Abstract
We have examined the long-standing hypothesis that leaves are morphologically more complex following prolonged proximity to the shoot apical meristem. Growth rates of the petiole and rachis of conventional and mutant pea leaves were compared for successive nodes of insertion in seedling plants. Leaves were longer at higher nodes, though the relative growth rate did not vary. Mature afila leaves were longer than those of conventional and tendril-less genotypes. The afila leaf alone exhibited a transient, highly significant rise in relative growth rate during the plastochron interval P4.5–P5.5. This rise occurred after the stage at which leaves of the different genotypes were anatomically distinguishable (stage P2–P3). Rates of vertical displacement of the leaf primordium from the shoot apical meristem did not differ significantly among genotypes. Our data suggest that the rate of leaf extension is one of the consequences, rather than a cause, of leaf morphology.
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