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Annals of Botany 81 : 441–448, 1998 Vascular Architecture of a Large-leafed Genotype of Trifolium repens N. R. S A C K V I L L E H A M I L T O N*† and M. J. M. H A Y‡ * Enironmental Biology Department, Institute of Grassland and Enironmental Research, Plas Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 3EB, UK and ‡ Grasslands Research Centre, AgResearch, Priate Bag 11008, Palmerston North, New Zealand Received : 21 October 1996 Returned for revision : 10 February 1997 Accepted : 24 November 1997 The objectives of this study were to identify the vascular connections from roots to upper axial bundles in one genotype of Trifolium repens L. ‘ Grasslands Kopu ’, identify pathways followed by the transpiration stream, and establish whether these pathways could account for previously-observed patterns of clonal integration. The study provides new information on vascular connections between root and parent and branch stolons at nodes possessing both a root and a branch, and to the first two leaves on branch stolons. A nodal root is connected to the lower nearside axial bundle of the parent stolon but to both lower and upper nearside axial bundles of the branch. Upper sympodia provide a long-distance transport pathway from a parent stolon to the apex of branch stolons. Lower sympodia are functionally different, providing short-distance transport to structures in close proximity to the source root. This is consistent with observed patterns of clonal integration in T. repens and may provide a simple architectural mechanism facilitating foraging. # 1998 Annals of Botany Company Key words : Acid fuchsin, clonal integration, foraging, physiological integration, serial sections, white clover, Trifolium repens (L.), vascular architecture, xylem transport. I N T R O D U C T I ON The architecture of the vascular system of a plant is one of the major determinants of patterns of resource allocation and, therefore, of clonal integration between connected parts of the plant (Watson and Casper, 1984 ; Price, Marshall and Hutchings, 1992). Patterns of clonal integration, in turn, determine the potential of the plant to ‘ forage ’ (foraging : ‘ the processes whereby an organism searches, or ramifies within its habitat, which enhance its acquisition of essential resources ’ ; Hutchings and de Kroon, 1994). A knowledge of vascular architecture is, therefore, a prerequisite for studies on clonal integration and foraging. The growth habit and dynamics of Trifolium repens—a long-lived perennial herb often present as mobile patches in heterogeneous grasslands, and persisting by the indefinitelyrepeated production of short-lived nodes on laterallyspreading shoots (often now described as stolons)—suggests an important role for foraging. Yet studies on clonal integration and foraging in this species are constrained by inadequate knowledge of its vascular architecture. In particular, published descriptions of the vascular architecture of T. repens (Erith, 1924 ; Devadas and Beck, 1972 ; Thomas, 1987 ; Fig. 1) contain an anomaly. The vascular system is reported to comprise eight to nine or more vascular bundles in four sympodia. Each sympodium consists of one axial bundle and associated leaf traces, branch traces and other bundles that branch repeatedly from the axial bundle in a regular sequence. Each axial bundle is continuous from base to apex of a stolon. There † For correspondence. Fax 01970 828357, e-mail Ruaraidh. Hamilton!BBSRC.AC.UK 0305-7364}98}03044108 $25.00}0 are no connections between the two upper and two lower sympodia. Nodal roots (the literature does not indicate whether derived from upper or lower root primordia) are connected only to the axial bundles of the lower sympodia. Essentially the same architecture was confirmed by A. Bryan, N. R. Sackville Hamilton and A. D. Bell (pers. comm.) in stolons from a wild population of T. repens in North Wales. The anomaly is that there appear to be no vascular connections from roots to upper sympodia, i.e. no pathway enabling the latter to perform their function of carrying the transpiration stream from root to leaf. One objective of the work reported here was to identify such pathway(s) so as to provide the necessary basic information for studies on clonal integration and foraging. The clonal integration expressed by T. repens shows an unexplained and unpredicted complexity (Turkington, Sackville Hamilton and Gliddon, 1991). On the one hand, stolon apices are highly integrated. When branches on the two sides of a stolon were grown with different species of grass, apices of the branches on both sides differentiated new modules (¯ nodeleafproximal internodeaxillary budnodal root) at the same rate, although the common rate was different under different pairs of grasses. It was suggested that this enables exploratory lateral spread of the plant to continue through locally-unfavourable as well as favourable patches : clonal integration is essential to support this component of growth when resources are not abundant locally. On the other hand, differentiated modules showed a localized, unintegrated response, changing leaf area and development of axillary buds in response to their immediate microenvironment but being unaffected by the micro- bo970576 # 1998 Annals of Botany Company 442 Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens transpiration stream of the upper two sympodia, and that transport within the two lower sympodia is primarily shortdistance. It is proposed that, if the hypothesis is confirmed, it would provide a mechanism for the simultaneous high clonal integration of lateral spread, and localized, unintegrated responses of modules to favourable patches. MATERIALS AND METHODS F. 1. Vascular system of a stolon of Trifolium repens as published by Thomas (1987). Bud traces (O) are shown as broken lines, and vascular connections of nodal roots (RT) as dotted lines. M, L, and U are median, lower and upper leaf traces, respectively. Axial bundles are labelled A1 to A4, in accordance with the nomenclature of Thomas (1987). Reproduced by kind permission of the Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau, with node numbers and trace labels altered to conform with the conventions adopted here. environment of connected branches on the opposite side of the stolon. It was suggested that increasing leaf area and branch production enhances exploitation of favourable patches once they are encountered, and that localized, unintegrated responses of these characteristics ensure that exploitatory growth responses are restricted to favourable patches. Implicit in this finding is that control of resource allocation to apical meristems must be fundamentally different from that to the differentiated products of meristems. Resource allocation to apical meristems should be possible over long distances within the plant, whereas other sinks should receive resources primarily from local sources. This paper reports on experiments designed to test the hypothesis that vascular connections from roots to upper sympodia enable long-distance transport to occur within the Sixty cuttings of a genotype of the large-leafed variety ‘ Grasslands Kopu ’, AgResearch clone K131, were established in potting compost in seed trays in a glasshouse in Palmerston North, New Zealand during January (summer). After 8 weeks, patterns of transport in the xylem were traced with acid fuchsin using a methodology based on Roach (1939) and Price et al. (1992). At this stage, the plants had 16–18 nodes on the parent stolon, with each mature node bearing either an inflorescence or a branch. Forty plants were selected and treated in the following manner. A single nodal root attached to each plant was teased out of the compost and washed. A 1±5 cm$ vial containing a 0±5 % aqueous solution of acid fuchsin was embedded in the soil below the relevant node, the root was inserted and then severed, under the solution, at 2 cm below the node. All other roots of the plant remained in place in moist potting compost during the period of uptake of dye. After 3 to 10 h, the distribution of dye was noted where visible on the intact plant. Transverse sections through fresh stolons of labelled plants were taken just proximal (i.e. towards the base of the stolon) to each node and drawn to show which vascular bundles contained dye. Serial sections were cut through selected nodes and internodes after labelling. Forty plants were treated thus, supplying one root on each plant with acid fuchsin. To determine transport patterns over the whole plant, a range of positions was selected for the treated root, from the youngest to the oldest rooted node on a stolon (Table 1, control), and on the first five nodes of a branch stolon (Table 1, branch). The path followed by the transpiration stream depends on the distribution of sources (roots) and sinks (leaves and other evaporative surfaces). These were controlled in some plants by selecting plants with particular characteristics (Table 1, unrooted), by removing selected branches, roots and}or leaves, or by severing selected stolon internodes, 24 h prior to labelling (Table 1, cut and severed treatments). Directions ‘ left ’ and ‘ right ’ are given viewing a stolon from above its base towards its apex. Nodes are numbered acropetally starting with the treated node as node 0 ; negative node numbers indicate nodes proximal to the treated node. There appears to be no accepted terminology corresponding to ‘ adaxial ’ and ‘ abaxial ’ to describe the side of a parent stolon relative to the side bearing a branch. For both parent and branch stolon the term ‘ nearside ’ is used to refer to the same side as the axil and ‘ farside ’ to refer to the opposite side, noting that for the branch, but not for the parent, ‘ nearside ’ is the same as ‘ adaxial ’ and ‘ farside ’ the same as ‘ abaxial ’. Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens T 1. Summary of positions of roots of Trifolium repens supplied with acid fuchsin, and of treatments applied Treatment (replicates) Control (25) Cut branch 0 (2) Unrooted distally (2) Cut distal (2) Severed stolon proximally (2) Supply acid fuchsin to branch (5) Supply acid fuchsin to branch, cut stolon proximally (2) Objective}hypothesis Supply acid fuchsin to the root at one branched node on a profuselybranched plant. Node position ranging from 4 to 15 nodes from the apex, the branch having 1–3 nodes less than the number of distal nodes on the parent As control, but node position 7–8 nodes from apex, and branch at node 0 removed 24 h prior to application of acid fuchsin As control, but node position 7–8 nodes from apex, on stolons with no roots distal to the treated root As control, but node position 7–8 nodes from apex, and all inflorescences, branches, roots, and leaves distal to the treated root removed 24 h prior to treatment As control, but node position 7–8 nodes from apex, and severed parent stolon at the second internode proximal to the treated root Treated root is on branch, 1–5 nodes from the point of insertion of the branch into its parent stolon. Branch position 6–9 nodes from apex of parent As previous treatment, but treated root 1–2 nodes from branch’s point of insertion into its parent stolon, and severed the parent stolon at the second internode proximal to the origin of the treated branch. Standard transport patterns in a plant growing under optimal conditions Improve sensitivity of analysis of transport paths into branch at node 2 by increasing transport into that branch Presence of distal roots (sources) may affect transport patterns Presence of distal sources and sinks may affect transport patterns Presence of proximal sources may affect transport patterns Basipetal transport from branch to parent Presence of proximal sources may affect basipetal transport from branch to parent 443 Superficial distribution Dye in leaves and stipules was visible without dissection (Fig. 2). Dye in stolons and petioles was not visible superficially. The distribution of dye was apparent after 2 h and intensified, with no qualitative changes, during a 10 h period. Regardless of which root was treated, acid fuchsin entering any leaf through its median leaf trace dyed the terminal leaflet and the distal two thirds of both lateral leaflets heavily (Fig. 2 A). Dye entering through upper and lower leaf traces stained the uppermost and lowermost half of the leaf, respectively, i.e. lateral leaflet plus half of the terminal leaflet (Fig. 2 A). (The left side of a leaf is uppermost in leaves originating on the left side of the stolon, and the right uppermost in leaves on the right.) The regions of leaf supplied by the upper trace do not overlap with those supplied by the lower. The intensity of staining was greatest in that part of the lateral leaflet not also supplied by the median trace but, even there, the intensity was lower than in leaves receiving dye through the median trace. In addition, dye in the upper leaf trace stained the upper stipule (Fig. 2 B). Transport paths from root to shoot The vascular system of the root divides into two unequal bundles to form separate direct connections to the vascular systems of both parent and branch (Fig. 3). The smaller root bundle connects to one bundle—the lower nearside axial bundle—of the parent, while the larger root bundle spreads out to connect directly to several nearside branch bundles, including both lower and upper nearside axial bundles. In accordance with these connections, dye absorbed by the root at a branched node entered both parent and branch stolon at that node. The parent stolon received dye only in the lower nearside axial bundle. The branch stolon at that node received dye in at least three vascular bundles : the lower and upper nearside axial bundles and the median trace to the leaf at the first node on the branch. Up to three further bundles in the branch received smaller amounts of dye in some plants, all on the nearside of the branch. Conforming with the sizes of the two root bundles, and the number of vascular bundles carrying dye in the stolon, most dye entered the branch at node 0 rather than the parent stolon, especially in well-developed branches. Transport paths within a parent stolon RESULTS As in most field- and glasshouse-grown plants of Trifolium repens, roots developed only at the lower of the two root buds at each node. Thus no data can be presented on transport from roots developing from the upper bud. Much or all of the dye entering the parent stolon was transported into the leaf at node 2 through its median leaf trace, the nearest available sink (Fig. 1). No dye appeared in the leaf at node 0, in accordance with the absence of vascular connections between the root and leaf of a node (Fig. 1). The presence of a developing inflorescence or branch at node 2 often caused acropetal transport in the lower and}or upper axial bundle as far as that branch or inflorescence. Further transport along axial bundles could be induced 444 Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens F. 2. Superficial appearance of Trifolium repens labelled with acid fuchsin in (A) leaves receiving acid fuchsin through (right) the median or (left) a lateral trace supplying the right side. B, Upper stipules with (bottom) or without (top) acid fuchsin in the upper leaf trace. by manipulation (Table 2). Removal of the leaf and branch at the treated node and of all distal leaves, branches and inflorescences caused dye to be transported the full length of the stolon in both upper and lower nearside axial bundles. The absence of roots distal to the treated root had no effect on dye transport along the upper axial bundles (i.e. there was no transport with or without distal roots), but increased transport in the lower sympodium such that dye moved up to four nodes distally in the axial bundle to supply the median leaf traces at nodes 4 and 6. Serial sections through the internode distal to a root showed that a vascular bundle branches from the lower nearside axial bundle, i.e. the one supplied by the root, and anastomoses with the upper nearside axial bundle. In some plants, dye passed up this bundle and appeared in the upper nearside axial bundle at node 1. In other plants, dye remained in the lower nearside axial bundle at node 1. In no case did dye cross from left to right axial bundle or ice ersa across a stolon. However, if dye was present in one upper sympodium then in some cases it appeared in the upper traces of leaves on both sides without crossing to the other upper axial bundle. Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens 445 T 2. Summary of effects of treatment on transport of acid fuchsin in Trifolium repens Treatment Effect Cut off branch at node 0 Caused consistent heavy transport into branch at node 2, via upper and}or lower axial bundles Increased the distance of acropetal transport in lower axial bundles by up to 4 nodes. No effect on acropetal flow in upper axial bundles Caused acropetal transport along the full length of the stolon to the apex in both lower and upper axial bundles Distal nodes unrooted F. 3. Topological 3-D diagram of vascular connections between root and axial bundles at a node of a stolon of Trifolium repens with a root and a branch to the right. The diagram includes one proximal internode on the parent stolon to show the point of insertion of the upper branch trace at the proximal node. For simplicity, leaf traces and other connections are not shown, and topographical features, such as the size and shape and positions of the bundles within the stolon, are not depicted accurately. Unshaded bundles, four axial bundles of the parent stolon, oriented with the base of the stolon towards the top left and its apex towards the bottom right ; lightly shaded bundles, four axial bundles of the branch stolon and branch traces within the parent stolon ; heavily shaded bundles, vascular bundle from the root and its connections to axial bundles in the stolons. Axial bundles in the parent stolon are labelled A1 to A4 following the convention of Thomas (1987), and A1« to A4« in the branch stolon. Basipetal transport was induced by severing vascular connections to organs usually supplied from proximal roots. For example, severing the root at node ®2 and the stolon internode proximal to node ®2 in a stolon caused basipetal transport along the axial bundle to supply the median trace of leaf 0 (Table 2). The qualitative patterns of distribution of dye within the parent stolon from a treated root were not affected by the position of the root along the stolon. Sections through nodes and internodes confirmed that the vascular connections shown in Fig. 1 correctly describe all nodes along the full length of a stolon. As nodes age, there is secondary thickening of the vascular bundles but no changes in the vascular connections. Transport into branch stolons Both lower axial bundles in the branch (A1« and A4« in Fig. 3) are derived from the lower nearside axial bundle in the parent (A4). Both upper axial bundles in the branch (A2« and A3«) are derived from the upper nearside axial bundle in the parent (A3) via a branch trace extending one node proximally within the parent stolon. In accordance with these and the previously-described root-shoot connections, dye from a treated root did not appear in branches on the farside of the parent stolon Cut off inflorescences, branches, roots, and leaves at all distal nodes Cut through parent stolon at second internode proximal to the treated root Supplied acid fuchsin to root on branch, 1–5 nodes from base of branch Supplied root on branch, 1–2 nodes from base of branch ; parent stolon severed at second internode proximal to parent node of treated branch Caused transport into the leaf at node 0 via its median trace, by basipetal transport in the lower nearside axial bundle to the point of insertion of the trace Qualitatively similar to control Marked basipetal transport from second branch node into parent stolon, thence into median trace of leaf at treated node. Little basipetal transport from first branch node (nodes ®1, 1, 3, 5 etc.). Basipetal transport within the parent stolon was not sufficient in any plant for dye to appear in nearside branches proximal to the treated root (nodes ®2, ®4 etc.). Dye appeared predominantly in the branch at node 0 but also in distal nearside branches (nodes 2, 4 etc.). Dye entering a branch in an upper axial bundle was transported the full length of the branch, in branches of any size from three to 14 nodes. Dye entering the branch in a lower axial bundle was transported two to three nodes if branch nodes themselves were rooted, or four to five nodes if the branch nodes were unrooted. Vascular bundles in a branch stolon diverged from bundles in the parent stolon proximally to the point of insertion of the root at the same node (Figs 3 and 4). Dye passed directly from the root into the branch at node 0, but distal nearside branches received dye only via bundles in the parent stolon. Therefore the pattern of distribution of dye in the branch at node 0 was qualitatively different from that observed in distal nearside branches. Transport within the branch at node 0 The branch at node 0 received dye in its nearside bundles only (the only bundles that are connected to the root of the parent node). The first leaf was dyed through its median trace, which has a strongly-developed connection to the root at node 0, and was consistently the most heavily dyed of all leaves on the plant (Fig. 4 A). The appearance of dye in subsequent leaves of the same branch was in accordance 446 Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens L2 * F. 4. Vascular connections from a parent stolon to the first four leaves of a branch stolon of Trifolium repens. For clarity, separate diagrams are presented for (A) lower and (B) upper sympodia. Connections with roots and secondary branches arising from the branch stolon are not shown. Thick lines, leaf traces ; thin lines, axial bundles ; solid lines, bundles in branch ; dotted lines, bundles from root ; dashed lines, connecting bundle in parent stolon, i.e. lower nearside axial bundle for lower sympodia (A), branch trace for upper sympodia (B). Nodes are numbered from the base of the branch, and lower, median and upper leaf traces to node n (n ¯ 1 … 4) are labelled Ln, Mn, Un. Asterisks indicate bundles receiving dye when dye is supplied to the root of the parent node : ***, consistently and heavily stained ; **, consistently stained ; *, stained, but lightly or not consistently. with previously-published vascular connections (Fig. 1), given the new finding that only the nearside vascular bundles have vascular connections from the root at node 0 (Figs 3 and 4). The second leaf was dyed, lightly or not at all, through its lower trace, and the third was consistently dyed through its median trace (Fig. 4 A). The fourth leaf was consistently dyed through its upper trace (Fig. 4 B), and was the most proximal leaf on the branch to be thus dyed. Appearance of dye in subsequent leaves and stipules was more variable. Transport within distal nearside branches Distal nearside branches received dye in their farside as well as their nearside bundles. Dye appeared only in the lower bundles, or only in the upper ones, or in all bundles, depending on whether it entered from the lower or upper or both nearside axial bundles of the parent stolon (Fig. 3) (the occurrence of these three possibilities is described above). Leaves in these distal branches were dyed through their traces in accordance with the connections shown in Fig. 4, i.e. through traces shown in Fig. 4 A if the branch received dye via the lower nearside axial bundle of the parent stolon, and those shown in Fig. 4 B if it received dye via the upper nearside axial bundle of the parent. The most proximal leaves were the most heavily dyed, and median traces carried more dye than lateral traces. Basipetal transport Marked basipetal transport from branch to parent stolon was observed when the root of the second node on a branch was treated and the parent stolon was severed at the internode two nodes proximal to the node at which the branch originated (Table 2). In contrast, little or no basipetal transport into the parent occurred when the root at the first node on a branch was treated. D I S C U S S I ON This study has revealed new information on vascular connections between root and parent and branch stolon at a node (Fig. 3). The root connects with the lower nearside axial bundle of the parent, and independently to lower and Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens upper nearside axial bundles of the branch (A4, A1« and A2« for a node on the right as in Fig. 3). This last connection, at the base of a branch, is the major link from roots to upper axial bundles in well-branched plants, and resolves the anomaly (see Introduction) that previous studies show no connection from roots to upper axial bundles. New information is also given on vascular connections to the leaves on the first two nodes on a branch (Fig. 4). These inevitably differ from those illustrated in Fig. 1 for nodes on established stolons, because leaf traces arise up to two nodes proximal to their corresponding leaf. The median trace of the first leaf on a branch is unique in having a welldeveloped vascular connection to the root at the parent node (Fig. 4 A), and therefore receives a large proportion of its transpiration demand from that single nodal root, and was consistently the most heavily dyed of all leaves on the plant. The upper trace of the second leaf on a branch arises from the branch trace proximal to the point of insertion of the root of the parent node. Thus the first trace to diverge from the upper nearside axial bundle of a branch distal to the point of insertion of the root of the parent node is the upper trace of the fourth leaf (Fig. 4 B). This makes it a major sink for the transpiration stream entering the upper nearside axial bundle of a branch, and leads to a characteristic feature, that no dye appears in the stipules of the first three nodes of a branch whose parent root is supplied with dye, while the fourth stipule is strongly dyed. All pathways followed by the transpiration stream were defined physically by the vascular bundles and their interconnections. The pathway followed was variable, depending on the distribution of sources (roots) and sinks (leaves and other evaporative surfaces). The direction of flow was usually acropetal, but could readily be reversed by reversing the direction of the source-sink gradient. This is consistent with the view that the vascular system is a passive system of interconnected pipes. Several aspects of the architectural features documented here have implications for the intraplant distribution of resources. For instance, the more numerous and larger connections from the root to the branch as compared with the parent stolon are consistent with results of $#P studies. Where $#P was supplied to a nodal root of the same genotype of ‘ Grasslands Kopu ’ at seven (Lo$ tscher and Hay, 1996), ten (Chapman and Hay, 1993) or 12 (Hay and Sackville Hamilton, 1996) nodes from the apex, $#P in the branch at the node of the treated root was, respectively, 42, 50 and 63 % of the total $#P exported from the root. Similar patterns occur in other genotypes : for example, in a genotype from an old pasture in Wales, Kemball and Marshall (1994) reported corresponding percentages of 27 and 71 % of the $#P supplied to a nodal root eight and 12 nodes from the apex, respectively. Secondly, since a nodal root is connected only to nearside axial bundles of both parent and branch stolons, roots at the parent node of a branch and the (adjacent) first node on that branch connect to the same lower axial bundle, whereas the second node on the same branch connects to the opposite lower bundle. Thus any tendency to basipetal flow from the root on the first branch node would be counteracted 447 by acropetal flow from the root at the parent node. In this study, basipetal flow from branch into parent was readily induced from the root at the second node of the branch, but not from that at the first node. In a related study (Hay and Sackville Hamilton, 1996), there was a six-fold greater basipetal movement of $#P into the parent stolon from a treated nodal root on the farside rather than the nearside of the branch. Furthermore, it was clearly demonstrated that median leaf traces were larger than lateral traces and were therefore stronger sinks for the transpiration stream. Thus most of the transpiration stream entering a leaf originated in the lower sympodia supplying lower and median traces. The lower axial bundles, therefore, supplied strong local leaf sinks, while the upper axial bundles, supplying only upper leaf traces, were found to transport dye throughout the length of the branch stolon. These results are largely consistent with the hypothesis advanced to explain patterns of clonal integration observed by Turkington et al. (1991). The lower axial bundles provide a short-distance transport pathway to structures in close proximity to the source root. It is suggested that this pathway enables localized responses to favourable microsites to occur. In contrast, the upper axial bundles of a branch provide a long-distance transport pathway from the parent stolon to the apex of the branch stolon. It is suggested that this pathway may enable high clonal integration of exploratory growth at stolon apices to occur. The generality of these results across other genotypes of white clover has yet to be determined. Circumstantial evidence is conflicting. On one hand, there is genetic variation in the number of vascular bundles visible in crosssections of stolons, with larger-leafed varieties tending to have more (Erith, 1924 ; Thomas, 1987). On the other hand, $#P uptake studies using undisturbed plants have shown similar patterns of distribution from root to parent and branch stolons in 17 other genotypes of the same variety ‘ Grasslands Kopu ’ and in a morphologically-contrasting small-leafed genotype ‘ Grasslands Tahora ’ (Lo$ tscher and Hay, 1996, 1997). The relevance of these studies to the field has yet to be determined. The distribution of source-sink gradients in the field is likely to be highly variable, and many nodes are unrooted or unbranched. In addition, further studies are required to clarify the role of other factors affecting clonal integration, such as translocation in the phloem, remobilization of nutrients, and utilization of resources (Chapman and Robson, 1992). Nevertheless, the results presented here are sufficient to demonstrate a functional dichotomy between upper and lower axial bundles. This may form the basis of a simple architectural mechanism to explain the complex patterns of clonal integration that are observed in T. repens, and may be a necessary part of efficient foraging. A C K N O W L E D G E M E N TS The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support given by the British Council via its Higher Education Link Scheme for this project. The first author thanks the Royal 448 Sackille Hamilton and Hay—Vascular Architecture of Trifolium repens Society for financial support. Professor R. G. Thomas, Massey University, is thanked for his valuable comments and advice. 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