Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology

The hypothesis of functionally adaptive diversification of wood structure in the course of evolution as advanced by Carlquist is critically tested for vessel member length and type of perforation plate. The functional significance of within-tree variation in vessel member morphology is discussed fir...

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Main Author: Baas, P. (Pieter)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1976
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/508223
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spelling ftnaturalis:oai:repository.naturalis.nl:508223 2024-02-11T10:01:31+01:00 Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology Baas, P. (Pieter) 1976-01-01 application/pdf https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/508223 en eng https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/508223 Leiden Botanical Series vol. 3 no. 1, pp. 157-181 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 1976 ftnaturalis 2024-01-17T23:23:36Z The hypothesis of functionally adaptive diversification of wood structure in the course of evolution as advanced by Carlquist is critically tested for vessel member length and type of perforation plate. The functional significance of within-tree variation in vessel member morphology is discussed first, and a criticism of Philipson & Butterfield\xe2\x80\x99s theory for explaining classical length-on-age curves for fusiform initial length is given. At the genus and family level examples are cited which contradict the hypothesis that specialization of the perforation plate has a strong selective advantage for the occupation of more xeric environments or for high conductive rates. Other examples, however, seem to support this. The functional interpretation of correlations between vessel member length and ecological conditions is criticised. A comparison is made between whole woody floras or vegetation types with respect to the proportion of genera with scalariform perforation plates (Tables 1 and 2, Fig. 2). In tropical lowland rain forests the percentage of genera with scalariform plates is rather low. It strongly increases for tropical montane forests and for temperate to arctic floras. It is lowest in seasonally dry to arid regions. These trends support Carlquist\xe2\x80\x99s idea that scalariform plates are, in general, only successful for conditions which require low rates of water conduction. In addition, the role of temperature is stressed. The total evidence presented in this paper is discussed in terms of random \xe2\x80\x98patio ludens\xe2\x80\x99 evolution which has to a considerable extent been canalized through selective pressures by environmental factors. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Naturalis Institutional Repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Naturalis Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftnaturalis
language English
description The hypothesis of functionally adaptive diversification of wood structure in the course of evolution as advanced by Carlquist is critically tested for vessel member length and type of perforation plate. The functional significance of within-tree variation in vessel member morphology is discussed first, and a criticism of Philipson & Butterfield\xe2\x80\x99s theory for explaining classical length-on-age curves for fusiform initial length is given. At the genus and family level examples are cited which contradict the hypothesis that specialization of the perforation plate has a strong selective advantage for the occupation of more xeric environments or for high conductive rates. Other examples, however, seem to support this. The functional interpretation of correlations between vessel member length and ecological conditions is criticised. A comparison is made between whole woody floras or vegetation types with respect to the proportion of genera with scalariform perforation plates (Tables 1 and 2, Fig. 2). In tropical lowland rain forests the percentage of genera with scalariform plates is rather low. It strongly increases for tropical montane forests and for temperate to arctic floras. It is lowest in seasonally dry to arid regions. These trends support Carlquist\xe2\x80\x99s idea that scalariform plates are, in general, only successful for conditions which require low rates of water conduction. In addition, the role of temperature is stressed. The total evidence presented in this paper is discussed in terms of random \xe2\x80\x98patio ludens\xe2\x80\x99 evolution which has to a considerable extent been canalized through selective pressures by environmental factors.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Baas, P. (Pieter)
spellingShingle Baas, P. (Pieter)
Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
author_facet Baas, P. (Pieter)
author_sort Baas, P. (Pieter)
title Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
title_short Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
title_full Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
title_fullStr Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
title_full_unstemmed Some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
title_sort some functional and adaptive aspects of vessel member morphology
publishDate 1976
url https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/508223
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Leiden Botanical Series vol. 3 no. 1, pp. 157-181
op_relation https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/508223
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