𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Ethylene and growth control in the fringed waterlily (Nymphoides peltata): Stimulation of cell division and interaction with buoyant tension in petioles

✍ Scribed by Irene Ridge; Ivan Amarasinghe


Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
1984
Tongue
English
Weight
662 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
0167-6903

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The effect of ethylene on petiole growth of the Fringed Waterlily (Nymphoides peltata (S.G . Gmelin) O . Kuntze) changes during leaf ontogeny . During early development (before expansion of laminae), ethylene causes an increase in both cell number and cell size ; later in development, promotion of rapid cell expansion is the dominant effect . The early effects may contribute to the accommodation of new leaves to water columns of different depth . The later effects on cell expansion only are shown to contribute to the rapid accommodation of floating leaves when changes in water level submerge the laminae . This kind of accommodation results from an interaction between accumulated ethylene, which increases wall extensibility, and the tension in petioles due to natural buoyancy which, it is suggested, supplements the driving force for cell expansion . Cell age (position) within a petiole and age of the whole petiole influence the growth response to ethylene alone and the amount of extra growth produced by applying tension when ethylene is present . In young petioles, apical cells are highly sensitive to ethylene and tension causes little further growth ; older cells in both immature and mature petioles show little response to ethylene unless the petiole is under tension . Young (but not mature) petioles respond slowly to applied tension even in the absence of ethylene . It is concluded that as cells age the driving force for expansion limits increasingly their capacity to respond to the wall-loosening effects of ethylene . Dual sensitivity to ethylene and buoyant tension facilitates rapid accommodation responses but sensitivity of young petioles to tension alone may exclude Nymphoides from habitats where current velocity is appreciable . * Indicates that 01 has been halved so that results are directly comparable with those for other zones .