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XXI.—On Leaf-Architecture as illuminated by a Study of Pteridophyta

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

F. O. Bower
Affiliation:
Regius Professor of Botany in theUniversity of Glasgow.

Extract

The expression “architecture” as applied to the leaf was introduced by Prantl in his monograph on the Hymenophyllaceæ. It may be adopted as connoting the sum of the facts of construction of leaves; together with those principles or methods deduced from them, upon which we find the leaf to be built up. The varieties of size, form, and complexity of leaves appear infinite; but similarities in the scheme of their construction are obvious. It cannot be assumed that where similarities occur they are necessarily due to immediate community of descent. They may or may not be. Parallel development under similar conditions may be, and probably has been often, the source of such similarity. But even so it may be possible to connect the simpler and the more complex within the several lines of nearer relationship, and a study of several such lines may be expected to disclose certain underlying principles or methods which have ruled in the construction of foliar organs at large. The recognition of these, in their evolutionary aspect, is the proper basis for a scientific knowledge of leaf-architecture.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1917

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References

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page 701 note ‡ It may be a question whether all cases of complex venation in any leaf-expansion represent the result of webbing of laciniæ originally distinct. It is possible that a branching of veins may be initiated de novo in a leaf-expansion. We know that some such new developments have produced the reticulate state. It would therefore be rash to deny that something similar may in some cases account for the origin of additional veins in an entire blade. We may conclude that in primitive types with open venation which are “webbed” the venation may be a near index of a primitive laciniation. But in derivative types, and especially where the venation is reticulate, as in Angiosperms, this may have so obliterated the original scheme of construction that what is actually seen can no longer be trusted as indicating it further than in quite general features.

page 701 note § Ber. d. d. Bot. Ges., xiii, p. 245.

page 702 note * Campbell, Eusp. Ferns, fig. 122.

page 702 note † See Land Flora, p. 627, and refs.

page 703 note * Phil. Trans., pt. ii, 1884, tigs. 15–17.

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page 706 note * Land Flora, chap, xlii, p. 670.

page 706 note † Bot. Gaz., 1914, pp. 509–514.

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