Floral Morphology ofApuleia leiocarpa(Dialiinae: Leguminosae), an Unusual Andromonoecious Legume
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2013 papers
Abstract
Apuleia leiocarpa (Vogel) J. F. Macbr. is a South American tree species belonging to the caesalpinioid subfamily of the Leguminosae. Phylogenetic analyses have placed Apuleia into the Dialiinae s.l. clade, with which it shares numerous morphological similarities, including dichasial cymose inflorescences. The genus has also been reported to be andromonoecious, a trait not seen elsewhere in its clade and only infrequently in the Caesalpinioideae. Scanning electron microscopy and stereomicroscopy were used to investigate the floral morphology of A. leiocarpa. It was found that while hermaphrodite flowers produced a single carpel and two stamens, staminate flowers developed three stamens but showed no signs of any carpel development. The third stamen fills the volume of the missing carpel within the bud as it grows. Inflorescences also appear to produce approximately four times as many staminate as hermaphrodite flowers. Both this high male-to-bisexual ratio and the early determination of gender seen in Apuleia are rare in the Caesalpinioideae and suggest that andromonoecy developed in this genus as a means to increase pollen dispersal rather than in response to resource limitations.
Related Papers
- Fruits and seeds of genera in the subfamily Caesalpinioideae (Fabaceae)(1991)
- Dynamic changes of endogenous hormone in litchi (Litchi chinensis Sonn.) pistil and stamen during flower development(2003)
- Micromorphlogical analysis of sex organ development and SDS-PAGE profile of male flowers at their later developmental stages in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.)(2005)
- → Factors responsible for the sex experssion of Japanese cucumber. II(1954)5 cited
- → An asexual flower of Silene latifolia and Microbotryum lychnidis-dioicae promoting its sexual-organ development(2019)