Three types of epidermal patterning occur in roots of angiosperms: in Type
1, all the epidermal cells can potentially produce root hairs (hair cells);
in Type 2. asymmetric cell divisions produce short cells that develop into
hair cells and larger cells that do not (non-hair cells); and in Type 3. h
air cells occur in files separated by one to three files of non-hair cells.
In the present study we examined the epidermal patternings of seedling roo
ts of 77 eudicotyledonous species from 43 families. We found that Type I pa
tterning was the most common and no species had Type 2 patterning. Previous
ly, Type 3 epidermal patterning had been described only in the family Brass
icaceae. In addition to the Brassicaceae (including the Capparaceae), we fo
und Type 3 patterning in the Brassicales families Limnanthaceae and Resedac
eae, whereas the other Brassicales families we examined, Caricaceae and Tro
paeolaceae: had Type 1 patterning. We also found Type 3 patterning in six f
amilies of the Caryophyllales sensu late: Amaranthaceae, Basellaceae, Caryo
phyllaceae, Plumbaginaceae, Polygonaceae and Portulacaceae. However, the fa
mily Cactaceae, which is also in this order, had Type 1 patterning. Only on
e other species, Nemophila maculata (Boraginaceae), had Type 3 patterning;
the other two species that we examined in this family had Type I patterning
. Type 3 patterning thus occurs more widely in the eudicotyledons than was
previously thought. (C) 2001 Annals of Botany Company.