
doi: 10.1086/673241
Premise of research. Leaf mesophyll is often differentiated into a palisade layer with tightly packed, elongated cells (I-cells) and a spongy layer with loosely packed, complex shaped cells. An alternative palisade type, composed of branched H-cells, has evolved in a number of plant lineages. Viburnum (Adoxaceae) possesses both types of palisade, providing an opportunity to assess the significance of evolutionary switches between these forms.Methodology. An anatomical survey of 80 species spanning the Viburnum phylogeny permitted an analysis of palisade differences in relation to other characters. A geometric model of leaf mesophyll surface area for CO2 absorption correlated well with measured photosynthetic capacity in a subset of species, allowing us to infer shifts in photosynthetic function.Pivotal results. Ancestrally, viburnums probably produced a palisade with one layer of H-cells. Multiple transitions to two layers of H-cells (H2) and to one or two layers of I-cells (I1, I2) occurred. These shifts...
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