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
4 - The structure of the shoot apex
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
It is an interesting fact that in plant science the study of development is not equated with embryology. Although the study of embryos has made significant contributions, it is clear that the framework of developmental study in the higher plants has been provided by postembryonic stages. A very important aspect of embryonic differentiation is the establishment of shoot and root apical meristems at approximately opposite poles of the embryonic body. These meristems, whose origins differ somewhat in the various groups of vascular plants, contribute relatively little to the actual development of the embryo, but they are the centers of postembryonic development, and by their continued activity they give rise to the shoot and root systems. The shoot- and root-building activity of these meristems does not represent a mere unfolding of embryonic rudiments; rather, it is a true epigenetic formation of organs and tissues that were not present in the embryo. Thus, all aspects of development – growth and differentiation, histogenesis and organogenesis – may be investigated in relation to the activity of apical meristems, and the size and accessibility of these formative regions, in comparison to the enclosed embryo, has made them favorable sites for both descriptive and experimental studies of plant development.
In the total development of the primary plant body via its meristems, it is obvious that many processes are taking place simultaneously. There can be little doubt that these processes are interrelated and that the interaction among them holds many important keys to the understanding of the plant body, its organization, and its integrated development.
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- Information
- Patterns in Plant Development , pp. 46 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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