During blooming, flower petals undergo significant shape changes. For lilies, various different mechanisms responsible for the change have been suggested [1,2]. One is that cell growth along the edge of a petal, or, more generally, a tepal, drives a transition from a cup shape (within a bud) to a saddle shape (within a bloom). This mechanism has been previously considered for tepals modeled as shallow elliptical shells whose thickness from the center, t, falls off at least as fast as t = t0 (1 - x2/a2 - y2/b2 ) [1]. Here t0 is the maximum thickness of the shell, a and b are the semimajor and semiminoraxes, x and y are the coordinates along the longitudinal and lateral axes. By measuring tepal thicknesses from images collected by x-ray tomography of intact buds and by photography of microtomed buds, we find that this condition is indeed met for both Lilium casablanca and Lilium lancifolium. [1] Liang and Mahadevan. Growth, geometry, and mechanics of a blooming lily.
Revised: May 28, 2014 |
Published: January 29, 2013
Citation
Portet T., P.N. Holmes, M.E. Bowden, S.A. Stephens, T. Varga, and S.L. Keller. 2013.Petal Thicknesses and Shape Transformations in Blooming Lilies.Biophysical Journal 104, no. 2 Supplement 1:493A-493A.PNNL-SA-101821.doi:10.1016/j.bpj.2012.11.2717