Abstract
The ontogenesis of chloroplasts during leaf development in Lepidozamia peroffskyana Regel is
described; this cycad lives in the ground layer of the evergreen subtropical closed forest of south-eastern
Australia. Characteristic features in young plastids are long bands of multilayered thylakoids,
resembling photosynthetic structures of some green algae and ferns. 'Optional' structures, namely
prothylakoid bodies and crystalline inclusions, are present in the pre-grana stages, in relation to the
slow rate of leaf development. Mature chloroplasts are characterised by a great number of randomly
oriented high grana stacks, a lack of starch, a high ratio of appressed to exposed thylakoids, and a low
ratio of Chl a to Chl b; these shade features appear coherent with the natural habitat of Lepidozamia.
However, since similar structures have been reported in mature chloroplasts of other cycads living in
exposed sites, the existence of a genetically superimposed structural pattern is hypothesised, reflecting
a primitive adaptation to weak light conditions of this group of ancient seed plants.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
8 articles.
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