One Upward, Two Steps Down: Order of Floral Organ Initiation


如何引用文章

全文:

开放存取 开放存取
受限制的访问 ##reader.subscriptionAccessGranted##
受限制的访问 订阅存取

详细

In most angiosperms, floral organs are acropetally initiated, i.e., from the perianth upwards to the gynoecium. The review surveys examples of deviation from this typical pattern that takes place in both oligomerous and polymerous whorled flowers. The plants displaying the same non-acropetal pattern of floral development are not necessarily closely related and thus similarities in their floral structure and development should be regarded as convergences. Vice versa, representatives of the same family often show different patterns of initiation of floral organs. Flowers with the same groundplan can demonstrate either typical acropetal or non-acropetal developmental pattern. In other words, evolution of patterns of floral development is relatively homoplastic. Presumably, the repeated transitions from acropetal to non-acropetal developmental patterns (and back) readily occurred in evolution and were of a saltational nature.

作者简介

M. Remizowa

Faculty of Biology, Moscow State University

编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: margarita.remizowa@gmail.com
俄罗斯联邦, Moscow, 119234

补充文件

附件文件
动作
1. JATS XML

版权所有 © Pleiades Publishing, Inc., 2019