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Plant Sciences

1988

Ecological wood anatomy

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Wood Anatomy Of Cneoraceae: Ecology, Relationships, And Generic Definition, Sherwin Carlquist Jan 1988

Wood Anatomy Of Cneoraceae: Ecology, Relationships, And Generic Definition, Sherwin Carlquist

Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany

Wood anatomy of the three species of Cneorurm is described qualitatively and quantitatively. The species differ in features related to ecology and form a clear series in this regard. The wood features of the family can all be matched by some Rutaceae and Simarubaceae, and the characteristics of Cneoraceae are listed in this connection. Nearly as many features are shared by Cneoraceae with Anacardiaceae and Sapindaceae; certain distinctive features may be found in somewhat more distant families, such as Oxalidaceae. Resemblances between Cneoraceae and Euphorbiaceae are attributed at least in part to the fact that Euphorbiaceae comprise a highly heterogeneous …


Wood Anatomy Of Scytopetalaceae, Sherwin Carlquist Jan 1988

Wood Anatomy Of Scytopetalaceae, Sherwin Carlquist

Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany

Eight wood samples representing six species in two genera of Scytopetalaceae are examined with respect to qualitative and quantitative features. Rhaptopetalum differs from Scytopetalum by having scalariform perforation plates, fiber-tracheids, longer vessel elements, and a series of features probably related to the understory status of Rhaptopetalum is compared to the emergent nature of Scytopetalum. Features ofScytopetalaceae relevant to relationships of the family include (I) scaJariform perforation plates; (2) alternate medium-sized intervascular pits; (3) scalariform vessel-parenchyma pitting; (4) diffuse-in-aggregates and scanty vasicentric axial parenchyma; (5) axial parenchyma strands subdivided in places into chains of chambered crystals; and (6) rays that are …


Wood Anatomy Of Drimys S.S. (Winteraceae), Sherwin Carlquist Jan 1988

Wood Anatomy Of Drimys S.S. (Winteraceae), Sherwin Carlquist

Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany

Qualitative and quantitative data are reported for seven specimens representing six varieties of the four species of Drimys generally recognized. Tracheid length and diameter are correlated both with plant size and with severity of climate: wide, long tracheids, not fluctuating in diameter seasonally, occur in Drimys of moderate elevations in subtropical latitude; narrower, shorter tracheids, becoming radially narrower briefly in latewood, occur in Drimys from higher altitudes and latitudes. Vesturing (warty layer) on the inside surface of tracheids occurs in Drimys from latitudes and altitudes where appreciable freezing is to be expected, but vesturing is absent at lower elevations and …


Wood Anatomy Of Acanthaceae: A Survey, Sherwin Carlquist, Scott Zona Jan 1988

Wood Anatomy Of Acanthaceae: A Survey, Sherwin Carlquist, Scott Zona

Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany

Qualitative and quantitative wood features are reported for 38 species representing 22 genera, including the scandent genera Mendoncia and Thunbergia. Woods of Acanthaceae are characterized by relatively narrow vessels with simple perforation plates and alternate lateral wall pitting, septate libriform fibers, scanty vasicentric axial parenchyma, rays both multiseriate and uniseriate, erect ray cells abundant in rays (some species rayless or near-rayless), numerous small crystals or cystoliths in ray cells in a few genera (first documented reports of both characters in woods of Acanthaceae), and nonstoried structure. This constellation of features is very closely matched by woods of Gesneriaceae, Scrophulariaceae, Pedaliaceae, …