Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae

In order to document stomatal characters which are significant in taxonomy, a detailed microscopic study on leaf epidermis of the selected taxa from Asteraceae was carried out. The plant species were Sonchus oleraceus, Bidens bipinnata, Centaurea iberica, Conyza bonariensis, Helianthus annuus, Lectu...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Asif Tahir, Rizwan Sarwar, Sajid Safeer, Imran Hamza, Muhammad Faraz Khan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Communications in Plant Sciences 2016-12-01
Series:Communications in Plant Sciences
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spelling doaj-558b52fb19554fbca3b36e3656ddffde2020-11-24T22:09:52ZengCommunications in Plant SciencesCommunications in Plant Sciences2237-40272237-40272016-12-017110.26814/cps2017002Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family AsteraceaeMuhammad Asif TahirRizwan SarwarSajid SafeerImran HamzaMuhammad Faraz KhanIn order to document stomatal characters which are significant in taxonomy, a detailed microscopic study on leaf epidermis of the selected taxa from Asteraceae was carried out. The plant species were Sonchus oleraceus, Bidens bipinnata, Centaurea iberica, Conyza bonariensis, Helianthus annuus, Lectuca serriola, Parthenium hysterophorus, Tagetes erecta, Cosmos sulphureus, Launaea procumbens, Zinnia elegan, Galinsoga parviflora and Conyza canadensis. All the species were amphistomatic and four types of stomata i.e., tetracytic, anomocytic, anisocytic and tricytic were recognized. Tetracytic stomatal type was dominant followed by anomocytic. Stomatal density was high on abaxial epidermis than adaxial epidermis except in Conyza bonariensis and Conyza canadensis. Highest stomatal density was in Tagetes erecta while lowest in Conyza canadensis. In lower epidermis stomatal index was higher in Sonchus oleraceus followed by Bidens bipinnata and Tagetes erecta while in upper epidermis highest index was shown by Cosmos sulphureus. Stomatal aperture and guard cell size and density were also significant features in these species.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Asif Tahir
Rizwan Sarwar
Sajid Safeer
Imran Hamza
Muhammad Faraz Khan
spellingShingle Muhammad Asif Tahir
Rizwan Sarwar
Sajid Safeer
Imran Hamza
Muhammad Faraz Khan
Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
Communications in Plant Sciences
author_facet Muhammad Asif Tahir
Rizwan Sarwar
Sajid Safeer
Imran Hamza
Muhammad Faraz Khan
author_sort Muhammad Asif Tahir
title Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
title_short Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
title_full Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
title_fullStr Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
title_full_unstemmed Anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family Asteraceae
title_sort anatomical variations in stomatal attributes of selected species of family asteraceae
publisher Communications in Plant Sciences
series Communications in Plant Sciences
issn 2237-4027
2237-4027
publishDate 2016-12-01
description In order to document stomatal characters which are significant in taxonomy, a detailed microscopic study on leaf epidermis of the selected taxa from Asteraceae was carried out. The plant species were Sonchus oleraceus, Bidens bipinnata, Centaurea iberica, Conyza bonariensis, Helianthus annuus, Lectuca serriola, Parthenium hysterophorus, Tagetes erecta, Cosmos sulphureus, Launaea procumbens, Zinnia elegan, Galinsoga parviflora and Conyza canadensis. All the species were amphistomatic and four types of stomata i.e., tetracytic, anomocytic, anisocytic and tricytic were recognized. Tetracytic stomatal type was dominant followed by anomocytic. Stomatal density was high on abaxial epidermis than adaxial epidermis except in Conyza bonariensis and Conyza canadensis. Highest stomatal density was in Tagetes erecta while lowest in Conyza canadensis. In lower epidermis stomatal index was higher in Sonchus oleraceus followed by Bidens bipinnata and Tagetes erecta while in upper epidermis highest index was shown by Cosmos sulphureus. Stomatal aperture and guard cell size and density were also significant features in these species.
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AT imranhamza anatomicalvariationsinstomatalattributesofselectedspeciesoffamilyasteraceae
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