Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense

Se comparó cristales de oxalato de calcio y la dureza de la hoja en cinco especies, (Cyclanthus subpalmata, Pandanus leram, Crinum amabile, Heliconia longiflora, y Guzmania zahnii), pre-seleccionadas por tener ráfidos, clasificando las hojas como jóvenes y viejas. Se contó los cristales por microsco...

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Autor principal: Finley, David S
Formato: Online
Idioma:eng
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 1999
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/18998
id RBT18998
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spelling RBT189982022-05-30T19:16:23Z Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense Finley, David S calcium oxalate raphide crystal toughness Calcium oxalate crystal formation and leaf toughness were measured and compared in five species, (Cyclanthus subpalmata, Pandanus leram, Crinum amabile, Heliconia longiflora and Guzmania zahnii) preselected for known leaf raphide production and toughness. Nine to eleven representative individuals from each species were randomly selected for the same microenvironment. The study was conducted in Las Cruces, Costa Rica. Leaves from each species were classified as two age classes: young and mature. Leaf crystal number was quantified by light microscopy. Leaf toughness was measured with a penetrometer. For all five species, the number of crystals was highest in young leaves and lowest in mature leaves. In addition, crystal formation was inversely related both to the leaf age class and to leaf toughness. It is proposed that crystal formation may be an alternative plant defense to toughness in young leaves. Se comparó cristales de oxalato de calcio y la dureza de la hoja en cinco especies, (Cyclanthus subpalmata, Pandanus leram, Crinum amabile, Heliconia longiflora, y Guzmania zahnii), pre-seleccionadas por tener ráfidos, clasificando las hojas como jóvenes y viejas. Se contó los cristales por microscopía de luz. La dureza de la hoja fue medida con un penetrómetro. En todas los especies, la cantidad de cristal fue mayor en hojas jóvenes y la formación estuvo inversamente relacionada con edad y dureza de la hoja. La formación de cristales puede ser una defensa alternativa a la dureza de las hojas jóvenes. Universidad de Costa Rica 1999-03-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/18998 10.15517/rbt.v47i1-2.18998 Revista de Biología Tropical; Vol. 47 No. 1-2 (1999): Volume 47 – Regular number 1-2 – March 1999; 27–31 Revista de Biología Tropical; Vol. 47 Núm. 1-2 (1999): Volumen 47 – Número regular 1-2 – Marzo 1999; 27–31 Revista Biología Tropical; Vol. 47 N.º 1-2 (1999): Volume 47 – Regular number 1-2 – March 1999; 27–31 2215-2075 0034-7744 10.15517/rbt.v47i1-2 eng https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/18998/19093 Copyright (c) 1999 Revista de Biología Tropical http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
institution Universidad de Costa Rica
collection Revista de Biología Tropical
language eng
format Online
author Finley, David S
spellingShingle Finley, David S
Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
author_facet Finley, David S
author_sort Finley, David S
description Se comparó cristales de oxalato de calcio y la dureza de la hoja en cinco especies, (Cyclanthus subpalmata, Pandanus leram, Crinum amabile, Heliconia longiflora, y Guzmania zahnii), pre-seleccionadas por tener ráfidos, clasificando las hojas como jóvenes y viejas. Se contó los cristales por microscopía de luz. La dureza de la hoja fue medida con un penetrómetro. En todas los especies, la cantidad de cristal fue mayor en hojas jóvenes y la formación estuvo inversamente relacionada con edad y dureza de la hoja. La formación de cristales puede ser una defensa alternativa a la dureza de las hojas jóvenes.
title Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_short Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_full Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_fullStr Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_sort patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
title_alt Patterns of calcium oxalate crystals in young tropical leaves: a possible role as an anti-herbivory defense
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 1999
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/18998
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