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Article
Comparative vegetative anatomy and systematics of Oncidiinae (Maxillarieae, Orchidaceae)
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society (2006)
  • William Louis Stern, University of Florida
  • Barbara S. Carlsward, Eastern Illinois University
Abstract
Subtribe Oncidiinae comprises a vegetatively heterogeneous assemblage of species that has persistently been incapable of organization. Anatomy was considered to be a possible means to resolve the perplexity of relationships amongst the constituent taxa. The consistent occurrence of a foliar hypodermis, homogeneous mesophyll, conical silica bodies in stegmata, and ubiquitous fibre bundles in leaves provides a matrix for linking the taxa, as do the parenchymatous pith and O-thickened endodermal cell walls in roots. However, the strict consensus of the 40 genera studied was completely unresolved, suggesting that vegetative characters alone are insufficient to assess the relationships amongst these taxa, a conclusion also reached for the remainder of Maxillarieae.
Keywords
  • analysis,
  • endodermis,
  • hypodermis,
  • stigmata,
  • vegetative anatomy,
  • vela men,
  • water-storage cell
Disciplines
Publication Date
2006
Citation Information
William Louis Stern and Barbara S. Carlsward. "Comparative vegetative anatomy and systematics of Oncidiinae (Maxillarieae, Orchidaceae)" Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society Vol. 152 (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/barbara_carlsward/10/