Abstract

The vascular cambium is an extensive and permanent secondary meristem with wood cells products of periclinal divisions commonly contributed to two directions and arranged in radial files of trees. Cambium activity is the origin of timber production. Taxodium ascendens Brongn is an exotic species in China, and its apical meristem and cambial activity are still elusive, resulting in a lack of understanding about its wood formation and improvement. We thus addressed this knowledge gap by studying Cambium activity. For studying, twigs from five 30-year-old healthy trees were collected between February-2017 and March-2018. Anatomy deciphered its apical meristem with a Cryptomeria–Abies type. The procambium appeared after leaf primordium and initially presented five lobes as observed transversely from a one-year-old shoot. The procambium under the apical differentiated into protophloem first and then protoxylem toward the inside. It means that protoxylem differentiated later than protophloem did. After dormancy, the vascular cambium began to be active, starting in early April 2017, which was later than shoot differentiation. On 25 July 2017, the cambial zone had 9–10 immature xylem cell layers. Both initiation and cessation of the xylem preceded that of the phloem. Until 10 October 2017, few immature elements were found, indicating the translation of cells from activity to dormancy. On 15 November 2017, the cambium contained 3–4 cells in radial rows, which demonstrated the dormancy of the cambium until next spring. Furthermore, immature xylem elements increased as cell layers in the cambium zone and cell fission increased. The growth pattern of T. ascendens revealed that cambial activity is highly seasonal and dependent on changes in abiotic conditions. Thus, the wood formation in the species will be significantly altered in a changing climatic pattern. These enhance our understanding of tree growth science, wood formation, wood structure, wood properties variation and wood improvement in tree breeding.

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