Anomalous Secondary Growth - Plantlet
Anomalous Secondary Growth - Plantlet
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Anomalous secondary growth” is the term under which have been grouped cambial conformations,
cambial products, and cambial numbers which differ from the most common “normal” condition, namely,
a single cylindrical cambium that produces phloem externally and xylem internally.
In this article, Anomalous secondary growth, it’s causes and position will be discussed briefly.
deviating methods of secondary thickening are called abnormal or anomalous secondary growth. In
In this case, the position of cambium is anomalous but the activity of cambium is normal. e.g. Serjania
sp. Here secondary growth occurs due to the anomalous position of cambium. A very peculiar structure is
noticed in Serjania, a climber of family Sapindaceae, where the cambium from the very beginning occurs
in separate strips, each strip having primary xylem towards the center and primary phloem towards the
periphery. It thus appears like a deeply-lobed compound structure made of several stems fused together.
With age and consequent development of periderm the compound structure becomes more marked. The
development of interfascicular cambium and its union with fascicular ones result in the formation of
separate cambium rings. In fact, there is a large central stele, surrounded by a few peripheral ones.
In the stem of Baugainvillea and others member of the Nyctaginaceae (e.g., Boerhaavia, Mirabilis
etc.) several cambia arise successively in a centrifugal direction. Each cambium produces xylem and
conjunctive tissue to the inside and phloem and conjunctive tissue to the outside. The resulting tissue
gives the appearance of concentric ring of vascular bundle embedded in conjunctive tissue.
The TS of Boerhaavia diffusa show two medullary bundles, a middle ring of 6-10 vascular bundle and
another ring of 15-20 or more small bundle. The bundle of the middle ring increase in thickness to a
limited extent by a fascicular cambium. The bundle of the outer ring are initially separate, quite small
and each provided with its own fascicular cambium. The fascicular cambium of the bundle becomes
interconnected by interfascicular cambium.
Sometimes when the normal cambium starts to cutting cell at several places irregularly and forms at
certain places much larger portion of xylem and a ridge and furrowed xylem cylinder produced. This
Medullary vascular bundle present. Medullary vascular bundle which are many and scattered in the pith.
Bundles are open and collateral. Cambial activity is only found in individual bundle. The cambial activity
ceases in this bundle. Anomalous secondary growth takes place due to the development of a new extra-
stelar cambium formation outside the stele in the pericycle region. Cambium cuts off secondary vascular
bundle and interfascicular parenchymatous conjunctive tissue on the inner side. e.g. Amaranthus
sp.
Interxylary phloem is defined as strands or bands of phloem embedded within the secondary xylem of a
stem of a plant. Anomalous secondary growth occurs due to the anomalous activity of cambium. Some
parts of cambium ring is identified as cambial strip. This cambial strip produce secondary phloem instead
of secondary xylem on the inner side. Due to this anomalous activities of cambial strip secondary phloem
embedded in the secondary xylem. Then cambium produce secondary xylem on the inner side. The
presence of phloem strands embedded within the secondary xylem is called inter-xylary phloem or
Secondary growth occurs in herbaceous woody liliflorae (Aloe, Agave). In Dracaena and other groups
of monocot (Cheadle 1937), the meristem concerned with this growth is called cambium. The cambium
originates in the parenchyma outside the vascular bundles. This part is identified as cortex.
Dracaena shows anomalous secondary growth where the cambium appears in the parenchyma cells
outside the vascular bundle. This region in which cambium appears identify as cortex. These newly
formed cuts cells towards outside and inside both. The tissue develops in the inner side of
the cambium is differentiated into secondary vascular bundle remain separated by each other by lignified
cell.