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Structural diversity of the wood of temperate species of 'Acacia' s.s. (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae)

2013, Whinder, Francis, Clarke, Kerri L, Warwick, Nigel W, Gasson, Peter E

'Acacia' s.s. comprises approximately 1020 species (i.e. just under one-third of all mimosoid legumes) and is almost entirely restricted to, although widespread, on the Australian continent. We investigated variation in the wood anatomy of 12 species from temperate New South Wales in a study concentrating on four recognised taxonomic sections ('Botrycephalae', 'Juliflorae', 'Phyllodineae' and 'Plurinerves'), to elucidate which characteristics are consistent within the sections, having removed climatic effect as much as possible. The sections had great utility in species identification, whereas none of the wood characters reflected the hypothesised phylogeny of the genus. The main consistent difference among species was in ray width (uniseriate versus 1-3 cells wide). All species had distinct growth rings. The vessels had alternate vestured pitting and simple perforation plates. Fibres were generally thick-walled, and many fibres had a gelatinous inner wall (tension wood fibres) and were inconsistently distributed. Axial parenchyma was mainly paratracheal, ranging from vasicentric to confluent and varied greatly in abundance. Prismatic crystals were usually present in chambered fibres and axial parenchyma strands, and also varied in abundance. The variation in these qualitative characters obscures taxonomic differences, but may allow inferences to be made about environmental adaptation.

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Climate trends in the wood anatomy of 'Acacia sensu stricto' (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae)

2017, Warwick, Nigel W, Hailey, Luke, Clarke, Kerri L, Gasson, Peter E

Background and Aims. This study investigates the structural diversity of the secondary xylem of 54 species of 'Acacia' from four taxonomic sections collected across five climate regions along a 1200 km E-W transect from sub-tropical [approx. 1400 mm mean annual precipitation (MAP)] to arid (approx. 240 mm MAP) in New South Wales, Australia. 'Acacia sensu stricto' (s.s.) is a critical group for understanding the effect of climate and phylogeny on the functional anatomy of wood. Methods. Wood samples were sectioned in transverse, tangential and radial planes for light microscopy and analysis. Key Results. The wood usually has thick-walled vessels and fibres, paratracheal parenchyma and uniseriate and biseriate rays, occasionally up to four cells wide. The greater abundance of gelatinous fibres in arid and semi-arid species may have ecological significance. Prismatic crystals in chambered fibres and axial parenchyma increased in abundance in semi-arid and arid species. Whereas vessel diameter showed only a small decrease from the sub-tropical to the arid region, there was a significant 2-fold increase in vessel frequency and a consequent 3-fold decrease in the vulnerability index. Conclusions. Although the underlying phylogeny determines the qualitative wood structure, climate has a significant influence on the functional wood anatomy of 'Acacia s.s.', which is an ideal genus to study the effect of these factors.