Keywords
stomata, grass leaves, preparation technique
Abstract
Four leaf preparation techniques (air drying, tetramethylsilane air drying, critical point drying, and freeze substitution) used in scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were evaluated with respect to the degree of cellular distortion they produce in stomatal guard cells of leaves of Dactylis glomerata and Elymus canadensis. Surface morphological distortion and cuticle disruption in the air-dried and tetramethylsilane air-dried leaves, and cuticle disruption within the critical point-dried tissue made it difficult to obtain measurements.The freeze-substituted tissue experienced little cuticle disturbance, and the cellular morphology appeared normal. The length of the guard cells did not significantly differ between the air-dried, tetramethylsilane air-dried, critical point-dried, or freeze-substituted samples. Widths did significantly vary, with the freeze-substituted tissue having lower values than tissues treated with the other treatments. Freeze substitution methodology produced SEM images that appear to be less distorted and allow easy and precise measurement.
Original Publication Citation
Microscopy and Microanalysis 1.3(Jun1995): 131-135.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Anderson, Val J.; Gardner, John S.; and Hardy, Joyce Phillips, "Stomatal Characterization of Grass Leaves by Four Preparation Techniques" (1995). Faculty Publications. 688.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/688
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
1995-06-01
Permanent URL
http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/2057
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
English
College
Life Sciences
Department
Plant and Wildlife Sciences
Copyright Status
© 1995 Cambridge University Press
Copyright Use Information
http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/