As the tip of a plant shoot grows, new leaves are produced at regular time intervals if temperature is held constant. This time interval is termed the plastochron (or plastochrone).[1] The plastochrone index and the leaf plastochron index are ways of measuring the age of a plant dependent on morphological traits rather than on chronological age.[clarification needed] Use of these indices removes differences caused by germination, developmental differences and exponential growth.
Definitions
editThe spatial pattern of the arrangement of leaves is called phyllotaxy whereas the time between successive leaf initiation events is called the plastochron and the rate of emergence from the apical bud is the phyllochron.
Plastochron ratio
editIn 1951, F. J. Richards introduced the idea of the plastochron ratio and developed a system of equations to describe mathematically a centric representation using three parameters: plastochron ratio, divergence angle, and the angle of the cone tangential to the apex in the area being considered.[2][3]
Emerging phyllodes or leaf variants experience a sudden change from a high humidity environment to a more arid one. There are other changes they encounter such as variations in light level, photoperiod and the gaseous content of the air.
References
edit- ^ Silk, Wendy Kuhn; Erickson, Ralph O. (1979). "Kinematics of plant growth". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 76 (4): 481–501. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(79)90014-6.
- ^ FJ Richards, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. London, Ser. B 235, 509 (1951).
- ^ Orthostichy, Parastichy and Plastochrone Ratio in a Central Theory of Phyllotaxis