» Articles » PMID: 30694463

Assessing Negative and Positive Phototropism in Lianas

Overview
Specialty Molecular Biology
Date 2019 Jan 30
PMID 30694463
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

By the nineteenth century, root climbers and adhesive-tendril climbers were known to exhibit negative phototropism. Negative phototropism is shared by various plant species belonging to many taxonomic families and is considered to be an outcome of parallel evolution. Through negative phototropism, lianas search for supporting hosts; however, compared with positive phototropism, which occurs during germination, there is little research on the properties of negative phototropism. This chapter presents a technique for quantifying negative phototropism in root climbers and adhesive-tendril climbers, which involves casting light on one side of a liana shoot and measuring the coordinates of the shoot tip and the angle of curvature of the entire shoot relative to the gradient of the light conditions.

Citing Articles

From dark to darkness, negative phototropism influences the support-tree location of the massive woody climber (Hydrangeaceae) in a Chilean temperate rainforest.

Rodriguez-Quintero W, Moreno-Chacon M, Carrasco-Urra F, Saldana A Plant Signal Behav. 2022; 17(1):2122244.

PMID: 36476262 PMC: 9733698. DOI: 10.1080/15592324.2022.2122244.