Abstract

The positions at which floret primordia arise in developing capitulum buds of Microseris pygmaea D. Don have been mapped by computer-assisted light microscopy. The primordia can be assigned positions along a basic phyllotactic spiral with a divergence angle of about 137.5°. In addition, there are regular deviations from a spiral arrangement. Typically, the first 26 primordia in phyllotactic sequence are arranged in two concentric circles of 13 primordia with considerable deviations in the divergence angle and in the distances between primordia along a parastichy at positions 13 and 26. This arrangement can be simulated by geometric models that include nearest neighbor packing, together with spiral phyllotaxis. The circular arrangement of peripheral primordia at nearly equal radial distances from the center of the developing capitulum helps to explain the numerical constancy (canalization) of peripheral structures, especially the constant number of 13 inner phyllaries on heads with very different numbers of florets.

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