{"title":"Morpho-Anatomy of the Gynoecium and Fruit in Three Ornamental Members of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae)","authors":"Roksolana Andreychuk, A. Odintsova","doi":"10.5586/aa.7415","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n Gynoecium and fruit micromorphology and anatomy were studied using light microscopy in three species of Campanuloideae belonging to the tribes Cyanantheae (\n Platycodon grandiflorus\n ), Wahlenbergieae (\n Jasione montana\n ), and Campanuleae (\n Adenophora liliifolia\n ) of the native and cultivated flora of Ukraine, to elucidate structural adaptations for fruit dehiscence. The studied species differed in flower/fruit orientation, carpel number, ovary insertion, and capsule-opening position, and the information provided a background for the discovery of common anatomical features influencing fruit dehiscence. In the studied species, the synascidiate and symplicate zones in the ovary and prominent placentae were found to be located near the mid-region of the ovary. The distinct innervation of the ovary wall and ovules was described. In\n P. grandiflorus\n , the septa and fruit wall contained a lignified parenchyma in a subepidermal position, while in\n J. montana\n and\n A. liliifolia\n , lignification was observed only in proximal portions of the septa, above the placenta (\n J. montana\n ), or was noted as a narrow strand from the ovary base to the mid-region, called “axicorn” (\n A. liliifolia\n ). In all the studied species, unlignified endocarpium was detected. The semi-inferior capsule of\n P. grandiflorus\n has been defined as a capsule of the\n Forsythia\n -type, with a sclerenchymatous layer in the inner zone of the mesocarpium. In\n J. montana\n and\n A. liliifolia\n , a new histogenetic type of capsule is described as\n Campanula\n -type, without lignified layers in the fruit wall and with lignified tissue in the septa, which enabled dehiscence. Our study proposed for the first time the classification of the capsules found in the studied species based on the development of openings in the superior or inferior regions of the fruits. The upright fruits of\n P. grandiflorus\n and\n J. montana\n reveal incomplete dorsiventral dehiscence in the superior region of the fruit, while dehiscence of pendent fruits of\n A. liliifolia\n is hippocrepiform-septifragal interlocular and occurs in the inferior region of the fruit at its base, as revealed previously in\n Campanula latifolia\n fruit.","PeriodicalId":6907,"journal":{"name":"Acta Agrobotanica","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Agrobotanica","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5586/aa.7415","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"PLANT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Gynoecium and fruit micromorphology and anatomy were studied using light microscopy in three species of Campanuloideae belonging to the tribes Cyanantheae (
Platycodon grandiflorus
), Wahlenbergieae (
Jasione montana
), and Campanuleae (
Adenophora liliifolia
) of the native and cultivated flora of Ukraine, to elucidate structural adaptations for fruit dehiscence. The studied species differed in flower/fruit orientation, carpel number, ovary insertion, and capsule-opening position, and the information provided a background for the discovery of common anatomical features influencing fruit dehiscence. In the studied species, the synascidiate and symplicate zones in the ovary and prominent placentae were found to be located near the mid-region of the ovary. The distinct innervation of the ovary wall and ovules was described. In
P. grandiflorus
, the septa and fruit wall contained a lignified parenchyma in a subepidermal position, while in
J. montana
and
A. liliifolia
, lignification was observed only in proximal portions of the septa, above the placenta (
J. montana
), or was noted as a narrow strand from the ovary base to the mid-region, called “axicorn” (
A. liliifolia
). In all the studied species, unlignified endocarpium was detected. The semi-inferior capsule of
P. grandiflorus
has been defined as a capsule of the
Forsythia
-type, with a sclerenchymatous layer in the inner zone of the mesocarpium. In
J. montana
and
A. liliifolia
, a new histogenetic type of capsule is described as
Campanula
-type, without lignified layers in the fruit wall and with lignified tissue in the septa, which enabled dehiscence. Our study proposed for the first time the classification of the capsules found in the studied species based on the development of openings in the superior or inferior regions of the fruits. The upright fruits of
P. grandiflorus
and
J. montana
reveal incomplete dorsiventral dehiscence in the superior region of the fruit, while dehiscence of pendent fruits of
A. liliifolia
is hippocrepiform-septifragal interlocular and occurs in the inferior region of the fruit at its base, as revealed previously in
Campanula latifolia
fruit.
Acta AgrobotanicaAgricultural and Biological Sciences-Agronomy and Crop Science
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
8
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍:
The Acta Agrobotanica publishes mainly significant, original research papers presenting the results new to the biology of cultivable or wild plants accompanying crops. The submissions dedicated particularly to flora and phytocenoses of anthropogenically transformed areas, bee pastures, nectariferous and polleniferous taxa, plant-pollinator relationships, urban and rural habitats for entomofauna, cultivated plants, weeds, aerobiology, plant pathogens and parasites are encouraged and accepted. Besides the original research papers, authors may submit short communications and reviews. The journal also publishes the invited papers in case of new developments in plant science. All submissions must be written in good English, which is solely a responsibility of the authors.