Wood Anatomy of Trees and Shrubs from China. V. Anacardiaceae

IAWA Journal ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongmin Dong ◽  
Pieter Baas

The wood anatomy of twenty species belonging to eleven genera of Anacardiaceae native to or commonly cultivated in China is described in detail and a generic wood anatomical key is given. The wood anatomical diversity pattern partly agrees with the traditional classification into the tribes Anacardieae (Anacardium, Buchanania, and Mangijera), Spondieae (Choerospondias, Dracontomelon, Lannea, and Spondias) and Rhoideae (Cotinus, Pistacia, Rhus, and Toxicodendron).

IAWA Journal ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Noshiro ◽  
P. Baas

The wood anatomy of Comaceae, Alangiaceae, Garryaceae, and Nyssaceae constituting the Comales in the sense of Cronquist (1981, 1988) is described in great detail and subjected to a cladistic analysis. A microscopic identification key to the woods studied is given. The alliance includes seventeen genera, mostly of trees and shrubs, very rarely herbs. Although wood anatomically fairly homogeneous, variation exists in both qualitative and quantitative characters. Some of the latter show distinct latitudinal trends within individual genera, and character states have only been recognised taking their latitudinal dependencies into account. The character states ultimately recognised in these continuously varying quantitative characters coincide with intergeneric or intersectional gaps. The cladistic analysis based on a datamatrix with twentyone characters (Table 3) and using Cereidiphyllum, Daphniphyllum, and Hamamelis as outgroups yielded a strict consensus tree with a quadrichotomy with two monophyletic clades, Hydrangea panieulata (a representative of the closely allied Hydrangeaceae) and Daphniphyllum (Fig. 81). One weakly supported clade includes Alangium, Camptotheea, Cornus, Curtisia, Davidia, Diplopanax, Mastixia, and Nyssa without any robust lineages among them. The other genera, Aralidium, Aueuba, Corokia, Garrya, Griselinia, Helwingia, Melanophylla and Toricellia, constitute a second, well-supported clade. Two Hydrangea taxa included in the analysis nest in the second clade and a basal branching respectively. The wood anatomical diversity pattern thus supports a family concept of Comaceae including Cornus, Curtisia, Diplopanax, Mastixia, Alangiaceae, and Nyssaceae, and exclusion of the genera in the other clade. There is remarkable agreement between some of these wood anatomical r~sults and recent cladistic analyses of rbcL sequences by Xiang and co-workers. The infrageneric classification of Cornus, Alangium and Nyssa is also discussed.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Baizhong ◽  
B. J. H. ter Welle ◽  
R. K. W. M. Klaassen

The wood anatomy of 24 species belonging to 18 genera of the Sapindaceae native to China is described. Despite the wood anatomical homogeneity of the Chinese taxa of the family, it is possible to key out individual genera as long as the unknown material is confined to Chinese species. In general, the wood of Sapindaceae is characterised by diffuse-porous vessel distribution, simple perforations, alternate intervessei pits, comrnonly septate libriform fibres, usually scanty paratracheal parenchyma, mainly uniseriate rays and prismatic crystals common in chambered parenchyma and or fibres. The two taxa from temperate regions are ring-porous.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 195-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Baas ◽  
Zhang Xinying

The wood anatomy of 34 species belonging to nine genera of Oleaceae, native or commonly cultivated in China, is described in detail, and a key to the identification of the genera is given. The diversity in wood structure supports the grouping of genera as based on a worldwide wood anatomical survey of the family by Esser and Van der Westen (1983) and Esser et al. (in preparation). Characters to separate these groups are type of imperforate tracheary elements (libriform fibres or fibre-tracheids), vessel distribution and grouping (mainly solitary or mainly in multiples; in an oblique to dendritic pattern or not), presence or absence of vascular tracheids, presence or absence of parenchyma bands (mostly marginal), and vessel wall sculpturing and intervessel pit size.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Zhong ◽  
P. Baas ◽  
E.A. Wheeler

The wood anatomy of 37 species belonging to the eight genera of Ulmaceae native to China is described. The wood of Chinese Ulmaceae is characterised by mostly simple perforations (sporadic scalariform plates occur in Hemiptelea and Zelkova); altemate, non-vestured intervessel pits; relatively short vessel elements and fibres; non septate fibres with simple to minutely bordered pits confined to the radial walls; mainly paratracheal parenchyma; rays rarely higher than 1 mm. Tanniniferous tubes are reported for the first time in Ulmaceae; they are limited to the genus Pteroceltis. Other, sporadically occurring features such as perforated ray and axial parenchyma cells and perforated fibres are also reported for the first time.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 337-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deng Liang ◽  
Pieter Baas

The wood anatomy of 95 species belonging to fifteen genera of the Theaceae native to China is described. Despite the wood anatomical homogeneity of the family it is possible to key out individual genera (p. 373) as long as the unknown material is confined to Chinese species. In general the wood of Theaceae can be characterised by exclusively solitary vessels, scalariform perforations, opposite to scalariform vessel wall pitting, ground tissue of long fibre-tracheids, parenchyma scanty paratracheal and apotracheally diffuse, and heterocellular rays.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shu-Yin Zhang ◽  
Pieter Baas

The wood anatomy of 162 species from China, belonging to 30 genera of the Rosaceae is described. The structural diversity is documented in a survey of characters, a family description, generic descriptions and tables. A key to the genera or groups of genera is presented. A number of genera is described wood anatomically for the first time. Vestured pits noted in some Spiraea species are newly recorded for the farnily . The phenomenon of fibre dimorphism in Spiraea is analysed in detail.


IAWA Journal ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 391-412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Bao Liang ◽  
Pieter Baas ◽  
Elisabeth A. Wheeler ◽  
Wu Shuming

The wood anatomy offive genera of Magnoliaceae (59 native species, 2 introduced species) of China is described. Although the wood anatomy of this family is rather homogeneous, it is possible to identify most specimens to genus. Magnoliaceae wood from China is characterised by diffuse-porosity, scalariform to opposite vessel wall pitting, scalariform perforations with few bars or in some Magnolia species simple perforations, ground tissue fibres with distinctly to minutely bordered pits, marginal parenchyma and heterocellular rays mostly with one marginal row of square/upright cells. Intervessel and vessel-parenchyma pits are almost exclusively opposite in the Liriodendroideae; they are almost exclusively scalariform in the Magnolioideae, except for Magnolia section Rhytidospermum in which pits are predominantly opposite. Although the wood anatomical characters more or less overlap between Magnolia and Manglietia, these genera are wood anatomically distinguishable. Wood anatomy is similar in the evergreen species of Magnolia and Michelia. Kmeria is the only genus in which crystals were observed. Taxa from the tropics to subtropics tend to have longer and wider vessel elements, and a lower vessel frequency than those from temperate provenances; oil cells in rays mostly occur in the taxa from tropical and subtropical provenances. Simple perforation plates are mostly present in the temperate taxa. Counter to trends for the dicotyledons at large, helical thickenings are more common in tropical species than in temperate species, and, when present, are usually not distinct in deciduous species.


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