Abstract

The stem ofPotamogeton natans is characterized by a central stelar vascular system with reduced xylem and abundant phloem. Wide sieve tubes composed of short sieve-tube members joined by simple sieve plates and associated with companion cells establish an effective conduit for assimilates. At each node the phloem forms a network of parallel sieve elements connecting the stem phloem to leaf and bud traces. InP. natans an axillary bud rarely develops into a side branch, its procambial vascular bundles are each connected to the nodal complex via separate anastomoses. Their most unusual components are the anastomosai sieve elements (ANSE), characterized by thin cell walls pitted all over by tiny callose-lined pores resembling plasmodesmata, which can be detected as bright areas by fluorescence microscopy after staining with aniline blue. Several layers of ANSE make up the centre of an anastomosis and link to both the nodal and bud stelar sieve tubes via mediating (MSE) and connecting sieve elements (CSE). The ultrastructural differentiation of ANSE, MSE, and CSE corresponds to that of normal sieve elements, i.e., in the mature stage they are enucleate, evacuolate, and have lost most of their cytoplasm. Their plastids are of form-P2c, containing many cuneate protein crystals, typical of monocotyledonous sieve elements. Quantitative aspects of the “pore” areas are discussed in relation to the functional significance of bud anastomoses.

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