2002
DOI: 10.1590/s0100-84042002000100005
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Anatomia da raiz de espécies de Dyckia Schult. f. e Encholirium Mart. ex Schult. & Schult. f. (Bromeliaceae, Pitcairnioideae) da Serra do Cipó (Minas Gerais, Brasil), com especial referência ao velame

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Cited by 26 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Only later did the adventitious roots begin to grow, facilitating the plant establishment in the substratum. Pitta (1997) corroborated the data presented by Pereira (1988) in her study on the post-seminal development of Encholirium subsecundum (Bromelioideae), which also reported the development of a primary root during germination. In the Tillandsia species studied here, which belong to the subfamily Tillandsioideae, no primary root developed during germination, and the appearance of the haustorium was considered as the beginning of the process.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Only later did the adventitious roots begin to grow, facilitating the plant establishment in the substratum. Pitta (1997) corroborated the data presented by Pereira (1988) in her study on the post-seminal development of Encholirium subsecundum (Bromelioideae), which also reported the development of a primary root during germination. In the Tillandsia species studied here, which belong to the subfamily Tillandsioideae, no primary root developed during germination, and the appearance of the haustorium was considered as the beginning of the process.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…In the Tillandsia species studied here, which belong to the subfamily Tillandsioideae, no primary root developed during germination, and the appearance of the haustorium was considered as the beginning of the process. As already mentioned above, the Bromelioideae species studied by Pereira (1988) and Pitta (1997) developed primary root. This feature could be important and useful for the phylogeny of Bromeliacae, where Tillandsioideae is considered as a derived group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…Krauss (1949), Pita & Menezes (2002) and Segecin & Scatena (2004) related the rhizome anatomy of the species they studied to the growth habit of the plants and/or to the environment where they grow.…”
Section: Rhizome and Root Anatomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bromelioideae Pitcairnioideae Tillandsioideae C 6 -H C 6 -OR C 6 -H C 6 -OR C 6 S-derivados (62-64) do álcool sinapílico, alguns flavonoides, cuja ocorrência na natureza ainda é bastante restrita, evidenciam que muitas substâncias com estruturas diferenciadas poderiam surgir se mais espécies desta família fossem estudadas. Enfim, acreditamos que esta fascinante família apresente boas perspectivas de estudo, com interessante potencial químico e farmacológico a ser descoberto.…”
Section: Flavonoidesunclassified
“…As adaptações que caracterizam tal evolução consistem na redução estrutural e funcional das raízes e na especialização dos tricomas foliares, escamas que podem suprir parcial ou totalmente a função de absorção das raízes. 6 A família Bromeliaceae apresenta uma longa história de uso etnobotânico, associada aos povos americanos nativos, como fonte de fibras, alimentos, forragens e medicamentos, além de uso ornamental e místico. 7 Estas categorias refletem, principalmente, antigas aplicações e percepções indígenas e nem sempre coincidem com seu uso moderno.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified