Short-shoot leaves on the terminal stem segments of the drought-deciduous desert shrub ocotillo (Fouquieria splendens) are retained long after long-shoot leaves are lost through senescence and abscission. This formerly unreported observation has relevance for determining whether a terminal stem segment is new or old, because newly produced segments are routinely associated with the presence of long-shoot leaves. It is now clear that the absence of long-shoot leaves on a terminal stem segment cannot be used as unequivocal evidence that the segment is old. The relatively rapid loss of long-shoot leaves from new terminal stem segments may be an adaptation to reduce herbivory by accelerating maturation of the spine that develops from tissues left by each senescing long-shoot petiole.
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1 December 2006
LOSS OF LONG-SHOOT LEAVES MAY MASK TERMINAL STEM SEGMENT AGE IN OCOTILLO (FOUQUIERIA SPLENDENS)
KEITH T KILLINGBECK
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Haseltonia
Vol. 2006 • No. 12
December 2006
Vol. 2006 • No. 12
December 2006
Chihuahuan Desert
Fouquieriaceae
leaf senescence
primary leaves
stem growth