In botany, apical dominance is the phenomenon whereby the main, central stem of the plant is dominant over (i.e., grows more strongly than) other side stems; on a branch the main stem of the branch is further dominant over its own side twigs.
Plant physiology describes apical dominance as the control exerted by the terminal bud (and shoot apex) over the outgrowth of lateral buds.
Apical dominance occurs when the shoot apex inhibits the growth of lateral buds so that the plant may grow vertically. It is important for the plant to devote energy to growing upward so that it can get more light to undergo photosynthesis. If the plant utilizes available energy for growing upward, it may be able to outcompete other individuals in the vicinity. Plants that were capable of outcompeting neighboring plants likely had higher fitness. Apical dominance is therefore most likely adaptive.
Typically, the end of a shoot contains an apical bud, which is the location where shoot growth occurs. The apical bud produces a plant hormone, auxin, (IAA) that inhibits growth of the lateral buds further down on the stem towards the axillary bud. Auxin is predominantly produced in the growing shoot apex and is transported throughout the plant via the phloem and diffuses into lateral buds which prevents elongation. That auxin likely regulates apical dominance was first discovered in 1934.
When the apical bud is removed, the lowered IAA concentration allows the lateral buds to grow and produce new shoots, which compete to become the lead growth.
Plant physiologists have identified four different stages the plant goes through after the apex is removed (Stages I-IV). The four stages are referred to as
lateral bud formation,
"imposition of inhibition" (apical dominance),
initiation of lateral bud outgrowth following decapitation, and
elongation and development of the lateral bud into a branch.
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Les phytohormones, ou hormones végétales, contrôlent tous les aspects de la croissance et du développement des plantes, depuis l'embryogenèse, la régulation de la taille des organes, la défense contre les agents pathogènes, la tolérance au stress et jusqu'au développement reproducteur. Les hormones végétales sont des molécules signal, produites dans les plantes à des concentrations extrêmement faibles. Contrairement aux animaux (dans lesquels la production d'hormones est limitée à des glandes spécialisées), chaque cellule végétale est capable de produire des hormones.
Chez les plantes terrestres, un méristème (du grec μεριστός, meristos, « divisé ») est une zone de division cellulaire, à l’origine d’organes et/ou de tissus végétaux (ce n’est pas un tissu car formé de cellules indifférenciées). Les cellules méristématiques indifférenciées se divisent (mitoses) puis se différencient en acquérant une structure et une fonction.
L’auxine est une phytohormone de croissance végétale indispensable au développement des plantes. Elle joue un rôle majeur dans le contrôle de leur croissance. Elle intervient dès les premiers stades de l'embryogenèse puis contrôle aussi bien l'organisation du méristème apical (phyllotaxie) et la ramification des parties aériennes de la plante (dominance apicale), que la formation de la racine principale, l'initiation des racines latérales et des racines adventives (rhizogénèse).
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