Register      Login
Australian Journal of Botany Australian Journal of Botany Society
Southern hemisphere botanical ecosystems
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Lineages, Lineage Stability and Pattern Formation in Leaves of Variegated Chimeras of Lophostemon confertus (R. Br.) Wilson & Waterhouse and Tristaniopis laurina (Smith) Wilson & Waterhouse (Myrtaceae)

DV Beardsell and JA Considine

Australian Journal of Botany 35(6) 701 - 714
Published: 1987

Abstract

Three variegated chimeras of L. confertus and T. laurina arise spontaneously in seedling populations: 1, white margin: green centre, 2, green margin: light green centre and 3, green margin: white centre. Types 1 and 2 are found in T. laurina and types 1 and 3 in L. confertus. We have determined chloroplast distribution in the leaf tissues by fluorescence microscopy to assess the basis for these colour patterns.

In L. confertus, a layer of collenchyma underlies the adaxial epidermis, replaces the upper layer of palisade, and does not mask mutant inner tissues, concealed by the adaxial layer of palisade in type 2 leaves of T. laurina. The central colour patterns are explained on the basis of accepted paths of cell lineage in leaf development (protoderm green in all three types; hypodermal derivatives genetically green in 2 and 3; and subhypodermal cells chlorophyll-deficient in types 2 and 3).

The cell lineages postulated are similar in both species and we show that the observations can be accounted for only by a shift in lineage path during leaf ontogeny. We conclude that some established concepts of leaf ontogeny require revision.

https://doi.org/10.1071/BT9870701

© CSIRO 1987

Committee on Publication Ethics


Rent Article (via Deepdyve) Export Citation Get Permission

View Dimensions