1. Ontogeny of the proliferous spikelet in Eleocharis viridans ( Cyperaceae).
- Author
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San Martin, Juca A. B., Fagundes, Natividad F., and Mariath, Jorge Ernesto de A.
- Subjects
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ONTOGENY , *CYPERACEAE , *ELEOCHARIS , *MONOCOTYLEDONS , *SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
Cyperaceae, the third largest family of monocotyledons, show unusual asexual reproductive strategies, such as pseudovivipary involving the formation of new individuals from somatic tissues of floral structures. In Eleocharis pseudovivipary is an important reproductive process in series Tenuissimae, which results in a structure called a proliferous spikelet. With the aim of describing the ontogenetic process of the pseudovivipary in E. viridans, proliferous spikelets at different developmental stages were analysed by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The proliferous spikelet develops from a meristem located in the axil of the basal glume, homologous to bracts of other groups of Cyperaceae, in the culm of the parental plant. Each proliferous spikelet is formed by sympodial units, which consist of an addorsed prophyll, an outer and inner sheath and a culm, which develops a primordium of floriferous spikelet at the terminal region, which can be aborted, and may develop a proliferous spikelet lateral in the axil of the basal glume. The second internode of each sympodial unit contains a root primordium and an intercalary meristem at the culm base. Our results indicate that pseudovivipary can coexist with sexual reproduction as an alternative reproductive strategy, allowing the rapid spread of populations. © 2014 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2014, 176, 524-539. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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