Abstract

The European mistletoe (Viscum album) is a dioecious epiphytic evergreen hemiparasite that develops an extensive endophyte enabling the absorption of water and mineral salts from the host tree, whereas the exophytic leaves are photosynthetically active. The attachment mode and host penetration are well studied, but little information is available about the effects of mistletoe age and sex on haustorium-host interactions. We harvested 130 plants of Viscum album ssp. album growing on host branches of Aesculus flava for morphological and anatomical investigations. Morphometric analyses of the mistletoe and the (hypertrophied) host interaction site were correlated with mistletoe age and sex. We recorded the morphology of the endophytic systems of various ages by using X-ray microtomography scans and corresponding stereomicroscopic images. For detailed anatomical studies, we examined thin stained sections of the mistletoe-host interface by light microscopy. The diameter and length of the branch hypertrophy showed a positive linear correlation with the age of the mistletoe. Correlations with their sex were only found for ratios between host branch and hypertrophy size. A female bias of about 76% was found. In a 4-year-old mistletoe, several small, almost equally sized sinkers and the connected cortical strands extend over more than 5 cm within the host branch. In older mistletoes, one main sinker was predominant and occupied an increasingly large proportion of the stem cross-section. Bands of vessels ran along the axis of the wedge-shaped haustoria and sinkers and bent sideways toward the mistletoe-host interface. At the interface, the vascular elements of the host wood changed their direction and formed vortices near the haustorium.

Highlights

  • The genus Viscum is assigned to the family Santalaceae, which belongs to the order Santalales (Stevens, 2001 onward; Su et al, 2015; Nickrent, 2020), but in other family delimitations it was placed within the Viscaceae (Nickrent et al, 2010 and several others before)

  • From the region around Sebastopol in California, where it was introduced around 1,900 by horticulturist Luther Burbank (Scharpf and Hawksworth, 1976; Hawksworth and Scharpf, 1986), it is spreading steadily and is already infesting at least 25 host species causing problems for orchards and urban hardwoods (Shaw and Lee, 2020). It develops an endophytic haustorial system of sinkers that enable the absorption of water and mineral salts from the stems of the host tree, whereas its exophyte is still capable of photosynthesis (Zuber, 2004)

  • In the case of the mistletoe sinker, we summarized the tangential and radial section planes as the longitudinal plane leading to following combinations: (i) transverse host plane and longitudinal haustorium plane, (ii) radial host plane and longitudinal haustorium plane, and (iii) tangential host plane and transverse haustorium plane

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Viscum is assigned to the family Santalaceae, which belongs to the order Santalales (Stevens, 2001 onward; Su et al, 2015; Nickrent, 2020), but in other family delimitations it was placed within the Viscaceae (Nickrent et al, 2010 and several others before). One of its nearly 100 species is the European mistletoe, Viscum album L., which is native to Europe and western and. It develops an endophytic haustorial system of sinkers that enable the absorption of water and mineral salts from the stems of the host tree, whereas its exophyte is still capable of photosynthesis (Zuber, 2004). These perennial and evergreen plants are dioecious, with male plants bearing staminate flowers and female plants bearing carpellate flowers and white or yellow berries (Kuijt, 1969). Creticum develops white fruits and grows exclusively on Pinus halepensis ssp. Viscum album ssp. creticum develops white fruits and grows exclusively on Pinus halepensis ssp. brutia on Crete (Grundmann et al, 2014)

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