Abstract
The early onset of bract necrosis in poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima Willd. ex. Klotzch) is characterized by small dark-stained spots that precede the development of enlarged necrotic lesions. Electron micrographs of adaxial epidermal and subepidermal tissues with early symptoms of necrosis revealed large, electron dense deposits in cell vacuoles. These spherical bodies resembled condensed tannins observed in the epidermal tissues of peach and apple fruit. Chemical analysis of bract tissues showed higher condensed tannin concentrations in bract samples with 2 mm diameter lesions than in samples with lesions less than 0.5 mm (equivalent to catechin concentrations of 59 and 13 mg·g–1 fresh mass, respectively). Tannin bodies were not observed in micrographs from parallel samples of healthy appearing bracts, and chemical analysis revealed only trace concentrations of condensed tannins in these tissues (0.2 mg·g–1 fresh mass). The evidence suggests that condensed tannins accumulate in affected cells at the earliest observable stages of bract necrosis.
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