Abstract

Maksymowych, Roman. (Villanova U., Villanova, Pa.) An analysis of leaf elongation in Xanthium pensylvanicum presented in relative elemental rates. Amer. Jour. Bot. 49(1): 7–13. Illus. 1962.—Xanthium plants were grown vegetatively, and leaves, whose developmental stages were specified by a previously described leaf plastochron index (L.P.I.), were marked with India ink along the midrib and photographed during 3 successive days. The relative elemental rates of elongation, d(dX/dpl)/dX were estimated during the whole course of development. The pattern of elongation was not constant but was changing with increasing plastochron age of the leaf. The elements of a young leaf of L.P.I. 0.75 elongated with a constant relative rate. In older leaves, the d(dX/dpl)/dX values were progressively declining toward the tip of the lamina. After L.P.I. 6.3 the only increment in length was due to the elongation of the elements of the petiole. The pattern of growth distribution is discussed in terms of relative elemental rates with respect to cell division and cell elongation in various portions of the lamina and is correlated with the basipetal trend of tissue differentiation in the developing Xanthium leaf.

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