Abstract

Excised shoot apices of Osmunda claytoniana were grown under controlled sterile conditions. Histological examination of the normal shoot apex shows that it is comprised of: (1) a promeristem, which possesses 1 or more apical initiating cells at its center; (2) a prestelar tissue consisting of an incipient vascular tissue which flanks the pith‐mother‐cell zone; the pith‐mother‐cell zone gives rise to the pith rib meristem and subsequently to the fundamental parenchyma of the pith; (3) the fundamental parenchyma of the cortex and the fundamental parenchyma of the dermal system both arising from flank cells of the promeristem. Apical initial cells of meristems irradiated with a 127,000 rad acute exposure of a deuteron beam having a diameter of 25μ, histologically examined at 7‐day intervals for a 12‐week period, as early as 3 weeks’ postirradiation, showed the apical initiating cell(s) together with certain of the cells of the pith‐mother‐cell zone to be destroyed. A wound response develops peripherally to the destroyed initials. In addition, an isolated, organized growth center is observed to develop from normal promeristem cells. Incipient vascular tissue and a new pith‐mother‐cell zone are also observed to develop in association with the new center of growth. Implications of the role of the interrelationships between apical initiating cell(s) and other cells of the meristem and the role they may play in maintenance of meristematic integrity within the shoot meristem are discussed.

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