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The study of plant development in recent years has often been
concerned with the effects of the environment and the possible
involvement of growth substances. The prevalent belief that plant
growth substances are crucial to plant development has tended to
obscure rather than to clarify the underlying cellular mechanisms
of development. The aim in this book is to try to focus on what is
currently known, and what needs to be known, in order to explain
plant development in terms that allow further experimentation at
the cellular and molecular levels. We need to know where and at
what level in the cell or organ the critical processes controlling
development occur. Then, we will be better able to under stand how
development is controlled by the genes, whether directly by the
continual production of new gene transcripts or more indirectly by
the genes merely defining self-regulating systems that then
function autonomously. This book is not a survey of the whole of
plant development but is meant to concentrate on the possible
component cellular and molecular processes involved. Consequently,
a basic knowledge of plant structure is assumed. The facts of plant
morphogenesis can be obtained from the books listed in the General
Reading section at the end of Chapter 1. Although references are
not cited specifically in the text, the key references for each
section are denoted by superscript numbers and listed in the Notes
section at the end of each chapter."
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