Author:
Scurfield G,Anderson CA,Segnit ER
Abstract
Scanning electron microscopy has been used to examine silica isolated by chemical means from the
wood of 32 species of woody perennial. The silica consists of aggregate grains lying free in the
lumina or in ray and xylem parenchyma cells in 24 of the species. It occurs as dense silica in the other
species, filling the lumina or lining the internal surfaces of vessels (and fibres) in all cases except
Gynotroches axillaris where it is deposited in ray parenchyma cells. Infrared spectra and X-ray
diffraction diagrams, obtained for specimens of both sorts of silica, are indistinguishable from those
for amorphous silica. Aggregate grain and dense silicas are also alike in that their differential thermal
analysis curves show a rather broad endothermic peak between 175° and 205°C. The results are
discussed in relation to possible modes of deposition of the two sorts of silica and the tendency for
silica in ray parenchyma cells to be associated with polyphenols.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
129 articles.
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