Difference between revisions of "POC Conf. Call 4-12-11"

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=New terms for Physcomitrella and related taxa (continued)=
 
=New terms for Physcomitrella and related taxa (continued)=
==Other related terms for mosses, not from Moss Ontology==
 
 
*'''[https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&aid=3241816&group_id=76834&atid=835555 spore capsule mouth]'''
 
 
'''Proposed definition:''' A plant anatomical space that is the opening on the apical end of a spore capsule.
 
 
Comment: The mouth is formed when the operculum separates from the capsule. The mouth may be covered by a peristome.
 
 
part_of sporangium
 
 
subsets for bryophytes
 
 
 
*'''[https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&aid=3241820&group_id=76834&atid=835555 epiphragm]'''
 
 
Schofeld says it is a "membranelike expansion of the columella covering most of the mouth of the sporangium in Polytrichidae (hair cap mosses)."
 
 
From Crum: "A circular membrane at the tip of the columella to which the peristome teeth of the prolytrichaceae are attached."
 
 
'''Proposed definition:''' A portion of parenchyma tissue that forms a circular membrane extending from a spore capsule collumella and attached to the ends of the peristome teeth that covers a spore capsule mouth.
 
 
Comment: Present in some moss species of the family Polytrichaceae.
 
 
Synonym: tympanum, epiphram
 
 
subsets for bryophytes
 
 
 
*'''[https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&aid=3241827&group_id=76834&atid=835555 pseudopodium]'''
 
 
From Crum: "An elongation of the gametophytic axis on which the capsule is borne in Sphagnum and Andreaea."
 
 
From Schofeld: "An elongated mass of leafless gametophore tissue that pushes the sporophyte beyond the perichaetial leaves (in Andreaea and Sphagnum)."
 
 
'''Proposed definition:''' A plant axis that is a leafless extension of a gametophore axis on which a sporophyte is borne.
 
 
Comment: Raises the sporophyte above the perichaetial bracts. Found in Sphagnum and Andreaea.
 
 
participates_in gametophytic phase
 
 
subsets for bryophytes
 
 
 
==[https://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=3132600&group_id=76834&atid=835555 Sporangium]==
 
==[https://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=3132600&group_id=76834&atid=835555 Sporangium]==
  

Revision as of 14:53, 6 April 2011

POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday April 12th, 2011 10am (PDT)

In attendance:

POC members:

Absent:

Collaborators:


Acceptance of the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_4-5-11?


Items arising from last week's meeting:

New terms for Physcomitrella and related taxa (continued)

Sporangium

We currently have the class sporangium (PO:0025094), which is a cardinal organ part.

In bryophytes, the sporangium is a plant organ. In seed plants, it is a cardinal organ part (part of a sporophyll). In ferns, it grows on the surface of a leaf. Would it be legitimate to say that in seed plants, the sporangium is a reduced organ that is located in another organ?

Current def: A hollow cardinal organ part in which spores are produced. [source: ISBN:0716710072]

Comment: May be multicellular or unicellular. In bryophytes, particularly in mosses, a sporangium is referred to as a capsule


We also have:

megasporangium (PO:0025201): A sporangium in which megaspores are produced. [source: ISBN:0716710072]

microsporangium (PO:0025202): A sporangium in which microspores are produced. [source: ISBN:0716710072]

nucellus (PO:0020020): A megasporangium in a seed plant, composed of fleshy subepidermal tissue inside an ovule and surrounding a megasporocyte. [source: POC:rw]

Comment: In seed plants, the megaspores and megagametophyte are retained within the nucellus.

pollen sac (PO:0025277): A microsporangium that is part of a sporophyll where the pollen grains developed and are contained after they develop. [source: POC:curators]

Comment: A pollen sac is a microsporangium in seed plants. In angiosperms, a single, unfused pollen sac may contain an anther locule or several pollen sacs may fuse so they contain a single anther locule.


Proposed def. nucellus: A megasporangium in a seed plant, composed of fleshy subepidermal tissue located in an ovule and surrounding a megasporocyte.

Proposed def. pollen sac: A microsporangium that is located in a sporophyll and where the pollen grains developed and are located after they develop. [source: POC:curators]

(comments stay the same)

We could continue to use the more general part_of relation for located_in

Sporangium parts

This is continued from our discussion at the POC_Conf._Call_3-8-11

Currently classes like exothecium, endothecium, primary parietal cell layer and tapetum are part of anther wall (PO:0000002). However, these layers and their constituent cell types can be part of any sporangium, not just an anther. Proposed making them part of a general class sporangium wall (as we did for parts of leaf).

From Smith:

Liverworts: Embryo divides to form outer layer (ampithecium) that gives rise to jacket layer and inner mass (endothecium) that gives rise to archesporium (cells of which divide to produce sporocytes and nurse cell, may also produce elators).

Hornworts: Embryo divides to form ampithecium that gives rise to jacket layer and primiary sporogenous layer, and endothecium that gives rise to sterile columella in all but one species (where it gives rise to sporagenous tissue). Jacket layer is 4-6 cells thick, and outer layer develops into epidermis. Sporagenous tissue gives rise to sporocytes and filaments of sterile cells called pseudoelators.

Sphagnum: Upper tier of cells in the embryo divides to form endothecium that gives rise to sterile columella and ampithecium that gives rise to outer sterile layer and inner archesporium. Archesporium gives rise to sporogenous layer two to four cells thick. Outer sterile layer gives rise to jacket layer 3 or 4 cells thick.

Eubrya: Early division of capsule gives rise to multilayered ampithecium and endothecium (with ampithecial cells and endothecial cells). Endothecium (usually) gives rise to archesporium and columella. Columella cells adjacent to archesporium remain small and develop into inner spore sac. Ampithecium develops into a multilayered structure, including layers with and without chloroplasts and an epidermis.

Psilophyta: Paired sporangia (a synangium or maybe a reduced sporangiophore) develop from a single cell. First cell division leads to a jacket initial and an archesporial (primary sporogenous) cell. Repeated periclinal divisions of jacket initial lead to jacket layer four or five cells thick and divisions of archesporial cell lead to many sporogenous cells. No tapetum develops. Near maturity, irregular clumps of sporogenous tissue divide to give rise to spore mother cells, remainder disintegrate

Lycopods: Sporangia borne on sporophylls.

Next meeting scheduled for Tues, Apr. 19th, 2011 at 10am PDT