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- Title
Shoot apical meristem and plant body organization: a cross-species comparative study.
- Authors
Schnablová, Renáta; Herben, Tomáš; Klimešová, Jitka
- Abstract
Background and Aims The shoot apical meristem (SAM) is the key organizing element in the plant body and is responsible for the core of plant body organization and shape. Surprisingly, there are almost no comparative data that would show links between parameters of the SAM and whole-plant traits as drivers of the plant's response to the environment. Methods Interspecific differences in SAM anatomy were examined in 104 perennial herbaceous angiosperms. Key Results There were differences in SAM parameters among individual species, their phylogenetic patterns, and how their variation is linked to variation in plant above-ground organs and hence species' environmental niches. SAM parameters were correlated with the size-related traits of leaf area, seed mass and stem diameter. Of the two key SAM parameters (cell size and number), variation in all organ traits was linked more strongly to cell number, with cell size being important only for seed mass. Some of these correlations were due to shared phylogenetic history (e.g. SAM diameter versus stem diameter), whereas others were due to parallel evolution (e.g. SAM cell size and seed mass). Conclusion These findings show that SAM parameters provide a functional link among sizes and numbers of plant organs, constituting species' environmental responses.
- Subjects
SHOOT apical meristems; PLANT species; ANGIOSPERMS; PLANT variation; PLANT phylogeny
- Publication
Annals of Botany, 2017, Vol 120, Issue 5, p833
- ISSN
0305-7364
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/aob/mcx116