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Article Dans Une Revue (Article De Synthèse) IAWA Journal Année : 2017

Diversity in the organisation and lignification of tension wood fibre walls – A review

Bruno Clair

Résumé

Tension wood, a tissue developed by angiosperm trees to actively recover their verticality, has long been defined by the presence of an unlignified cellulosic inner layer in the cell wall of fibres, called the G-layer. Although it was known that some species have no G-layer, the definition was appropriate since it enabled easy detection of tension wood zones using various staining techniques for either cellulose or lignin. For several years now, irrespective of its anatomical structure, tension wood has been defined by its high mechanical internal tensile stress. This definition enables screening of the diversity of cell walls in tension wood fibres. Recent results obtained in tropical species with tension wood with a delay in the lignification of the G-layer opened our eyes to the effective presence of large amounts of lignin in the G-layer of some species. This led us to review older literature mentioning the presence of lignin deposits in the G-layer and give them credit. Advances in the knowledge of tension wood fibres allow us to reconsider some previous classifications of the diversity in the organisation of the fibre walls of the tension wood.
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Dates et versions

hal-01636686 , version 1 (16-11-2017)

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Bruno Clair, Barbara Ghislain. Diversity in the organisation and lignification of tension wood fibre walls – A review. IAWA Journal, 2017, 38 (2), pp.245 - 265. ⟨10.1163/22941932-20170170⟩. ⟨hal-01636686⟩
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