Leake Jonathan R
Department of Animal & Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, PO Box 60], Sheffield, S10 2UQ, UK.
New Phytol. 1994 Jun;127(2):171-216. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.1994.tb04272.x.
More than 400 species of vascular plants, in 87 genera, are acholophyllous and heterotrophic, but not directly parasitic upon autotrophs. They are usually, but incorrectly, described as 'saprophytes'since they are in fact nourished by means of specialized mycorrhizal associations. Although distributed world-wide, they are most abundant and show the greatest species-richness in the Neotropics and Palaeotropical regions. Their aerial parts range in size from a few centimetres to extensive liane types up to 40 m long. With few exceptions, their habitats are dense moist forests in which there is a surface accumulation of leaf litter, often in situations which are too shaded for autotrophic growth. Although the achlorophyllous mycorrhizal mode of life has evolved independently many times and in widely disparate taxonomic groups, such plants show strong convergent evolution in particular adaptations to their peculiar mode of life. Most prominant amongst these are reductions in the size of seed and embryo, and the lack of differentiation of the embryo at maturity. The number of seeds produced by each flower is typically very large and the shape, structure and surface features of seeds involving adaptation for wind dispersal show remarkable parallels in many species. Specific adaptations for zoochory are rare but well developed in a small number of genera, some of which produce scents like fungal fruit bodies or floral parts which mimic fungal sporocarps. Vegetative parts are often even more conspicuously reduced. Most myco-heterotrophs are entirely subterranean for most of their lives and these stages exhibit adaptations consistent with a change in function from organs of absorption to organs of storage, shown by the almost universal loss of root hairs, decrease in surface area as exhibited in short cylindric'vermiform'and tuberous roots or, in extreme cases, the complete suppression of roots and the formation of a swollen tuber or rhizome. Increased width of the root cortex often accommodates mycorrhizal infection and stores of carbohydrates and other materials obtained from the fungal symbiont. Mycorrhizal infection is confined to the below-ground parts of the plants but may be found there in modified stems as well as in roots. In many genera, stems are exceptionally slender and thread-like and their vascular tissues are either reduced to a single narrow cylinder of bicollateral bundles or, minimally, to four or six narrow bundles in the cortex. Secondary thickening is poorly developed in all but a tiny minority of species, lignification being confined to annular or, rarely, a few scalariform xylem vessels. Phloem is present in very small amounts and then mainly as parenchyma with sieve tubes frequently recorded as narrow and possibly with abherent sieve plates. Leaves are typically reduced to widely spaced achlorophyllous scales on the inflorescence axis. Occasionally, they are present only on underground rhizomes or tubers. The vascular supply to the leaf-scales, normally reduced to a single trace, may be absent. Vestigial stomata are sometimes found on leaves and, in a few species which retain traces of chlorophyll, on shoots but, in most fully heterotrophic species, stomata are absent from aerial parts. Since their seeds are very small and contain minimal reserve carbohydrates, the germination of myco-heterotrophs in nature would appear to depend upon infection by an appropriate symbiotic fungus at an early stage. The nature of the carbohydrates transferred from the fungus to the plants has not been determined. Once acquired from The fungal partner, most plants store carbon in a variety of forms, the most common of which is starch, although other compounds including glucomannan, fructan and calcium oxalate art important in some specks. Asexual reproduction is frequently important with root tubers, tubercles and rhizomes providing the means of vegetative spread. Nonetheless, all the angiospermous species recorded to date also reproduce sexually. Floral structures show varying degrees of reduction concomitant with myco-heterotrophy. Inflorescences are typically small, often with a single terminal flower, and the floral parts often show extreme simplification, with the production of unilocular or, more rarely, bilocular and trilocular ovaries. In some of the most highly adapted species, there is reduction of integumentary layers surrounding each ovule from the normal bitegmic condition to unitegmic or, occasionally, ategmic. With the principal exception of the Monotropaceae, placentation is typically trimerous and parietal. Flowers normally appear to be cross-pollinated and are brightly coloured. nectiferous, occasionally scented, and can demonstrate extreme morphological adaptations which attract insects as in the production of lone caudate tepals or fungus-mimicking structures. Much is still to be learned about the adaptive features and especially about the physiology of these plants and of their early developmental stages during which the essential associations with fungi are established. Similarly, studies of the taxonomy and physiology of most of their fungal partners are still in their infancy. Contents Summary 171 I. Introduction 172 II. Taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships of myco-heterotrophic plants 174 III. Distribution patterns 180 IV. Habitats 183 V. Embryology 185 VI. Characteristics of seeds 186 VII. Mycorrhizal infection 192 VIII. Morphologies of roots 196 IX. Characteristics of shoots 199 X. Carbon assimilation and storage by mycoheterotrophic plants 202 XI. Reproduction 208 XII. Mutualism or parasitistn? 210 XIII. Future directions for research in mycoheterotrophic plants 210 XIV. Conclusions 211 Acknowledgements 211 References 211.
87个属的400多种维管植物是无叶绿素且异养的,但并非直接寄生于自养植物。它们通常(但并不准确)被描述为“腐生植物”,因为实际上它们是通过特殊的菌根共生关系获取养分。尽管分布于全球,但在新热带地区和古热带地区最为丰富,物种多样性也最高。它们的地上部分大小不一,从几厘米到长达40米的大型藤本植物类型都有。几乎无一例外,它们的栖息地是茂密潮湿的森林,地表有落叶堆积,通常处于光照过弱而不利于自养生长的环境。尽管无叶绿素的菌根生活方式在许多不同的分类群中独立进化了很多次,但这类植物在适应其特殊生活方式的特定适应特征上表现出强烈的趋同进化。其中最显著的是种子和胚的尺寸减小,以及成熟胚缺乏分化。每朵花产生的种子数量通常非常多,而且在涉及适应风力传播的种子形状、结构和表面特征方面,许多物种都有显著的相似之处。适应动物传播的特殊适应特征很少见,但在少数几个属中发育良好,其中一些会产生类似真菌子实体的气味,或者花部结构模仿真菌子囊果。营养器官通常更为明显地退化。大多数菌根异养植物一生中大部分时间完全生长在地下,这些阶段表现出与功能从吸收器官转变为储存器官相一致的适应特征,几乎普遍失去根毛,根表面积减小呈现出短圆柱状的“蠕虫状”和块根状,或者在极端情况下,根完全退化,形成膨大的块茎或根状茎。根皮层宽度增加通常有助于菌根感染,并储存从真菌共生体获得的碳水化合物和其他物质。菌根感染仅限于植物的地下部分,但在根以及经过改造的茎中都可能存在。在许多属中,茎异常细长且呈丝状,其维管组织要么简化为单个狭窄的双韧维管束圆柱体,要么最少减少到皮层中的四到六个狭窄维管束。除了极少数物种外,次生加厚发育不良,木质化仅限于环状,或者很少见地存在于少数梯纹木质部导管中。韧皮部数量极少,主要以薄壁组织形式存在,筛管通常很窄,可能具有附着的筛板。叶子通常退化为花序轴上间距很大的无叶绿素鳞片。偶尔,叶子仅存在于地下根状茎或块茎上。叶鳞片的维管供应通常减少到单条维管束,甚至可能不存在。在叶子上有时会发现退化的气孔,在少数仍保留少量叶绿素痕迹的物种的嫩枝上也有,但在大多数完全异养的物种中,地上部分没有气孔。由于它们的种子非常小,储存的碳水化合物储备极少,菌根异养植物在自然环境中的萌发似乎依赖于早期被合适的共生真菌感染。从真菌转移到植物的碳水化合物的性质尚未确定。一旦从真菌伙伴那里获取,大多数植物会以多种形式储存碳,其中最常见的是淀粉,尽管包括葡甘露聚糖、果聚糖和草酸钙在内的其他化合物在某些物种中也很重要。无性繁殖通常很重要,根状块茎、瘤和根状茎是营养繁殖的方式。尽管如此,迄今为止记录的所有被子植物物种也进行有性繁殖。花部结构随着菌根异养而呈现出不同程度的简化。花序通常很小,常常只有一朵顶生花,花部常常极度简化,产生单室子房,更罕见的是双室和三室子房。在一些适应程度最高的物种中,围绕每个胚珠的珠被层数从正常的双珠被状态减少到单珠被,偶尔甚至无珠被。除了水晶兰科外,胎座通常是三轮且侧膜胎座。花通常似乎是异花授粉,颜色鲜艳,有蜜腺,偶尔有气味,并且可以表现出极端的形态适应特征来吸引昆虫,例如产生细长的尾状花被片或模仿真菌的结构。关于这些植物的适应特征,尤其是它们与真菌建立基本共生关系的早期发育阶段的生理学,仍有许多有待了解的地方。同样,对它们大多数真菌伙伴的分类学和生理学研究仍处于起步阶段。内容摘要171 一、引言172 二、菌根异养植物的分类和系统发育关系174 三、分布模式180 四、栖息地183 五、胚胎学185 六、种子特征186 七、菌根感染192 八、根的形态196 九、茎的特征199 十、菌根异养植物的碳同化和储存202 十一、繁殖208 十二、共生还是寄生?210 十三、菌根异养植物未来的研究方向210 十四、结论211 致谢211 参考文献211