The shoot apical meristems of adult Echinocereus engelmannii plants are zonate and have a tunica, central mother cells, a peripheral zone, and a pith-rib meristem. An ultrastructural, stereological study showed that each zone has its own distinct ultrastructure, but that the differences between the zones are quite small, both on a protoplasmic basis and on a cytoplasmic basis. Furthermore, the ultrastructure present in the adult apices differed only slightly from that which had been found in seedling apices, demonstrating a long-term stability of structure. The standard deviations found in the sample were small, indicating little variability from one plant to the next and suggesting that there are little or no cyclic changes during the plastochron or a 24-hr photoperiod. The ultrastructures found in the shoot apical meristems differed significantly and markedly from mature tissues of the same plants. A RECENT STUDY of the geometry of shoot apical meristems by Niklas and Mauseth (1980) demonstrated that meristem zonation could be produced solely by cell-packing phenomena; that is, a meristem with tunica, central mother cells, peripheral zone, and a pith-rib meristem could be constructed from cells which are all identical to each other. The zonation that is visually apparent would be due only to the patterns in which the cells are packed into the volume of the apex. However, the study did not preclude the possibility that each zone could also be composed of specialized cells, such that central mother cells would have a fine structure different from that of the cells of the peripheral zone or pith-rib meristem. If this were the case, the visibility of the zonation would be due both to cell-packing and differ