Studies in the pollen morphology of Cajanus cajan(L.) Millsp. and its wild ally Atylosia W. & A.

2000 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 507
Author(s):  
M. Chaturvedi ◽  
K. Datta

Studies in the pollen morphology of 13 cultivars ofCajanus cajan, a cultivated legume of Africa and Asia,and six species of Atylosia, a wild ally ofC. cajan, were conducted with light microscope andscanning electron microscope, with a view to assess interrelationship betweenthe wild and cultivated species. There is a striking resemblance among thepollen features of Cajanus cajan and fiveAtylosia species, namelyA. albicans, A. lineata,A. platycarpa, A. scarabaeoidesand A. volubilis. Pollen grains in all these species are3-zonocolporate with thickened colpi margins, and the exine surface isreticulate with circular, slightly elongated or irregular lumina. The mergerof these Atylosia species into the genusCajanus finds support also in pollen features. However,A. marmorata (an Australian species) shows distinctlydifferent pollen features from all of the above species by having smallerpollen grains, by the absence of thickened colpi margins and by havingreticulation with elongated large brochi with narrow muri. Interestingly,A. scarabaeoides, another Australian species but alsowidely distributed in Africa and Asia, does not show pollen morphologicalaffinity with A. marmorata, and is closer toCajanus cajan.

1970 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Ozler ◽  
S Pehlivan

Pollen grains of 20 taxa from two genera of the Liliaceae were examined and compared by LM (light microscope), SEM (scanning electron microscope) and pollens of four taxa were also examined with TEM (transmission electron microscope). Pollen grains shed as monads. They are monosulcate and ellipsoidal. Fritillaria crassifolia subsp. crassifolia Freyn & Smt. sometimes sheds the pollen as dyads. Exine is semitectate and the tectum is perforate. Columellae are simplicolumellate. Ectexine is thicker than endexine. Exine sculpture (ornamentation) is reticulate, reticulate-rugulate, rugulate and retipilate in Asparagus pollens and reticulate, suprareticulate, rugulate-reticulate and striate-reticulate in Fritillaria pollens. Sulcus extends from distal to proximal in some pollens of Asparagus and Fritillaria.   Key words: Asparagus, Fritillaria, Liliaceae, Pollen morphology DOI = 10.3329/bjb.v36i2.1498 Bangladesh J. Bot. 36(2): 111-120, 2007 (December)


2011 ◽  
Vol 73 (4) ◽  
pp. 315-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Klimko ◽  
Krystyna Idzikowska ◽  
Mariola Truchan ◽  
Anna Kreft

Pollen grains of 9 species of the genus <em>Plantago</em> (Plantaginaceae), including 8 taxa native to Poland, were observed under a light microscope and a scanning electron microscope. Descriptions of grain sculpture are illustrated only SEM micrographs. The studied pollen grains were medium-sized or small, spherical or prolate spheroidal. Their sculpture was always verrucate with granulation. In the studied taxa, internal apertures had the form of pores. Their number ranged from (4)5-9(14). The pores were scattered on the surface of pollen grains. Identification features of individual taxa include: presence or absence of an annulus around each pore, annulus structure, ornamentation of the pollen grain and operculum, type of aperture membrane, number of internal pores, and pore diameter. We suggest that two new pollen grain types, characteristic of <em>P. intermedia</em> and <em>P. arenaria</em>, should be distinguished, and that <em>P. alpina</em> should be assigned to the <em>P. coronopus</em> type.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-211
Author(s):  
Saurabh Sachan ◽  
◽  
S.B. Padal ◽  

Genus Cassytha (Lauraceae) is characterized by unigue Pollen morphology. We Prepared strains of C. filiformis following acetolysis method (Ikuse, 1956) for observation under Light Microscope and Scanning Electron Microscope. The present study revealed that the lamellar and scbrate nature of exine are entirely different and attributing to different morphology of pollen grains, especially the shape. This communication provides a comparison of pollen morphology between Indian and South African species filiformis discriminates the morphological variations found among the Indian specimens of C. filiformis from that of South African region.


Biologia ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emine Alçitepe

AbstractThe pollen morphology of Turkish species belonging to sect. Quinqueloculares (Boiss.) Phitos (Campanulaceae) were investigated with a light microscope (LM) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). All examined species are endemic, except Campanula crispa Lam. According to the results of this study, pollen grains of the examined taxa were triporate and spheroidal. Their sculpture was spinose and baculate (C. crispa Lam.); spinulose and microperforate (C. tomentosa Lam.); microperforate (C. vardariana Bocquet) or more commonly, microechinate (C. iconia Phitos, C. lyrata Lam. subsp. lyrata, C. hagielia Boiss., C. sorgerae Phitos, C. betonicifolia SM., C. karadjana Bocquet, C. telmessi Hub.-Mor. & Phitos, C. davisii Turrill).


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 1369-1378 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Hebda ◽  
C. C. Chinnappa

Pollen grains of eight species of Geum (Rosaceae) from western Canada were studied in the light microscope and the scanning electron microscope. The taxa included Geum aleppicum, Geum calthifolium, Geum glaciale, Geum macrophyllum, Geum rivale, Geum rossii, Geum schofieldii, and Geum triflorum. All taxa produce pollen grains in monads that are isopolar, radially symmetrical, and predominantly tricolporate. Tetracolporate grains occur especially in Geum rossii and Geum calthifolium. Grains are subspheroidal to subprolate with a circular to subtriangular amb. All taxa exhibit a well-developed chambered aperture formed by overarching pore flaps. Flaps extend over the aperture but do not join to form an equatorial bridge. The chamber of Geum schofieldii is distinct and complex, often extending equatorially along a sinuous path to the adjacent aperture. Exine is tectate, microperforate, with a thin nexine. Sculpturing is striate or occasionally rugulate and consists of ridges and valleys with microperforations on valley floors. Ridges and valleys are oriented predominantly parallel to the colpus but occasionally curve or loop near the poles. Sculpturing of Geum schofieldii pollen, is predominantly striate but exhibits a unique verrucate to rugulate pattern along the equator caused by elaboration of the sexine. Polar diameter varies from ca. 20 μm in Geum macrophyllum to 33 μm in Geum schofieldii. The distinctness of Geum schofieldii pollen supports specific status.


2017 ◽  
pp. 117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Sosa

This work studies 17 species of mexican Araliaceae from the palynological point of view belonging to the genera Aralia, Dendropanax, Didymopanax, Redera, Oreopanax y Sciadodendron . All the pollen descriptions are presented at the generic level. The grains were studied based in scanning electron microscope and light microscope. It includes a dichotomous key for the genera grains. The results showed few differences between the pollen grains of the genera although some exine characters are important. Redera and Didymopanax presented an exine semi-tectate and the rest of the genera had tectate-perforate grains. This paper compared also some pollen characters with morphological ones, finding pollen characters considered primitive correlated with characters of primitive Araliaceae groups .


Phytotaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 516 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
PRADIP VIKRAM DESHMUKH ◽  
SIDDHARTHAN SURVESWARAN ◽  
RAMCHANDRA DNYANOBA GORE ◽  
MANOJ MADHWANAND LEKHAK

The endemic Indian genus Haplanthodes (Acanthaceae) is revised. Four species, viz. H. neilgherryensis, H. plumosa, H. tentaculata and H. verticillata and a new variety, H. neilgherryensis var. toranganensis are recognized. Lectotype is designated for Haplanthodes, Haplanthus plumosus and H. verticillaris. The nomenclature of the Linnaean name Ruellia tentaculata is also discussed. Micromorphology of seed using light microscope (LM) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) is observed for the first time, and two types, reticulate and micro papillate, have been recognized based on surface sculpturing pattern. The genus differs from the related genera Andrographis and Haplanthus by distinctly two grooved seeds with hygroscopic hairs. Pollen grains of the genus are oblate or prolate spheroidal, distinctly triangular, trizonocolporate with reticulate exine ornamentation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-148
Author(s):  
Burcu Yilmaz Çitak ◽  
Hüseyin Dural ◽  
Tuna Uysal ◽  
Nur Münevver Pinar

In this paper, the palynomorphology of 17 taxa of section Cheirolepis in Turkey, were investigated by light (LM) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). Detailed descriptions of the pollen grains were given for each taxon and a well-resolved dendrogram was generated through numerical analysis of palynological diagnostic features. The pollen grains were found to be radially symmetric, isopolar, and generally 3-zonocolporate, with the exception of C. derderiifolia, C. kotschyi var. floccosa, and C. saligna, which were also 4-zonocolporate. The shape of the pollen grains were prolatespheroidal, with the polar axes of 32.76–46.26 μm and equatorial axes of 31.86–45.82 μm. The sculpturing of the pollen grains was generally scabrate-perforate or rarely microechinate-perforate. The spines were conical with a changing base length. The length and the width of the spines varied between 0.48 and 2.28 μm and 0.4 and 3.39 μm, respectively. The number of perforations at the base of the spines ranged in two or morerows and they varied between 5 and 30. The number of spines was 16–70 in 10 μm2. The results of this study showed that the polar axes, equatorial axes, aperture type, pollen shape, spine length, perforation number, and number of spines in 10 μm2 are essential for distinguishing the studied taxa. The taxa were grouped by clustering analysis of selected pollen characters using the UPGMA method.


1970 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Özler ◽  
S Pehlivan

Pollen grains of 16 taxa of Allium L. belonging to sections Rhizirideum G. Don ex Koch., Codonoprasum Reichb. and Allium L. were investigated using light and scanning electron microscope, and pollens of four taxa were also examined with transmission electron microscope. Pollens were monosulcate and ellipsoidal. It was observed that the sulcus extends from distal to proximal in all taxa. The exine was semitectate and the tectum was perforate. Columellae were simplicolumellate. Exine sculpture was striate-perforate, striate-rugulate-perforate and rugulate-perforate. A. albidum Fischer ex Bieb. subsp. caucasicum (Regel) Stearn, A. rupicola Boiss ex Mouterde and A. asperiflorum Miscz. were seen to have an operculum. Key words: Allium; Codonoprasum; Rhizirideum; Alliaceae; Pollen morphology; Turkey DOI: 10.3329/bjb.v39i1.5524Bangladesh J. Bot. 39(1): 37-36, 2010 (June)


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 595-612 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Hebda ◽  
C. C. Chinnappa ◽  
B. M. Smith

Morphology and geographic variation of pollen grains of three genera of the Rosaceae (Dryas, Fragaria, Holodiscus) of western Canada were studied using the light microscope and scanning electron microscope. Dryas spp. pollen is tricolporate with a weakly developed fusiform aperture in the colpus, which upon expansion of the grain becomes a large rectangular opening. Sculpturing consists of ridges and valleys (striate or rugulate), the latter containing perforations, which grades to a network of ridges and perforations (reticulate) at colpus margins. Ridges are parallel to the colpus or form looping patterns. Dryas integrifolia and Dryas octopetala pollen in silicone oil usually are larger than those of Dryas drummondii. Fragaria spp. pollen is tricolporate with a well-developed complex equatorial aperture. Fragaria chiloensis and F. vesca exhibit a lobed and equatorially extended endoaperture, which is overarched by sexine. Fragaria virginiana usually has a less distinct endoaperture. Fragaria species have a fusiform colpus operculum. Sculpturing consists of nonasastomosing ridges parallel to the colpus and valleys containing obscure microperforations. Holodiscus discolor pollen is tricolporate. Sculpturing is striate to reticulostriate, consisting of ridges and valleys with perforations. A distinct zone, either lacking ridges or of densely packed ridges, borders the colpus.


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