4.6 Article

Charting the twist-to-bend ratio of plant axes

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 19, Issue 191, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2022.0131

Keywords

bending modulus; finite-element method; flexural rigidity; torsional modulus; torsional rigidity; twist-to-bend ratio

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The evolution of land plants has resulted in various body plans, and the differences in cross-sectional geometry and tissue pattern of plant axes affect their flexural rigidity, torsional rigidity, and twist-to-bend ratio. By designing artificial cross-sections and using a mathematical model, we were able to calculate the twist-to-bend ratio and observe clustering of similar tissue patterns.
During the evolution of land plants many body plans have been developed. Differences in the cross-sectional geometry and tissue pattern of plant axes influence their flexural rigidity, torsional rigidity and the ratio of both of these rigidities, the so-called twist-to-bend ratio. For comparison, we have designed artificial cross-sections with various cross-sectional geometries and patterns of vascular bundles, collenchyma or sclerenchyma strands, but fixed percentages for these tissues. Our mathematical model allows the calculation of the twist-to-bend ratio by taking both cross-sectional geometry and tissue pattern into account. Each artificial cross-section was placed into a rigidity chart to provide information about its twist-to-bend ratio. In these charts, artificial cross-sections with the same geometry did not form clusters, whereas those with similar tissue patterns formed clusters characterized by vascular bundles, collenchyma or sclerenchyma arranged as one central strand, as a peripheral closed ring or as distributed individual strands. Generally, flexural rigidity increased the more the bundles or fibre strands were placed at the periphery. Torsional rigidity decreased the more the bundles or strands were separated and the less that they were arranged along a peripheral ring. The calculated twist-to-bend ratios ranged between 0.85 (ellipse with central vascular bundles) and 196 (triangle with individual peripheral sclerenchyma strands).

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