Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem
Само за регистроване кориснике
2010
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Different ways of formation of fasciated floral meristem were analyzed. It has been demonstrated that distinguishing between phenomena of enlargement of a single growing point and fusion of a few into single one is impossible. The frequency of abnormalities is proposed as criterion for such classification. The investigation of developmental abnormalities, teratology, has recently obtained a somewhat different meaning as compared with a period of its origin. Except function of direct description of certain teratological phenomena, this part of morphology entered a field of modeling of developmental processes, mutation analysis, and even evolutionary reconstructions in light of the Evo-Devo concept. Teratology itself has tightly associated with contemporary molecular developmental genetics, the latter significantly pushing out the structural approach in understanding of morphological abnormalities.
Кључне речи:
flower / fasciation / floral meristemИзвор:
Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin, 2010, 65, 3, 98-103Издавач:
- Allerton Press, Inc.
Колекције
Институција/група
FiVeRTY - JOUR AU - Sinjushin, Andrey PY - 2010 UR - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/3544 AB - Different ways of formation of fasciated floral meristem were analyzed. It has been demonstrated that distinguishing between phenomena of enlargement of a single growing point and fusion of a few into single one is impossible. The frequency of abnormalities is proposed as criterion for such classification. The investigation of developmental abnormalities, teratology, has recently obtained a somewhat different meaning as compared with a period of its origin. Except function of direct description of certain teratological phenomena, this part of morphology entered a field of modeling of developmental processes, mutation analysis, and even evolutionary reconstructions in light of the Evo-Devo concept. Teratology itself has tightly associated with contemporary molecular developmental genetics, the latter significantly pushing out the structural approach in understanding of morphological abnormalities. PB - Allerton Press, Inc. T2 - Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin T1 - Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem EP - 103 IS - 3 SP - 98 VL - 65 DO - 10.3103/S009639251003003X ER -
@article{ author = "Sinjushin, Andrey", year = "2010", abstract = "Different ways of formation of fasciated floral meristem were analyzed. It has been demonstrated that distinguishing between phenomena of enlargement of a single growing point and fusion of a few into single one is impossible. The frequency of abnormalities is proposed as criterion for such classification. The investigation of developmental abnormalities, teratology, has recently obtained a somewhat different meaning as compared with a period of its origin. Except function of direct description of certain teratological phenomena, this part of morphology entered a field of modeling of developmental processes, mutation analysis, and even evolutionary reconstructions in light of the Evo-Devo concept. Teratology itself has tightly associated with contemporary molecular developmental genetics, the latter significantly pushing out the structural approach in understanding of morphological abnormalities.", publisher = "Allerton Press, Inc.", journal = "Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin", title = "Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem", pages = "103-98", number = "3", volume = "65", doi = "10.3103/S009639251003003X" }
Sinjushin, A.. (2010). Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem. in Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin Allerton Press, Inc.., 65(3), 98-103. https://doi.org/10.3103/S009639251003003X
Sinjushin A. Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem. in Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin. 2010;65(3):98-103. doi:10.3103/S009639251003003X .
Sinjushin, Andrey, "Flower Fasciation: I. Origin of Enlarged Meristem" in Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin, 65, no. 3 (2010):98-103, https://doi.org/10.3103/S009639251003003X . .