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Article
Calcium oxalate crystal macropatterns in leaves of species from groups Glycine and Shuteria (Glycininae; Phaseoleae; Papilionoideae; Fabaceae)
Canadian Journal of Botany
  • Teresa Cervantes-Martinez, Iowa State University
  • Harry T. Horner, Iowa State University
  • Reid G. Palmer, U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • Theodore Hymowitz, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • A. H. D. Brown, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2005
DOI
10.1139/b05-119
Abstract

Calcium oxalate crystal macropatterns in leaves were characterized for 69 species (and two Glycine tomentella cytotypes) from 14 of 16 genera in two legume groups, Glycine and Shuteria, to determine whether they share a common macropattern. A leaf clearing method was used to visualize the crystals. All 69 species (and two Glycine tomentella cytotypes) displayed prismatic crystals associated with leaf veins and vein endings. In contrast, mesophyll crystals occurred in 76.8% of 69 species and two G. tomentella cytotypes, and varied from a few to many. Conversely, only 40.9% of 22 Glycine species (in group Glycine) lacked mesophyll crystals, while 8.7% of 23 species of six genera associated with Glycine (in group Glycine) lacked mesophyll crystals. Thus 24.4% of 45 species of seven combined genera in group Glycine lacked mesophyll crystals. With seven genera in group Shuteria, 20.8% of 24 species lacked mesophyll crystals. The consistently present vein crystals varied in size and shape, so their length–width (Stubby versus Long) crystal ratios were determined for primary, secondary, and tertiary veins, and vein endings. Two trends were evident: Long-crystal ratios increased from primary veins to vein endings in species in both groups, and the perennial and annual Glycine species showed this condition to a greater extent than all the non-Glycine species. In some cases, taxonomically closely associated species were quite similar in their macropattern and presence or absence of mesophyll crystals. These results should be of value to future studies dealing with taxonomy and phylogeny of species in these two leguminous groups.

Comments

This article is published as Cervantes-Martinez, Teresa, Harry T. Horner, Reid G. Palmer, Theodore Hymowitz, and A. H. D. Brown. "Calcium oxalate crystal macropatterns in leaves of species from groups Glycine and Shuteria (Glycininae; Phaseoleae; Papilionoideae; Fabaceae)." Botany 83, no. 11 (2005): 1410-1421. doi: 10.1139/b05-119.

Rights
Works produced by employees of the U.S. Government as part of their official duties are not copyrighted within the U.S. The content of this document is not copyrighted.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Teresa Cervantes-Martinez, Harry T. Horner, Reid G. Palmer, Theodore Hymowitz, et al.. "Calcium oxalate crystal macropatterns in leaves of species from groups Glycine and Shuteria (Glycininae; Phaseoleae; Papilionoideae; Fabaceae)" Canadian Journal of Botany Vol. 83 Iss. 11 (2005) p. 1410 - 1421
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/harry-horner/111/