January 29, 2013
Journal Article

Petal Thicknesses and Shape Transformations in Blooming Lilies

Abstract

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