Abstract

FISHER, J. B., GOH, C. J. & RAO, A. N., 1989. Non-axillary branching in the palms Eugeissona and Oncosperma (Arecaceae). The south-east Asian palms, Eugeissona (Calamoideae) and Oncosperma (Arecoideae) are multiple-stemmed. The morphology and development of branching in two species of each genus were examined in Singapore, Borneo, and the Malay Peninsula. Cultivated seedling and adult plants of 0. tigillarium were also observed in Florida. A new shoot arises most often from a longitudinal abaxial groove at the base of an enclosing leaf sheath. In some instances, especially in E. tristis, the enclosing leaf has two equal, adjacent grooves such that any distinction between an original mother shoot and a lateral daughter shoot is impossible. No axillary buds occur in Eugeissona which is hapaxanthic. In Oncosperma, which is pleonanthic, axillary buds are absent from young pre-flowering stems, but an inflorescence bud occurs in the axil of each leaf in older aerial stems. Early ontogenetic stages of vegetative branching, as seen in sectioned apices, indicate that a new vegetative shoot is present on the abaxial base of the first (youngest) leaf primordium. There is no ontogenetic evidence for the displacement of an originally axillary meristem as previously described for the palm Salacca (Calamoideae). Shoot development in Eugeissona is interpreted as a putative dichotomy of the apical meristem in which the meristem centres commonly develop unequally. In Oncosperma the smaller sucker bud meristem may be described as an abaxial leaf base bud, but ontogenetic variations indicate this form of branching is close to dichotomous branching. These new examples of non-axillary branching are compared to similar cases previously reported for palms and other monocotyledons.

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