RESPONSE OF LEAF EPIDERMAL CELL ARCHITECTURE TO CLIMATE - A POTENTIAL PALEOPROXY

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rose Aubery ◽  
◽  
Michael A. Urban ◽  
Regan E. Dunn ◽  
Richard S. Barclay ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 221 (1) ◽  
pp. 540-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Róza V. Vőfély ◽  
Joseph Gallagher ◽  
Grace D. Pisano ◽  
Madelaine Bartlett ◽  
Siobhan A. Braybrook

2017 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-256
Author(s):  
Daniel von Wangenheim ◽  
Darren M. Wells ◽  
Malcolm J. Bennett

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. e0251625
Author(s):  
Fabian E. Z. Ercan ◽  
Juha Mikola ◽  
Tarja Silfver ◽  
Kristiina Myller ◽  
Elina Vainio ◽  
...  

Numerous long-term, free-air plant growth facilities currently explore vegetation responses to the ongoing climate change in northern latitudes. Open top chamber (OTC) experiments as well as the experimental set-ups with active warming focus on many facets of plant growth and performance, but information on morphological alterations of plant cells is still scarce. Here we compare the effects of in-situ warming on leaf epidermal cell expansion in dwarf birch, Betula nana in Finland, Greenland, and Poland. The localities of the three in-situ warming experiments represent contrasting regions of B. nana distribution, with the sites in Finland and Greenland representing the current main distribution in low and high Arctic, respectively, and the continental site in Poland as a B. nana relict Holocene microrefugium. We quantified the epidermal cell lateral expansion by microscopic analysis of B. nana leaf cuticles. The leaves were produced in paired experimental treatment plots with either artificial warming or ambient temperature. At all localities, the leaves were collected in two years at the end of the growing season to facilitate between-site and within-site comparison. The measured parameters included the epidermal cell area and circumference, and using these, the degree of cell wall undulation was calculated as an Undulation Index (UI). We found enhanced leaf epidermal cell expansion under experimental warming, except for the extremely low temperature Greenland site where no significant difference occurred between the treatments. These results demonstrate a strong response of leaf growth at individual cell level to growing season temperature, but also suggest that in harsh conditions other environmental factors may limit this response. Our results provide evidence of the relevance of climate warming for plant leaf maturation and underpin the importance of studies covering large geographical scales.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng-Ping Zhang ◽  
Shi-Bao Zhang

Genome size is known to influence phenotypic traits in leaves and seeds. Although genome size is closely related to cellular and developmental traits across biological kingdoms, floral longevity is a floral trait with important fitness consequence, but less is known about the link between floral longevity and sizes of genomes and cells. In this study, we examined evolutionary coordination between genome size, floral longevity, and epidermal cell size in flowers and leaves in 13 Paphiopedilum species. We found that, across all the study species, the genome size was positively correlated with floral longevity but negatively associated with labellum epidermal cell size, and a negative relationship was found between floral longevity and labellum epidermal cell size. This suggested that genome size is potentially correlated with floral longevity, and genome size has an important impact on life-history trait. In addition, genome size was positively correlated with leaf epidermal cell size, which was different from the relationship in flower due to different selective pressures they experienced or different functions they performed. Therefore, genome size constraints floral longevity, and it is a strong predictor of cell size. The impact of genome size on reproduction might have more implications for the evolution of flowering plants and pollination ecology.


Biologija ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seyed Mehdi Talebi ◽  
Mitra Noori ◽  
Habibeh Afzali Naniz

Euphorbia is the largest genus of Euphorbiaceae widely distributed all over the world. The genus members grow naturally in different parts of Iran and nearly 96 species of Euphorbia have been listed in the country. Investigations show that the traits of foliar epidermis have taxonomic values. That is why the features of epidermal leaf anatomy of 18 Euphorbia taxa were studied in the present study. Plant samples were collected from Kerman Province, Iran, and identified using available references. Semi-permanent slides were prepared of adaxial and abaxial leaf epidermis. Then the slides were studied using light microscopy and some epidermal leaf anatomy characteristics stomata types, trichomes, the shape and type of epidermal cell, and their walls were examined. Photomicrographs were taken from each sample. Results showed that stomata type were stable among the species. Not only leaf epidermal cell shapes differed between the taxa, but also in some species they varied between the abaxial and adaxial surfaces. These conditions hold true for cell wall patterns. Some of the studied taxa had simple and uniseriate trichomes on the epidermal surfaces, in most of them trichomes were present on both leaf surfaces, while in one species trichomes were seen on the abaxial surface. Our findings confirmed that some of the anatomical traits, such as the absence or presence of trichomes, epidermal cell shape, and anticlinal cell wall patterns had taxonomic value and are useful in the identification of taxa.


2020 ◽  
Vol 103 (6) ◽  
pp. 609-621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuanqiang Tang ◽  
Suxin Yang ◽  
Xingxing Feng ◽  
Tao Wu ◽  
Jiantian Leng ◽  
...  

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