Ula M. Noor Al-Mousawi, Alla N. Al-Waheeb , and Sahar A.A. Malik Al-Saadi
الملخص الانجليزي
The anatomical features of leaves and stems of seven species belonging to five genera of
the Papaveraceae family were studied, including: Fumaria bracteosa Pomel, 1875; Glaucium
grandiflorum Boissier & A. Huet,1856; Hypecoum pendulum Linnaeus, 1753; Papaver fugax
Poiret,1804; Papaver macrostomum Boissier & A. Huet, 1867; Papaver rhoeas Linnaeus,
1753 and Roemeria refracta de Candolle,1821. The results showed that the anticlinal cell
walls of the adaxial surface were more thickened in P. fugax, H. pendulum, P. macrostomum
and R.refracta, while it was thin in P. rhoeas. The current investigation finds three types of
the stomata (i.e., anomocytic, paracytic and hemiparacytic), and the number of stomata on the
adaxial epidermis ranged between 22.11 stomata mm2 in P. rhoeas and 69.30 stomata/mm2
in
P. fugax; the stomatal index percentage on the adaxial surface was 15.04% in P.
macrostomum and 4.14% in P. rhoeas.
The type of the mesophyll was bifacial (dorsiventral) in structure for the species. Stems
gave a good character in separation of the species; shape and size of cortex cells, and the
numbers of cortex layers were taxonomically significant. The observations of this study
showed six types of trichomes that were non-glandular biseriated, triseriated or multiseriated,
unicellular with multicellular short hairs and finally uniseriate long hairs (in G. grandiflorum).
P. rhoeas recognized by found glandular short hairs