WOOD AND BARK ANATOMY OF ARISTOLOCHIACEAE - SYSTEMATIC AND HABITAL CORRELATIONS

Authors
Citation
S. Carlquist, WOOD AND BARK ANATOMY OF ARISTOLOCHIACEAE - SYSTEMATIC AND HABITAL CORRELATIONS, IAWA journal, 14(4), 1993, pp. 341-357
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences",Forestry
Journal title
ISSN journal
09281541
Volume
14
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
341 - 357
Database
ISI
SICI code
0928-1541(1993)14:4<341:WABAOA>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Wood of Aristolochiaceae has vessels with simple perforation plates; l ateral wall pitting of vessels alternate to scalariform; tracheids, fi bre-tracheids or libriform fibres present; axial parenchyma diffuse, d iffuse-in-aggregates, scanty vasicentric, and banded apotracheal; rays wide and tall, paedomorphic, multiseriate only, little altered during ontogeny (new rays originate suddenly as wide multiseriate rays); eth ereal oil cells present in rays; wood structure storied. All of these features occur in Lactoridaceae and Piperaceae, and support the groupi ng of Aristolochiaceae with these families and the nonwoody family Sau ruraceae. Chloranthaceae may be the family next closest to this assemb lage. Druses characteristically occur in rays of Aristolochia. Trachei ds in Aristolochia may be correlated with the lianoid habit, although Holostylis, a caudex perennial thought close to Aristolochia, also has tracheids. The fibre-tracheids and libriform fibres of Apama and Thot tea may be related to the sympodial shrubby habit of those two genera. On the basis of one species each of Apama and Thottea, the genera dif fer with respect to wood anatomy. The paedomorphic ray structure of al l genera of Aristolochiaceae suggests an herbaceous or minimally woody ancestry rather than ancestors with typically woody monopodial habit. Types of bark structure observed in the species surveyed are briefly characterised. Storied wood structure and presence of druses and ether eal oil cells in rays are newly reported for the family.