Article
Tamaio N; Neves MF; Brandes AFN; Vieira RC
2011
Flora - Morphology Distribution Functional Ecology of Plants
206
987-996
The lianas of the Paullinieae tribe (Sapindaceae) have highly specialized stems which present four different structural variations of the vascular cylinder: divided compound corded and fissured. Because each vascular cylinder grows in an independent manner through its own circular cambium we ask which type should be used for anatomic descriptions of the wood in these lianas. The corded divided and fissured type variants appear only when the stems are in secondary growth. In the divided and fissured types any cylinder may be used but in the corded type the central cylinder is recommended because the peripheral cylinders appear only in very mature stems. However because the variant having a compound vascular cylinder appears in the stem when in primary growth and has a central vascular cylinder plus 2–10 peripheral cylinders we analyzed the central vascular cylinder and three peripheral vascular cylinders of six species of Serjania to establish a standard. While it was found that the vascular cylinders are qualitatively homogeneous quantitative differences did occur in a random fashion either between the central and peripheral cylinders or among the peripheral cylinders. Based on statistical evidence we conclude that the central vascular cylinder of the compound type should be used as standard in comparative anatomy studies.
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