Abstract

The various primary vascular systems of shoots of Anagallis arvensis L. (Primulaceae) can be distinguished in relation to the number of leaves (two, three, or four) at each node. In this study, shoot segments (single intemodes and the nodes above them) were examined. The arrangement of segments within shoots was also recorded. The vasculature forms a closed system with the number of sets of bundles usually equal to twice the number of leaves. Irregularities are found in the following features of the system: the number of bundles composing leaf half‐traces; occurrence of anastomosing bundles; the number of intemodes through which bundles extend; levels of leaf attachment to the stem at the node; and distribution of parenchyma within the vascular cylinder, which determines the number of bundles in sets and the number of bundle sets. The irregularities occur with different frequencies for segments exhibiting different phyllotactic patterns. Comparison of these frequencies leads to the following conclusions: anastomosing bundles occur only in decussate or trimerous shoot segments, whereas sets of bundles united within intemodes and displaced leaves occur only in tetramerous or trimerous ones; decrease of the number of bundles per leaf and displacement of leaves at the nodal level are correlated; variation between segments exhibiting the same phyllotactic pattern is greatest for trimerous, less for tetramerous, and least for decussate segments; the vascular system of decussate shoot segments is more stable than that of the other systems; and trimerous segments seem to be intermediate between the other two segment types.

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