Interesting maple leaf
Amanda Neill
neilla at MAIL.BIO.TAMU.EDU
Fri Jun 30 15:33:33 CDT 2000
I have seen a similar mutation in Magnolia grandiflora, where one petiole has produced two asymmetrical leaves. At the time I thought it was the result of insect damage to the leaf primordium.
Amanda Neill
On 6/30/00,
Richard Jensen wrote:
One of my students and I came across a red maple (Acer rubrum) leaf that
has an intresting morphology: essentially, there are two separate leaf
blades at the apex of the petiole (but neither has the shape of a typical
mature red maple leaf and they are essentially mirror images of each
other)
I wonder if this is an atavism suggesting that the ancestral leaf form was
compound, e.g, like the leaves of box elder (Acer negundo). My
understanding is that the modern simple leaves of Prunus (cherries,
plums, etc.) are derived from compound leaves and I wonder if the same has
been suggested for maples.
Richard J. Jensen | E-MAIL: rjensen at saintmarys.edu
Dept. of Biology | TELEPHONE: 219-284-4674
Saint Mary's College | FAX: 219-284-4716
Notre Dame, IN 46556 |
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