POC Conf. Call 4-28-11

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POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Thursday April 28th, 2011 10am (PDT)

In attendance:

POC members:

Absent:

Collaborators:


Acceptance of the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_4-26-11?

Items arising from last week's meeting:

New terms for Physcomitrella and related taxa (continued)

Conductive cells and tissue

Grouping conductive tissue in vascular and non-vascular plants

For vascular plants, we have the class:

vascular tissue (PO:0009015): A portion of plant tissue that has parts xylem and phloem. [APweb:Glossary]

Comment: Functions in conduction and support. In the stem it is often found as a stele, surrounded by the cortex and surrounding the pith.

For non-vascular plants, we could add the class: portion of non-vascular axial tissue

proposed definition: A portion of plant tissue that has non-vascular axial cells as parts and is part of a non-vascular shoot system

Could keep vascular tissue as is, then add a new class: portion of conductive tissue. Like portion of secretory tissue (PO:0005656), this is a functional classification, and should serve only as a secondary classification, specified by intersection_of terms.


conductive tissue for bryophytes

midrib/costa

Moss Ontology definition: The nerve of a phyllid. Altered from Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006)

We have term midvein (PO:0020139): The central, and usually the most prominent, vein of a leaf or leaf-like organ. [source: APWeb:Glossary] (which, by the way, should just say phyllome, instead of leaf or leaf-like organ). However, midvein is_a leaf vein, which is a portion of vascular tissue, so it cannot apply to mosses.

We should have a term that groups conductive tissue together for both vascular and non-vascular plants, kind of like we have axial cell for vascular and non-vascular conductive cells.

New child of portion of plant tissue: portion of axial tissue:


(also, we need to redefine phloem to be more like definition of xylem, and not based on function) (need to redefine axial cell so it doesn't say vascular cell)

These terms were not proposed by the Physco group, but should be in the PO.

  • hydrome


  • leptome

axial cell

We need to address the definition of axial cell, as it was written with angiosperms in mind.

axial cell (PO:0000081): A vascular cell derived from the fusiform cambial initial and oriented with its longest diameter parallel with the main axis of stem or root. [source: ISBN:0471245208]

Comment: These cells make up the axial system, also known as vertical or longitudinal system.


Currently has develops_from fusiform initial, which is_a cambium initial, which is part_of vascular cambium, which is part_of vascular system. This won't work for hydroids and leptoids or for xylem and phloem cells in leaves, which do not arise from a vascular cambium. Also, the term vascular cell does not exist in the PO, so it does not work for the definition.

Is it valid to use the term axial cell for all cell types vascular or non-vascular tissue? Would it be better to have a different name for this class of cell types? Do we want to keep the existing definition, and make it a subset of a more general class?


Proposed def.: A elongated plant cell that is oriented parallel to other cells in the axial tissue.

Comment: Axial cells are involved in conduction of water, carbohydrates and minerals or are accessory to the conductive cells. In plant axes, axial cells are oriented with their longest diameter parallel with the axis, but in phyllomes, they may have other orientations.

Conductive cell types for bryophytes

hyrdoid (PO:0025032):: An elongate, water conducting cell that is dead at maturity, with tapered ends that are thin and partially hydrolyzed, that lacks specialized wall thickenings or lignin. [source: ISBN:0962073342 (Crum), ISBN:9780717810073]

Comment: Occurs in the gametophytic phase of a plant life cycle.

Proposed def.: An axial cell that is dead at maturity, with tapered ends that are thin and partially hydrolyzed, and lacking specialized wall thickenings or lignin.

Comment: Water conducting cells found in bryophytes, mainly in the gametophytic phase, but also sometimes in the sporophytic phase.

part_of hydrome


leptoid (PO:0025033): A food conducting cell associated with hydroids that resembles the sieve elements of some seedless vascular plants. [source: ISBN:962073342, ISBN:9780717810073]

Comment: Occurs in the gametophytic phase of a plant life cycle.

Proposed def.: An axial cell that resembles the sieve elements of some seedless vascular plants.

Comment: A food conducting cell found mainly in the gametophytic phase, but also sometimes in the sporophytic phase, of bryopytes.

part_of leptome


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).


See Summary of sporangium development

Next meeting scheduled for Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011 at 10am PDT/1pm EDT