A tendril, that word we just picked-up in our reading is a “slender threadlike appendage of a climbing plant, often growing in a spiral form, that stretches out and twines around any suitable support.”
“Successful speciation in climbers is correlated with the development of specialized climbing strategies such as tendrils, i.e., filiform organs with the ability to twine around other structures through helical growth. Tendrils are derived from a variety of morphological structures, e.g., stems, leaves, and inflorescences, and are found in various plant families. In fact, tendrils are distributed throughout the angiosperm phylogeny, from magnoliids to asterids, making these structures a great model to study convergent evolution…”
Sousa-Baena, M. S., Sinha, N. R., Hernandes-Lopes, J., & Lohmann, L. G. (2018). Convergent evolution and the diverse ontogenetic origins of tendrils in angiosperms. Frontiers in plant science, 9, 403.
The orders with larger numbers of tendrilling strategies are Fabales and Asterales In the … Fabaceae … evolved tendrils, comprising three different strategies: (i) whole leaves modified into tendrils (found in the Fabaceae exclusively); (ii) terminal leaflets modified into tendrils; and (iii) shoots modified into tendrils…
Search Lessons
Hope you enjoyed this SearchResearch Challenge… I certainly learned about how and why plants twine and climb.
Quick note: Sorry this took so long to get to you. I didn’t PLAN for this to take an extra week. It’s just that these days of COVID and public strife end up pushing SRS to a slower work schedule. I’ll try to keep up! Hope you’re doing well during these trying days.