Abstract
This chapter describes the anatomical features of the Asteraceae and discusses ecological, functional, and evolutionary aspects.
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- 1.
Many Anglo-Saxon researchers dealing with plant physiology actually use the term hypodermal cells (layer) when referring to exodermis. The term hypodermis is rather confusing: it suggests only a topographic disposition of a plant tissue. In fact, anatomically speaking, the layer of cells with suberized cells beneath the epidermis represents the exodermis.
- 2.
Root aerenchyma is quantified as gas volume per unit root volume, i.e., porosity (Colmer and Flowers 2008).
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Grigore, MN., Ivanescu, L., Toma, C. (2014). Asteraceae. In: Halophytes: An Integrative Anatomical Study. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-05729-3_18
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-05729-3_18
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