Abstract
Vegetative seedlings of the Ceres strain Brassica campestris L., a quantitative, long-day plant, were induced to flower by exposure to a 16-hr, long-day cycle. Cytohistological and cytohistochemical changes associated with inflorescence development were examined. Developing shoot apices were classified in vegetative, transitional, and reproductive stages. The vegetative apex possessed a biseriate tunica, central zone, peripheral zone and pith-rib meristem. The transitional stage at 48 hr was marked by an increase in size and by a stratification of the upper cell layers of the shoot apex with a concurrent decrease of apical cytohistochemical zonation. The reproductive stage was initiated at 58 hr by periclinal cell divisions in the 3rd and 4th cell layers of the flank region. Cytohistochemical zonation in the vegetative apical meristem was restored in the floral apex. An “intermediate developmental” phase was not observed between the vegetative and reproductive stage.
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