SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.91 número3Los jardines botánicos y la crisis de la biodiversidadDiversidad de helechos y licófitos en fragmentos de selva mediana subperennifolia del sur de Tabasco, México índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
Home Pagelista alfabética de periódicos  

Serviços Personalizados

Journal

Artigo

Indicadores

Links relacionados

  • Não possue artigos similaresSimilares em SciELO

Compartilhar


Botanical Sciences

versão On-line ISSN 2007-4476versão impressa ISSN 2007-4298

Bot. sci vol.91 no.3 México Set. 2013

 

Botánica estructural

 

The chloroplasts and unlignified parenchyma of two tropical pioneer forest tree species (Urticaceae)

 

Los cloroplastos y el parénquima no lignificado en dos especies arbóreas pioneras del bosque tropical (Urticaceae)

 

Eliezer Cocoletzi1, Guillermo Angeles1,3, Victoria Sosa1 and Araceli Patrón2

 

1 Instituto de Ecología A. C., El Haya, Xalapa, Veracruz, México.

2 Instituto de Investigación Cientifica y Tecnológica, San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí, México.

3 Corresponding author: guillermo.angeles@inecol.edu.mx.

 

Received: September 2nd, 2012
Accepted: December 27th, 2012

 

Abstract

The influence of light on chloroplast density and formation of unlignified parenchyma was determined in stems of Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula, two woody pioneer species from the Mexican tropics, growing either under the shade or under sunny conditions. The goals of the present study were: (1) to quantify and characterize chloroplasts in this tissue and (2) to determine the influence of two light conditions in chloroplast number and unlignified parenchyma formation. Sunshine increases the presence of chloroplasts and the area of unlignified parenchyma in M. longipes stems, whereas in U. glabriuscula it occurs the opposite. Differences in the presence of some features in the pioneer species studied, such as the abundance of mucilaginous ducts (M. longipes), type of cystolith (U. glabriuscula), and the area occupied by the pith in stem cross sections, occur as a response to canopy gaps in this tropical forest.

Keywords: canopy gaps, chloroplasts formation, nonfoliar photosynthesis, unlignified parenchyma.

 

Resumen

Se determinó la influencia de la luz sobre la densidad de cloroplastos y la formación de parénquima no lignificado en tallos de Myriocarpa longipes y Urera glabriuscula, dos especies pioneras del trópico mexicano que pueden crecer bajo condiciones de sombra o de sol. Los objetivos del presente estudio fueron: (1) cuantificar y caracterizar los cloroplastos en este tejido y (2) determinar la influencia de dos niveles de iluminación sobre el número de cloroplastos y la formación de parénquima no lignificado. La luz del sol induce un aumento en la presencia de cloroplastos en el área de parénquima no lignificado en M. longipes, pero en U. glabriuscula ocurre lo contrario. Se observaron diferencias en la presencia de algunas características en estas especies pioneras, tales como la abundancia de ductos mucilaginosos (M. longipes), tipo de cistolito (U. glabriuscula) y el área transversal del tallo ocupada por la médula, que pudieran estar determinadas por claros en el dosel de la selva tropical.

Palabras clave: abertura del dosel, formación de cloroplastos, fotosíntesis no foliar, parénquima no lignificado.

 

Chloroplasts are not restricted to leaves, but rather can also be present in other parts of the plant including stems, branches, roots, flowers, fruit, and cotyledons as an additional strategy for carbon gain (Aschan and Pfanz, 2003; Dima et al., 2006). Among stem tissues with chloroplasts there is unlignified parenchyma (ULP), a tissue that functions as a repository for secondary metabolites and water, and which commonly forms tangential bands or clusters in the secondary xylem of a dozen plant families (Angeles et al., 2004; InsideWood, 2004).

The chloroplasts found inside trunks and branches can be functional and have the ability to actively assimilate reductive CO2 in the presence of nutrients, water and carbon dioxide (Pfanz et al., 2002). The stems of woody plants have structural modifications that allow light to pass to the interior and reach the light-harvesting complex in the thylakoid membrane of the chloroplasts (Sun et al., 2003). Inside the stem, the parenchyma cells of the bark, xylem rays, and the pith actively consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide as a result of mitochondrial activity. The different layers of bark have a high degree of resistance to gas diffusion, resulting in a barrier to atmospheric O2 (Pfanz and Aschan, 2001) . As a consequence, CO2 accumulates within the stem, eventually leading to protoplasm acidification in the inner tissues and nonfoliar photosynthesis causes the refixation of endogenously produced CO2 inside the stem (Pfanz et al., 2002) . Some authors have shown that the parenchyma cells surrounding the vessels in the xylem are able to assimilate soluble carbon dioxide from the sap, since their chloroplasts have an effective morphology, enzymatic machinery, and photosynthesis (Fineran, 1995; Aschan et al., 2001; Aschan and Pfanz, 2003; Berveiller et al., 2007).

During plant growth and development, light is one of the most important environmental factors that influence metabolic activities via photomorphogenesis. Studies have shown that ca. 730 nm light, conducted axially by vascular tissues, is important for photomorphogenesis when radiation leaks into the surrounding living tissue, such as ULP (Vogelmann, 1993; Sun et al., 2003). As a response to changes in light from the environment, ULP may undergo modifications in the number, size, shape, and arrangement of cells and pigment concentration (Givnish, 1988). In tropical forests, for example, canopy openings can suddenly increase light incidence in the understory from 1% to 100% (Poulson and Platt, 1989), promoting the rapid growth of pioneer species. These sudden changes in the light environment could cause rapid changes in whole plant architecture but also in the foliar and nonfoliar chloroplasts of plants growing in the understory (Pearcy, 1990; Bai et al., 2008; Martínez-Sánchez et al., 2008).

Previous research on the physiology of woody tissue has focused mostly on carbon gain (Teskey et al., 2008; Saveyn et al., 2010), the presence of the enzymes involved in photosynthesis, such as RuBisCO (Buns et al., 1993), corticular photosynthesis (Aschan et al., 2001; Aschan and Pfanz, 2003), the ultrastructure and arrangement of chloroplasts (Larcher et al., 1988; Fineran, 1995), and chlorophyll (van Cleve et al., 1993; Dima et al., 2006). However, the ultrastructure of nonfoliar chloroplasts growing under different light levels has not yet been compared. Pfanz et al. (2002) compared chloroplasts in the chlorenchyma of the woody stems of several groups of plants. They estimated the density, height, and width of grana stacks in the stem layers as well as among life stages.

Thus, for this study we selected two tropical pioneer tree species with stems that have ULP to determine the density and distribution of chloroplasts in this tissue, and to find out whether these differ under sunny and shady conditions. We chose Myriocarpa longipes Liebm. and Urera glabriuscu-la V.W.Steinm. in the Urticaceae family because they form both LP (lignified parenchyma) and ULP in their stems, and because they are pioneer trees in the tropical rain forest reserve at Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, Mexico, where the dynamics of tree replacement after a gap opens has been well documented (Martínez-Ramos et al., 1988; Martínez-Ramos and García-Orth, 2007; Sánchez-Gallen et al., 2010). Secondary or pioneer trees require large openings (> 100 m2) to regenerate and sprout (González et al., 1997; Ibarra-Manríquez et al., 1997; Howe et al., 2010). In this forest solar radiation reaching the forest understory through the canopy varies from 0.1% to 2%, whereas in canopy gaps radiation is 100% (Orozco-Segovia et al., 1987; González et al., 1997; Figueroa and Vazquez-Yanes, 2002).

In summary, the objectives of the present study were: (1) to quantify and characterize the chloroplasts of ULP, and (2) to determine the influence of two light intensities on the number of chloroplasts and ULP formation.

 

Materials and methods

Plant material. In the spring of 2011, samples from eight Urera glabriuscula and eight Myriocarpa longipes trees that were approximately ten years old, and with a dbh 10-15 cm were collected in the Los Tuxtlas Tropical Biology Field Station in Veracruz, Mexico (95° 03' 49'' W, 18° 29' 44'' N, 443 m a.s.l.). Although U. glabriuscula and M. longipes are pioneer species, mature individuals can be found growing in openings or in the understory.

Light intensity. Two different light environments were chosen: (1) sunny, where the trees grew at the edge of roads or clearings and (2) shady, where trees grew under the forest canopy. Four trees each of Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula were selected for each environment to evaluate the effect of solar radiation on the amount of ULP and the number of chloroplasts. Photonic flux density (PFD) was measured on every stem surface; data were recorded every hour from 12:00-16:00 h with a Datalogger (LI-COR 1000, LI-COR Lincoln, Nebraska, EUA). Microclimate information collected with the Datalogger was compared with information gathered from the meteorology station located in the Los Tuxtlas Biological Field Station.

Chloroplast arrangement. To determine the number of chloroplasts per area in ULP, each stem sample was hand-sectioned for immediate observation. Fresh slices were examined with a Nikon Eclipse E600 microscope, using fluorescence optics (mercury lamp UV 50 W) equipped with a 450-490 nm exciting filter (chromatic transmission divisor DM500) and a 515 nm barrier filter. Images were taken with a Nikon CoolPix 950 digital camera. To acquire semiquantitative data, samples were also examined with an Olympus FV1000 confocal laser microscope. Two stain-excitement signals were used at 488 and 543 nm; for fluorescence, signal emission detection used two long-step filters of 644-692 nm and 500-530 nm. Pictures in X/Y were taken with a resolution of 800 x 800 pixels. Fourteen images were taken in Z, each 4.5 pirn, and these were then combined into a single X/Y image.

Each image was processed with Image-J version 1.45e (National Institutes of Health, United States, http://rsb.info.nih.gov) to minimize noise and sharpen the contrast between red autofluorescence chloroplasts and the background. A macro (text file) was developed to optimize the image processing (Appendix). First, the color information (R, G, and B) of the images was divided, creating new red information images. Then, the background was removed from each image to create a new dark monochromatic background while keeping the chloroplasts red in color. Subsequently, the images were converted to an 8-bit format, thus creating a bichromatic image. The threshold option in the Intermodes algorithm (Prewitt and Mendelsohn, 1966) was used to obtain an image with a light background and the chloroplasts in black. The Close, Open and Fill Holes options were used to avoid black dots and extra black pixels in the image, and 1 mm2 area was drawn on the image with the chloroplasts located in the ULP, allowing us to measure the total area occupied by chloroplasts. The Analyze Particles function was used to calculate the area occupied by the chloroplasts. The average area of an individual chloroplast for the two tree species was 0.0002 mm2.

Chloroplast ultrastructure. To observe the ultrastructure of chloroplasts in ULP cells, transverse ultra-thin sections were examined with a transmission electron microscope (TEM). Blocks of wood measuring 5 x 2 mm and containing ULP were obtained from stems and then fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde in 25 mM phosphate buffer PBS (NaHPO4·7H2O 100 mM and NaH2PO4·H2O pH 7) at 4 °C (Chaffey, 2002) for 48 h; samples were washed in four PBS changes, for 15 min each time. Postfixation was done with 1% OsO4 in phosphate buffer for two hours at 4 °C. Samples were dehydrated in a series of graded ethanol concentrations for 15 min each at 4 °C: 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, and 100% ethanol, and then two more changes with 100% ethanol, each one lasting 15 min. In addition, two changes with 100% propylene oxide (PPO) for 15 min each were done. Samples were left in PPO-Epoxy resin (Epon 812) (1:1) in a desiccator for 48 h, at room temperature. One change of 100% Epon 812 was done in a rotating device for 4 h. The embedded material was polymerized after 48 h at 60 °C (Ruzin, 1999). Sections were made (90 nm) with an ultramicrotome (Reichert-Jung) and contrasted with 2% uranyl acetate for 30 min, followed by 2% lead citrate for 10 min. Finally, the samples were examined in a JEM-1200 EXII (JEOL) transmission electron microscope equipped with a digital camera (Ditabis, Pforzheim, Germany) to record selected images.

Measuring the area of ULP. Stem samples from each individual were hand-sectioned in transverse slices approximately 100 μm thick and then analyzed with a Leica MZ8 stereomicroscope using incident light from a Leica CLS150X lamp. Pictures were taken with a Nikon CoolPix 950 digital camera. The captured images were used to calculate the area of ULP using the software Image-J version 1.45e (National Institutes of Health, U.S.A.; http://rsb.info.nih.gov). Each image was modified to minimize noise and sharpen the contrast between the lignified and unlignified tissue. First, the original light background was removed from each image, creating a new monochromatic background while keeping the color of the stem tissue. Next, the image was inverted so the background was dark and the lignified tissue was white. At this point the ULP appeared as a dark object because the software recognizes black pixels for the purpose of counting. The images were then converted to an 8-bit format, creating a bichromatic image. Using the threshold adjustments, the contrast was modified under the red-scale setting in order to delineate each cluster of ULP more clearly. Using the drawing tools, some particles were adjusted manually to avoid black dots in the image. Then, the Analyze Particles function was used to measure the area covered by ULP, but first, it was necessary to obtain the smallest and the largest values of the cluster size. This step excluded objects that were too small or too large, and allowed us to measure just the area occupied by ULP. In an 8-bit image format, each individual ULP cluster for the two species studied had an area of 0.02 to 6 mm2. These values were consistent with the average particle size calculated as part of the Analyze Particles output. A total of 50 images were processed. In order to determine the accuracy and consistency of the Image-J measurements, the measurements produced by the Wand tool in each cluster were compared with those obtained using the Analyze Particles tool. ULP area was expressed as a ratio that this tissue occupies in the whole stem area.

Statistical analysis. Comparisons between chloroplasts number and ULP area were made with a T-test, data were logarithm base 10 transformed, but untransformed data are reported in text and figures.

 

Results

Structure and number ofchloroplasts. ULP cells of the secondary xylem contain chloroplasts everywhere in the transverse stem sections (Figure 1A), although the number of chloroplasts decreased as stem diameter increased. Chloroplasts in both species had the same ultrastructure but differences were observed between the two environments. Chloroplasts are mostly ovoid (Figure 1A) to elongated (Figure 2A, B) in shape, the diameter to length ratio is approximately 1:1.5-2.5. The chloroplasts of plants from sunny places have few plastoglobuli (Figure 1C) and their grana thylakoids have stacked thylakoid sheets (Figure 1B), with few grana that are two times longer than their diameter. Occasionally, within the stroma matrix one to three small ovoid starch grains per chloroplast were visible as an electron-transparent zone in both species in both light conditions (Figure 1C). In plants from shady places, the grana consisted of stacks of closely packed thylakoids with dark stained portions (Figure 2C), and an assortment of parallel overlapping lamellae eventually forming rudimentary grana. The distance between individual grana was constant; the chloroplasts from the shade were more irregular in shape and had more abundant membranes than the chloroplasts of sunny environments (Figure 2D, Table 1).

Chloroplast density was not statistically different between species and environments (Table 2). The laser scanning confocal and fluorescence microscopy revealed the chlorophyll in the inner layers of Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula, and also in the ULP, characterized by a strong red autofluorescence (Figure 3A). The intensity of the fluorescence in the inner stem tissues was greater in young stems than in older ones. Fluorescence was more intense in the cortex and less intense in the cambial zone. Fluorescence was seen throughout the secondary xylem, mainly in the paratracheal and radial parenchyma and also in the pith zone (Figure 3B, C).

ULP area. The secondary xylem of Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula is divided into sections: lignified and ULP (Figure 3D, E). In U. glabriuscula ULP cells occur in discontinuous bands (Figure 3D), while in M. longipes they are in clusters (Figure 3E). These two types of arrangements measured up to 200 μm2 in the transverse section. ULP tissue is composed of living, turgid, vacuolated, and polyhedral cells, their walls are primary unlignified with uniform thickness. Although the ULP is variable in size and shape, it is more conspicuous in the intermediate section of secondary xylem. Discontinuous bands and clusters are smaller in the internal (closer to pith zone) than in external sections (close to cambial zone). In M. longipes and U. glabriuscula the ULP occupies up to 33.2 % of the stem area (Figure 3D, E). The statistical analysis revealed differences in the ULP ratio between environments in U. glabriuscula (P < 0.05), in M. longipes also differences were detected (P < 0.05) between environments (Table 2).

 

Discussion

Structure and number of chloroplasts. As previously reported for the stems of other vascular plants, the chloroplasts of Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula contained plastoglobuli and few starch grains, these resembling the chloroplasts of shade-type leaves (Anderson et al., 1973; Givnish, 1988). Our results found grana stacks (length-width) in a ratio 1:2 in shady and 1:1.5 in sunny environments, coinciding with previous reports such as that for the grana stacks of Korthalsella salicornoides (Fineran, 1995).

Our observations detected high quantities and larger chloroplasts in Myriocarpa longipes in sunny environments. The density of chloroplasts in stems of M. longipes coincided with chloroplast density from the leaves of sun-adapted plants (Givnish, 1988). In general, chloroplasts from sun-adapted leaves are larger, but less abundant than those of shade-adapted leaves (Boardman, 1977). In M. longipes we found a similar pattern: stems growing at the edges of forest openings, and exposed to elevated light radiation that can penetrate deep into their tissues formed larger chloroplasts, although not as many as those of the stems growing under the canopy. This effect responds to an adaptation to avoid photoinhibition, by reducing the exposed area per unit mass of chloroplast. The reduction in the size and number of chloroplasts inside the stems of M. longipes could also be attributed to the optical characteristics of the stem interior. Like other parenchymatic cells, ULP cells possess multiple facets, dispersing and reflecting light in different directions within the stem (Sun et al., 2003). In a shady environment, the limited incident radiation does not favor light conduction within the stems down to the regions in the plant close to the forest soil. In the absence of light moving down in the stems, the enzymes remain underexpressed and chloroplasts do not form.

The use of epifluorescence microscopy to detect chlorophyll by autofluorescence allowed us to determine whether the chloroplasts are functional (chlorophyll is identified by its red color) as has been demonstrated in a 14CO2 labeling experiment (Langenfeld-Heyser, 1989). Chloroplasts have been detected by these methods in the cortex, xylem rays, perimedular, and pith cells for several plant groups (Dima et al., 2006; Pilarski and Tokarz, 2006). Our observations using epifluorescence microscopy detected chlorophyll in large quantities in rays, in wood parenchyma cells, and in pith cells, but mainly in ULP cells in the two Urticaceae species studied. The location of chlorophyll in those tissues suggest that they play a part in stem carbon assimilation by using CO2 dissolved in the sap stream, as reported in herbaceous species (Hibberd and Quick, 2002).

Unlignified parenchyma. The results of the t-test indicate differences in the area of ULP formed in stems of the two species. In the stems of Myriocarpa longipes growing under sunny conditions, we found larger areas of ULP than in shady environments. In sunny environments, there is an increase in the availability of water, light, and nutrients for plant growth and development (Martínez-Ramos, 1985). In the stems of Urera glabriuscula more ULP was formed under shady conditions. The allocation of these resources in a plant is driven by intrinsic photoreceptors (phytochromes) located in living cells, like ULP, which react to specific wavelengths with photomorphogenic response inside the stems (Briggs and Olney, 2001). Determination of light effects in other parts of the plant, such as the leaves, have shown that they become thicker and have increased chlorophyll content in relation to leaf area, altering their chlorophyll content while keeping a constant thickness (Vogelmann, 1993).

 

Conclusion

Differences were found in number of chloroplasts under the two light levels in Myriocarpa longipes and Urera glabriuscula, as well as in the allocation of ULP. Although chloroplast structure was similar in both species, major differences were observed between light levels. In sunny conditions, chloroplasts had fewer plastoglobuli but more starch grains per chloroplast than in shady environments. Under shade thylakoids and membranes were more abundant than in the open. The presence of these features requires the coordinated expression of chloroplast genes, in combination with the right environmental signals. The area covered by ULP in M. longipes stems was larger in the sunny than in the shady environment, while the opposite was found for ULP area in U. glabriuscula. This is the first report of the presence of chloroplasts in the ULP of stems of these two Urticaceae. Our results did not show clear differences for ULP or chloroplast formation under sunny and shady environments, perhaps because the difference in solar radiation in the two environments we used was not sufficient to induce visible morphogenic effects. These findings, however, do open the door to further research on a phenomenon that has received little attention until now: the formation and function of ULP in woody stems.

 

Acknowledgments

We are particularly grateful to Victor Steinmann, Laura Yáñez, and Guillermo Laguna for their careful review of previous versions of this manuscript; to Armando Martinez and Roger Guevara for their assistance in statistical analysis. We thank Arith Pérez and the personnel at the Los Tuxtlas Tropical Biology Field Station (UNAM) for their assistance in the lab and field, respectively. A scholarship awarded to EC by CONACyT (336218) is gratefully acknowledged. The Instituto de Ecología A. C. (Secretaria de Posgrado) provided additional funds. This study constitutes E. Cocoletzi's Master of Science thesis at the Instituto de Ecología, A. C. Two anonymous reviewers provided very thoughtful comments to our original manuscript.

 

Literature cited

Anderson J.M., Goodchild D.J. and Boardman N.K. 1973. Composition of the photosystems and chloroplast structure in extreme shade plants. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Bioenergetics 325:573-585.         [ Links ]

Angeles G., Zendejas-López P., Ortega-Escalona F. and Madero-Vega C. 2004. Origin and development of ULP in Urticaceae, Abstract. International symposium on wood sciences, October 24-29 Montpellier, France.         [ Links ]

Aschan G. and Pfanz H. 2003. Non-foliar photosynthesis - a strategy of additional carbon acquisition. Flora - Morphology, Distribution, Functional Ecology of Plants 198:81-97.         [ Links ]

Aschan G., Wittmann C. and Pfanz H. 2001. Age-dependent bark photosynthesis of aspen twigs. Trees-Structure and Function 15:431-437.         [ Links ]

Bai K., Liao D., Jiang D. and Cao K. 2008. Photosynthetic induction in leaves of co-occurring Fagus lucida and Castanop-sis lamontii saplings grown in contrasting light environments. Trees-Structure and Function 22:449-462.         [ Links ]

Berveiller D., Kierzkowski D. and Damesin C. 2007. Interspecific variability of stem photosynthesis among tree species. Tree Physiology 27:53-61.         [ Links ]

Boardman N.K. 1977. Comparative photosynthesis of sun and shade plants. Annual Review of Plant Physiology 28:355-377.         [ Links ]

Briggs W.R. and Olney M.A. 2001. Photoreceptors in plant photomorphogenesis to date. Five phytochromes, two cryptochromes, one phototropin, and one superchrome. Plant Physiology 125:85-88.         [ Links ]

Buns R., Acker G. and Beck E. 1993. The plastids of the Yew tree (Taxus baccata L.): ultrastructure and immunocytoche-mical examination of chloroplastic enzymes. Acta Botanica 106:32-41.         [ Links ]

Chaffey N. 2002. Wood microscopical techniques. In: Chaffey N. Ed. Wood Formation in Trees. Cell and Molecular Biology Techniques, pp. 17-40, Taylor & Francis, New York.         [ Links ]

Dima E., Manetas Y. and Psaras G.K. 2006. Chlorophyll distribution pattern in inner stem tissues: evidence from epifluorescence microscopy and reflectance measurements in 20 woody species. Trees-Structure and Function 20:515-521.         [ Links ]

Figueroa J.A. and Vazquez-Yanes C. 2002. Light quality effect on the seeds germination in tropical pioneer tree Heliocarpus appendiculatus (Tiliaceae). Revista de Biología Tropical 50:31-36.         [ Links ]

Fineran B.A. 1995. Green tissue within the haustorium of the dwarf mistletoe Korthalsella (Viscaceae). An ultrastructural comparison between chloroplasts of sucker and aerial stem tissues. Protoplasma 189:216-228.         [ Links ]

Givnish T.J. 1988. Adaptation to sun and shade: A whole-plant perspective. Functional Plant Biology 15:63-92.         [ Links ]

González S.E., Dirzo R. and Vogt R.C. 1997. Historia Natural de Los Tuxtlas. Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico, D.F.         [ Links ]

Hibberd J.M. and Quick W.P. 2002. Characteristics of C4 photosynthesis in stems and petioles of C3 flowering plants. Nature 415:451-454.         [ Links ]

Howe H.F., Urincho-Pantaleon Y., de la Peña-Domene M. and Martínez-Garza C. 2010. Early seed fall and seedling emergence: precursors to tropical restoration. Oecologia 164:731-740.         [ Links ]

Ibarra-Manríquez G., Martínez-Ramos M., Dirzo R. and Núñez-Farfán J. 1997. La vegetación. In: González Soriano E., Dirzo R. and Vogt R. Eds. Historia Natural de Los Tuxtlas. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, D.F.         [ Links ]

ImageJ. 2012. Published on the internet. <http://imagej.nih.gov/ij> (accessed on February 17, 2012).         [ Links ]

InsideWood. 2004. Published on the internet. <http://insidewood.lib.ncsu.edu/> (accessed on February 17, 2012).         [ Links ]

Langenfeld-Heyser R. 1989. CO2 fixation in stem slices of Picea abies (L.) Karst: microautoradiographic studies. Trees-Structure and Function 3:24-32.         [ Links ]

Larcher W., Lütz C., Nagele M. and Bodner M. 1988. Photosynthetic functioning and ultrastructure of chloroplasts in stem tissues of Fagus sylvatica. Journal of Plant Physiology 132:731-737.         [ Links ]

Martínez-Ramos M. 1985. Claros, ciclos vitales de los árboles tropicales y regeneración natural de las selvas altas perennifolias. In: Gómez-Pompa A. and del Amo R.S Eds. Investigaciones sobre la Regeneración de Selvas Altas en Veracruz, México. Vol 2, pp. 191-240, Alhambra Mexicana, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones sobre Recursos Bióticos, México, D.F.         [ Links ]

Martínez-Ramos M., Alvarez-Buylla E., Sarukhán J. and Piñero D. 1988. Treefall age determination and gap dynamics in a tropical forest. Journal of Ecology 76:700-716.         [ Links ]

Martínez-Ramos M. and García-Orth X. 2007. Sucesión ecológica y restauración de las selvas húmedas. Boletín de la Sociedad Botánica de México 80:69-84.         [ Links ]

Martínez-Sánchez J.L., Meave J.A. and Bongers F. 2008. Light-related variation in sapling architecture of three shade-tolerant tree species of the Mexican rain forest. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 81:361-371.         [ Links ]

Orozco-Segovia A., Vázquez-Yanes C., Coates-Estrada R. and Pérez-Nasser N. 1987. Ecophysiological characteristics of the seed of the tropical forest pioneer Urera caracasana (Urticaceae). Tree Physiology 3:375-386.         [ Links ]

Pearcy R.W. 1990. Sunflecks and photosynthesis in plant canopies. Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology 41:421-453.         [ Links ]

Pfanz H. and Aschan G. 2001. The existence of bark and stem photosynthesis in woody plants and its significance for the overall carbon gain: an eco-physiological and ecological approach. Progress in Botany 62:477-510.         [ Links ]

Pfanz H., Aschan G., Langenfeld-Heyser R., Wittmann C. and Loose M. 2002. Ecology and ecophysiology of tree stems: corticular and wood photosynthesis. Naturwissenschaften 89:147-162.         [ Links ]

Pilarski J. and Tokarz K. 2006. Chlorophyll distribution in the stems and trunk of beech trees. Acta Physiologiae Plantarum 28:233-236.         [ Links ]

Poulson T.L. and Platt W.J. 1989. Gap light regimes influence canopy tree diversity. Ecology 70:553-555.         [ Links ]

Prewitt J.M.S. and Mendelsohn M.L. 1966. The analysis of cell images. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 128:1035-1053.         [ Links ]

Ruzin S.E. 1999. Plant Microtechnique and Microscopy. Oxford University Press, Oxford.         [ Links ]

Sánchez-Gallen I., Álvarez-Sánchez F.J. and Benítez-Malvido J. 2010. Structure of the advanced regeneration community in tropical rain forest fragments of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. Biological Conservation 143:2111-2118.         [ Links ]

Saveyn A., Steppe K., Ubierna N. and Dawson T.E. 2010. Woody tissue photosynthesis and its contribution to trunk growth and bud development in young plants. Plant, Cell and Environment 33:1949-1958.         [ Links ]

Sun Q., Yoda K., Suzuki M. and Suzuki H. 2003. Vascular tissue in the stem and roots of woody plants can conduct light. Journal of Experimental Botany 54:1627-1635.         [ Links ]

Teskey R.O., Saveyn A., Steppe K. and McGuire M.A. 2008. Origin, fate and significance of CO2 in tree stems. New Phytologist 177:17-32.         [ Links ]

van Cleve B., Forreiter C., Sauter J.J. and Apel K. 1993. Pith cells of poplar contain photosynthetically active chloroplasts. Planta 189:70-73.         [ Links ]

Vogelmann T.C. 1993. Plant tissue optics. Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology 44:231-251.         [ Links ]

Creative Commons License Todo o conteúdo deste periódico, exceto onde está identificado, está licenciado sob uma Licença Creative Commons