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MOVING WITH CLIMBING PLANTS FROM CHARLES DARWIN'S TIME INTO THE 21ST CENTURY

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 96, Issue 7, Pages 1205-1221

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.0900045

Keywords

attachment mechanisms; biomechanics; growth; hydraulics; lianas; plant anatomy; twining plants; vines

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We provide an overview of research on climbing plants from Charles Darwin to the present day. Following Darwin's interests, this review will focus on functional perspectives including attachment mechanisms and stem structure and function. We draw attention to a number of unsolved problems inviting future research. These include the mechanism for establishment of the twining habit, a quantitative description following the development of a tissue element through space and time, the chemistry of sticky exudates, the microstructure of xylem and the capacity for water storage, the vulnerability to embolism, and the mechanism for embolism repair. In conclusion we cite evidence that, in response to increasing CO, concentration, anthropic perturbation and/ or increasing forest fragmentation, lianas are increasing relative to tree species. In the 21st century, we are returning to the multiscale, multidisciplinary approach taken by Darwin to understand natural history.

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