4.1 Article

Morphology and evolution of epiphytic Davalliaceae scales

Journal

BOTANY-BOTANIQUE
Volume 86, Issue 12, Pages 1393-1403

Publisher

NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA-N R C RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/B08-098

Keywords

Davalliaceae; fern; epiphyte; evolution; scale development; scale structure

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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The scales of most members of the Davalliaceae and related epiphytic, secondary-hemiepiphytic, and climbing ferns consist of a stalk and a shield, are (lease, and are persistent oil the long-creeping rhizomes. They differ from the sessile, mostly deciduous scales of the related terrestrial eupolypod ferns. The stalked scales first developed two-dimensionally and later produced the proximal pail of the shield from near the base to comprise a peltate or pseudopeltate shield on a stalk. Anatomical observations showed variations in the cellular and histological features and the degree of stalk insertion into a rhizome concavity. A character-phylogenetic tree of scales suggested all evolutionary linkage between the stalked scale and the epiphytic life form in the lineage leading to Davalliaceae and Polypodiaceae. The elaborated scales of most species of the obligate-epiphytic Davalliaceae were similar to the sunken-stalked, peltate, absorbing, epiphyllous trichomes of some angiosperm epiphytes. These results suggest that the stalked scales may have significant roles Such as protection against desiccation, external water storage, and absorption of water and nutrients.

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