Study of the comparative wood anatomy of the species of amphorogynaceae, cervantesiaceae, nanodeaceae, santalaceae, and thesiaceae

This work compares the anatomy of the secondary xylem of 56 species of 19 genera belonging to Amphorogynaceae, Cervantesiaceae, Nanodeaceae, Santalaceae, and Thesiaceae according to the new classification (Nickrem et al. 2010). Anatomical characters typical for each species were identifled and two w...

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Autor principal: Norverto, C.A
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2011
Acceso en línea:Registro en Scopus
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024 7 |2 scopus  |a 2-s2.0-84855688423 
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100 1 |a Norverto, C.A. 
245 1 0 |a Study of the comparative wood anatomy of the species of amphorogynaceae, cervantesiaceae, nanodeaceae, santalaceae, and thesiaceae 
260 |c 2011 
270 1 0 |m Norverto, C.A.; Profesorado de Biología del Consejo Superior de Educación Católica, Gudad de Buenos Aires 1428, Argentina; email: cnorve@gmail.com 
506 |2 openaire  |e Política editorial 
504 |a Baas, P., Werker, E., Fahn, A., Some ecological trends in vessel characters (1983) IAWA Bull. n.s, 4, pp. 141-159 
504 |a Butterfield, B.G., Meylan, B.A., The occurrence of septate fibers in some New Zealand woods (1976) N.Z. J. Bot, 14, pp. 123-30 
504 |a Carlquist, S., Wood anatomy of Compositae: A summary with comment on factors controlling wood evolution (1966) Aliso, 2, pp. 25-44 
504 |a Carlquist, S., Ecological factors in wood evolution: A floristic approach (1977) Amer. J. Bot, 64, pp. 887-96 
504 |a Carlquist, S., Further concepts in ecological wood anatomy, with comments on recent work and evolution (1980) Aliso, 9, pp. 499-553 
504 |a Carlquist, S., Vessel grouping in dicotyledon wood: Significance and relationship to imperforate trachueary elements (1984) Aliso, 10, pp. 505-525 
504 |a Carlquist, S., (1988) Comparative Wood Anatomy: Systematic, Ecological, and Evolutionary Aspects of Dicotyledon Wood, , Springer-Verlag. Berlin & Heidelberg 
504 |a Chalk, L., Phil, M., The phylogenetic value of certain anatomical features of dicotyledons woods (1937) Ann. Bot, 1 (3), pp. 409-428 
504 |a IAWA COMMITTEE ON NOMENCLATURE. 1964. Multilingual glossary of terms used in wood anatomy. Verlagbuchanstalt Konkordia, Winterhur, Switzerland; Jeffrey, E.C., (1917) The Anatomy of Woody Plants, , Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago 
504 |a Kribs, D.A., Salient lines of structural specialization in the wood parenchyma of dicotyledons (1937) Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, 64, pp. 177-186 
504 |a Kukachka, B.F., Sectioning refractory woods for anatomical studies (1977) USDA Forest Service Res. Note FPL-0236, 9p. , also Microscopia Acta 80: 301-307, 1978 
504 |a Metcalfe, C.R., The structure of some sandalwoods and their substitutes and of some other little-known scented woods (1935) Kew Bull, 4, pp. 165-195 
504 |a Metcalfe, C.R., Chalk, L., (1950) Anatomy of the Dicotyledons, 1. , ed. 1, Clarendon Press, Oxford 
504 |a Metcalfe, C.R., Chalk, L., (1983) Anatomy of the Dicotyledons, 2. , ed. 2, Clarendon Press, Oxford 
504 |a Nickrent, D.L., Malecot, V., Vidal Russell, R., Der, J.P., A revised classification of Santalales (2010) Taxon, 59, pp. 538-558 
504 |a Normand, D., Note sur Panatomie du bois du genre nouveau Okoubaka (1944) Bull. Soc. Bot. France, 91, pp. 20-25. , [Okoubaka wood compared with wood of Octoknema borealis. Crystals in rays of both general 
504 |a Norverto, C.A., Wood anatomy and relationships of Santalaceae I (1993) Acanthosyris, Jodina, and Myoschilos. Aliso, 13, pp. 499-511 
504 |a Patel, R.N., Wood anatomy of the dicotyledons indigenous to New Zealand (1974) Santalaceae. New Zealand J. Bot., 7 (12), pp. 431-443 
504 |a Rao, R.V., Sharma, B., Dayal, R., Occurrence of perforated ray cells in Santalaceae (1984) IAWA Bull. n.s, 5, pp. 313-316 
504 |a Record, S.J., Hess, R., (1943) Timbers of the New World, , Yale Univ. Press, New Haven, CT 
504 |a Stauffer, H.U., Santalales-Studien I. Zur Stellung der Gattung Okoubaka Pellegrin et Normand (1957) Ber. Schweiz. Bot. Ges, 67, pp. 422-427 
504 |a Stauffer, H.U., Santalales studien V. Afrikanische Santalaceae I. Osyris, Colpoon und Rhoiacarpos (1961) Vierteljahrsschr. Naturf. Ges. Zurich, 106, pp. 387-400 
504 |a Stauffer, H.U., Santalales sudien X (1969) Amphorogynae eine NeueTribus der Santalaceae. Vierteljahrsschr. Naturf. Ges. Zurich, 114, pp. 49-76 
504 |a Stern, W.L., (1988) Index Xylariorum -3. Institutional Wood Collections of the World. I.A.W.A. Bull., 9, pp. 203-252. , n.s 
504 |a Swamy, B.G.L., The comparative morphology of the Santalaceae: Node, secondary xylem, and pollen (1949) Amer. J. Bot, 36, pp. 661-673 
504 |a Vliet, G.V., Koek-Noorman, J., Ter Welle, B., Wood anatomy, classification and phylogeny of the Melastomataceae (1981) Blumea, 27, pp. 463-473 
504 |a Webber, I.E., The woods of scleropyllous and desert plants of California (1936) Amer. J. Bot, 23, pp. 18-188 
520 3 |a This work compares the anatomy of the secondary xylem of 56 species of 19 genera belonging to Amphorogynaceae, Cervantesiaceae, Nanodeaceae, Santalaceae, and Thesiaceae according to the new classification (Nickrem et al. 2010). Anatomical characters typical for each species were identifled and two wood anatomical groups were recognized: Group A with vessel groupings with few solitary vessels, vessels in dendritic pattern (only Jodina rhombifolia, Pyrularia, Myoschilos oblongum and Mida salicifolia), long fibers with simple to bordered pits, vasicenlric tracheids (except in Acanthosyris, Cervantesia tomentosajodma rhombifolia, Pyrularia and Scleropyrum), fiber-lracheids (except in Pyrularia, Okoubaka aubrevillei, Sckropyrum and Pilgerina madagascariensis). Group B with solitary vessels, vasicentric tracheids, fibertracheids. Most species of Group A belong to Cervantesiaceae according to the new classification, except for the species of Scleropy rum that according to their anatomical characters belong to Group B. Myoschilos oblongum is part of Santalaceae (Group B) but anatomical characters are same as Cervameciaceae. The wood anatomy of species in Group A shows more xeromorphic characters than the species of Group B. Myoschilos oblongum is adapted to cold regions where there is no water in the winter season.  |l eng 
593 |a Profesorado de Biología del Consejo Superior de Educación Católica, Gudad de Buenos Aires 1428, Argentina 
690 1 0 |a ACANTHOSYRIS 
690 1 0 |a OKOUBAKA AUBREVILLEI 
690 1 0 |a PYRULARIA 
690 1 0 |a SANTALACEAE 
773 0 |d 2011  |g v. 5  |h pp. 643-659  |k n. 2  |p J. Bot. Res. Inst. Tex.  |x 19345259  |t Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 
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856 4 0 |u https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19345259_v5_n2_p643_Norverto  |y Handle 
856 4 0 |u https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_19345259_v5_n2_p643_Norverto  |y Registro en la Biblioteca Digital 
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