The study was carried out in order to bring about a better understanding of the life cycle of the pteridophyte by means of experimentally induced apospory. Inducing apospory was successful in Pteridium aquilinum var. latiusculum and Dryopteris erythrosora, but the former was exclusively used in the precise study because of the rapid growth of the gametophyte and the abundant induction of apospory. The leaf or the root detached from the sporophyte produced the aposporous prothallium, but those attached to the sporophyte did not, irrespectively of the environmental conditions so far as the present study was concerned. Also the surgically damaged apex or undeveloped leaf attached to the sporophyte did not produce the prothallium. The ability of inducing apospory was limited to the early leaves or roots of the young sporophyte. The prothallial outgrowth occurred irrespectively of the leaf age and of the existence of the dividing cell. It originated from any part of the leaf without any correlation to the existing sporophytic structures, such as the leaf apex, the vascular bundle, etc. There was no polarity for the appearance of the outgrowth. Every sporophytic cell in the epidermis, the mesophyll and the cortex could produce the gametophytic cell except the guard cell and the vascular element. The outgrowth originated from one to several sporophytic cells. The first indication of the occurrence of the aposporous outgrowth was that many, large chloroplasts appeared in the sporophytic cells from which the outgrowth originated. But there were the leaves whose cells remained alive and green even after producing the aposporous outgrowth. The outgrowth on the detached root originated from the epidermis cells at or rather near the growing point. The case was essentially the same with that of the leaf. The outgrowth was morphologically and functionally a true gametophyte and bore the sex organs by which the tetraploid sporophyte was sexually produced. Neither the sporophytic nor the intermediate outgrowth occurred on the detached sporophytic organ. © 1962, Japan Mendel Society, International Society of Cytology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Takahashi, C. (1962). Cytological Study on Induced Apospory in Ferns. CYTOLOGIA, 27(1), 79–96. https://doi.org/10.1508/cytologia.27.79
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