Vascular plants produce new organs at the tip of the stem in a very organized fashion. This patterning process occurs in small groups of stem cells, the so-called shoot apical meristems (SAM), and generates regular patterns called phyllotaxis. The phyllotaxis of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana follows a Fibonacci spiral, the most frequent...
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2010 (v1)Conference paperUploaded on: April 5, 2025
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June 27, 2011 (v1)Conference paper
Phyllotaxis is the geometric arrangement of organs in plants, and is known to be highly regular. However, experimental data (from [i]Arabidopsis thaliana[/i]) show that this regularity is in fact subject to specific patterns of permutations. In this paper we introduce a model for these patterns, as well as algorithms designed to identify these...
Uploaded on: April 5, 2025 -
2011 (v1)Conference paper
Phyllotaxis is the geometric arrangement of organs in plants, and is known to be highly regular. However, experimental data (from Arabidopsis thaliana) show that this regularity is in fact subject to specific patterns of permutations. In this paper we introduce a model for these patterns, as well as algorithms designed to identify these...
Uploaded on: April 5, 2025 -
2013 (v1)Journal article
Abstract In vascular plants, the arrangement of organs around the stem generates geometric patterns called phyllotaxis. In the model plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, as in the majority of species, single organs are initiated successively at a divergence angle from the previous organ close to the canonical angle of 137.5°, producing a Fibonacci...
Uploaded on: April 5, 2025