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Spatial distribution characteristics of stomata at the areole level in Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Magnoliaceae)

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Spatial distribution characteristics of stomata at the areole level in Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Magnoliaceae). / Shi, P.; Jiao, Y.; Diggle, P.J. et al.
In: Annals of Botany, Vol. 128, No. 7, 09.11.2021, p. 875-886.

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Shi P, Jiao Y, Diggle PJ, Turner R, Wang R, Niinemets U. Spatial distribution characteristics of stomata at the areole level in Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Magnoliaceae). Annals of Botany. 2021 Nov 9;128(7):875-886. Epub 2021 Aug 16. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcab106

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@article{2f582301f2664df98e72c23d10effdc3,
title = "Spatial distribution characteristics of stomata at the areole level in Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Magnoliaceae)",
abstract = "BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In hierarchically reticulate venation patterns, smaller orders of veins form areoles in which stomata are located. This study aimed to quantify the spatial relationship among stomata at the areole level.METHODS: For each of 12 leaves of M. cavaleriei var. platypetala, we assumed that stomatal characteristics were symmetrical on either side of the midrib, and divided the leaf surface on one side of the midrib into six layers equidistantly spaced along the apical-basal axis. We then further divided each layer into three positions equidistantly spaced from midrib to leaf margin, resulting in a total of 18 sampling locations. In addition, for 60 leaves, we sampled three positions from midrib to margin within only the widest layer of the leaf. Stomatal density and mean nearest neighbour distance (MNND) were calculated for each section. A replicated spatial point pattern approach quantified stomatal spatial relationships at different distances (0-300 μm).KEY RESULTS: A tendency towards regular arrangement (inhibition as opposed to attraction or clustering) was observed between stomatal centres at distances <100 μm. Leaf layer (leaf length dimension) had no significant effect on local stomatal density, MNND or the spatial distribution characteristics of stomatal centres. In addition, we did not find greater inhibition at the centre of areoles, and in positions farther from the midrib.CONCLUSIONS: Spatial inhibition might be caused by the one-cell-spacing rule, resulting in more regular arrangement of stomata, and it was found to exist at distances up to ~100 μm. This work implies that leaf hydraulic architecture, consisting of both vascular and mesophyll properties, is sufficient to prevent important spatial variability in water supply at the areole level.",
keywords = "Areoles, K function, one-cell-spacing rule, replicated spatial point pattern analysis, stomatal distributions",
author = "P. Shi and Y. Jiao and P.J. Diggle and R. Turner and R. Wang and U. Niinemets",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1093/aob/mcab106",
language = "English",
volume = "128",
pages = "875--886",
journal = "Annals of Botany",
issn = "0305-7364",
publisher = "OXFORD UNIV PRESS",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spatial distribution characteristics of stomata at the areole level in Michelia cavaleriei var. platypetala (Magnoliaceae)

AU - Shi, P.

AU - Jiao, Y.

AU - Diggle, P.J.

AU - Turner, R.

AU - Wang, R.

AU - Niinemets, U.

PY - 2021/11/9

Y1 - 2021/11/9

N2 - BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In hierarchically reticulate venation patterns, smaller orders of veins form areoles in which stomata are located. This study aimed to quantify the spatial relationship among stomata at the areole level.METHODS: For each of 12 leaves of M. cavaleriei var. platypetala, we assumed that stomatal characteristics were symmetrical on either side of the midrib, and divided the leaf surface on one side of the midrib into six layers equidistantly spaced along the apical-basal axis. We then further divided each layer into three positions equidistantly spaced from midrib to leaf margin, resulting in a total of 18 sampling locations. In addition, for 60 leaves, we sampled three positions from midrib to margin within only the widest layer of the leaf. Stomatal density and mean nearest neighbour distance (MNND) were calculated for each section. A replicated spatial point pattern approach quantified stomatal spatial relationships at different distances (0-300 μm).KEY RESULTS: A tendency towards regular arrangement (inhibition as opposed to attraction or clustering) was observed between stomatal centres at distances <100 μm. Leaf layer (leaf length dimension) had no significant effect on local stomatal density, MNND or the spatial distribution characteristics of stomatal centres. In addition, we did not find greater inhibition at the centre of areoles, and in positions farther from the midrib.CONCLUSIONS: Spatial inhibition might be caused by the one-cell-spacing rule, resulting in more regular arrangement of stomata, and it was found to exist at distances up to ~100 μm. This work implies that leaf hydraulic architecture, consisting of both vascular and mesophyll properties, is sufficient to prevent important spatial variability in water supply at the areole level.

AB - BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In hierarchically reticulate venation patterns, smaller orders of veins form areoles in which stomata are located. This study aimed to quantify the spatial relationship among stomata at the areole level.METHODS: For each of 12 leaves of M. cavaleriei var. platypetala, we assumed that stomatal characteristics were symmetrical on either side of the midrib, and divided the leaf surface on one side of the midrib into six layers equidistantly spaced along the apical-basal axis. We then further divided each layer into three positions equidistantly spaced from midrib to leaf margin, resulting in a total of 18 sampling locations. In addition, for 60 leaves, we sampled three positions from midrib to margin within only the widest layer of the leaf. Stomatal density and mean nearest neighbour distance (MNND) were calculated for each section. A replicated spatial point pattern approach quantified stomatal spatial relationships at different distances (0-300 μm).KEY RESULTS: A tendency towards regular arrangement (inhibition as opposed to attraction or clustering) was observed between stomatal centres at distances <100 μm. Leaf layer (leaf length dimension) had no significant effect on local stomatal density, MNND or the spatial distribution characteristics of stomatal centres. In addition, we did not find greater inhibition at the centre of areoles, and in positions farther from the midrib.CONCLUSIONS: Spatial inhibition might be caused by the one-cell-spacing rule, resulting in more regular arrangement of stomata, and it was found to exist at distances up to ~100 μm. This work implies that leaf hydraulic architecture, consisting of both vascular and mesophyll properties, is sufficient to prevent important spatial variability in water supply at the areole level.

KW - Areoles

KW - K function

KW - one-cell-spacing rule

KW - replicated spatial point pattern analysis

KW - stomatal distributions

U2 - 10.1093/aob/mcab106

DO - 10.1093/aob/mcab106

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34397092

VL - 128

SP - 875

EP - 886

JO - Annals of Botany

JF - Annals of Botany

SN - 0305-7364

IS - 7

ER -