Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Development in the vascular plants
- 2 Embryogenesis: beginnings of development
- 3 Analytical and experimental studies of embryo development
- 4 The structure of the shoot apex
- 5 Analytical studies of the shoot apex
- 6 Experimental investigations on the shoot apex
- 7 Organogenesis in the shoot: leaf origin and position
- 8 Organogenesis in the shoot: determination of leaves and branches
- 9 Organogenesis in the shoot: later stages of leaf development
- 10 Determinate shoots: thorns and flowers
- 11 The development of the shoot system
- 12 The root
- 13 Differentiation of the plant body: the origin of pattern
- 14 Differentiation of the plant body: the elaboration of pattern
- 15 Secondary growth: the vascular cambium
- 16 Secondary growth: experimental studies on the cambium
- 17 Alternative patterns of development
- Credits
- Author index
- Subject index
2 - Embryogenesis: beginnings of development
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Development in the vascular plants
- 2 Embryogenesis: beginnings of development
- 3 Analytical and experimental studies of embryo development
- 4 The structure of the shoot apex
- 5 Analytical studies of the shoot apex
- 6 Experimental investigations on the shoot apex
- 7 Organogenesis in the shoot: leaf origin and position
- 8 Organogenesis in the shoot: determination of leaves and branches
- 9 Organogenesis in the shoot: later stages of leaf development
- 10 Determinate shoots: thorns and flowers
- 11 The development of the shoot system
- 12 The root
- 13 Differentiation of the plant body: the origin of pattern
- 14 Differentiation of the plant body: the elaboration of pattern
- 15 Secondary growth: the vascular cambium
- 16 Secondary growth: experimental studies on the cambium
- 17 Alternative patterns of development
- Credits
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
We saw in the previous chapter that it is characteristic for morphogenetic events to continue throughout the life-span of most plants. This is in marked contrast to animal development, in which there is a concentration of morphogenetic phenomena in the embryonic stages. Nonetheless, like the animal, the vascular plant begins life as a single cell, the fertilized egg, and passes through an embryonic phase during which the fundamental body plan is laid down. Although it may be argued that all plants that develop from a single cell into a multicellular state pass through an embryonic phase, historically the term embryo has been restricted to those groups in which the early stages are enclosed within parental tissue and are presumed to be nutritionally dependent upon the parent organism. On this basis the bryophytes and the vascular plants often are designated the Embryophyta. In the bryophytes and the lower vascular plants there is no interruption of growth to mark the end of the embryonic phase, which is therefore rather ill defined. On the other hand, in the seed plants, embryonic development is considered to be terminated at the maturation of the seed, and this leads to a sharp distinction between the embryo and all postgermination stages.
Throughout the Embryophyta, as well as in some lower groups, plant development from a zygote alternates in the life cycle with development of a second plant body from a single-celled spore.
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- Patterns in Plant Development , pp. 6 - 25Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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