학술논문

Comparative leaf micromorphology and anatomy of the dragon tree group of Dracaena (Asparagaceae) and their taxonomic implications.
Document Type
Article
Source
Plant Systematics & Evolution. Oct2018, Vol. 304 Issue 8, p1041-1055. 15p.
Subject
*DRACAENA
*STOMATA
*SCANNING electron microscopy
*EPIDERMAL growth factor receptors
*PLANT morphology
Language
ISSN
0378-2697
Abstract
Micromorphological features of the leaf epidermis and the inner structure of leaf tissues of eight arborescent taxa of the genus Dracaena were analysed using light and scanning electron microscopy. The plants are xeromorphic or mesomorphic. Their leaves are isobilateral and amphistomatic, and the stomata are anomocytic and tetracytic. The mesophyll in all the species is divided into an outer chlorenchyma and a central region with colourless water-storage cells, chlorophyll cells and vascular bundles. Water-storage cells have wall bands and reticulate thickenings on the walls. The article describes and illustrates several new quantitative and qualitative leaf characters of the dragon tree group. Our findings can be used to identify the dragon tree group leaves, while the shape of epidermal cells and stomata types may be useful in the identification and classification of fragments of fossil leaves. We conclude that D. ombet and D. schizantha are not two distinct species, but should be treated as subspecies of D. ombet. Leaf characters, especially stomata depth on adaxial epidermis, height of adaxial epidermal cells and the presence and thickness of hypodermal fibre bundles markedly differ between geographical groups: Macaronesian species (D. draco and D. tamaranae), the species found in East Africa and Arabian Peninsula (D. ombet subsp. ombet, D. ombet subsp. schizantha, D. serrulata and D. cinnabari) and Southeast Asian species (D. kaweesakii and D. jayniana). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]