Pollen morphology of Curroria, Mondia, Socotranthus and Stomatostemma (Periplocaceae)

Bothalia ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Verhoeven ◽  
H. J. T. Venter

The pollen morphology of I Planch., O Skeels, Socotranthus Kuntze and Stomatostemma N.E. Br. was studied.All the genera are characterized by pollen grains arranged in tetrads. The arrangement of the grains may be rhomboidal, tetrahedral or decussate. The 4 - 6 pores present are restricted to the junction area of adjacent grains. The exine is smooth.Exine structure consists of an outer, homogeneous stratum (tectum) subtended by a granular stratum. The intine is well developed. The pollen grains of tetrads are connected by wall bridges (cross-wall cohesion). Except for small differences which may occur between species and genera in pollen size and arrangement of tetrads, the pollen is uniform in morphology.

2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muazaz Al-Hadeethy ◽  
Athiya Al-Mashhadani ◽  
Talib Al-Khesraji ◽  
Sahapat Barusrux ◽  
Hazim Al-Jewari ◽  
...  

The present study highlights the taxonomic values of the pollen features of 20 species of Verbascum L. in Iraq. The pollen grains were acetolysed and observed under Light and Electron microscopes. Our results showed that the pollen grains of these species are usually radially symmetrical, isopolar, tricolporate and display reticulate sculpturing. The variations were found in shape, size, and exine thickness. Most of the species are subprolate, prolate spheroidal, and prolate, whereas oblate spheroidal pollens were found only in V. thapsus. The pollen size among the species studied ranges from 16.2-32.5 µm. The majority of species are medium sized except V. agrimoniifolium and V. oreophilum that are small sized, and four species i.e. V. palmyrense, V. sinuatum, V. songaricum, and V. thapsus having both small and medium sized pollen grains. Moreover, the result showed that the exine thickness ranges from 0.87-4.75 µm, but this value can overlap between some species. Therefore, only the shape of pollen grains could be used to classify these species into groups.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjpt.v21i2.21355Bangladesh J. Plant Taxon. 21(2): 159-165, 2014 (December)


Phytotaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 404 (5) ◽  
pp. 171
Author(s):  
MITRA LAL PATHAK ◽  
MUHAMMAD IDREES ◽  
BO XU ◽  
XIN FEN GAO

Pollen morphology of 27 species of Photinia sensu stricto and five closely related genera of subfamily Maloideae (Rosaceae) were studied in detail. Palynomorphological characteristics were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Comparative pollen analysis was accomplished based on pollen size, shape, polar and equatorial views, polar and equatorial diameter ratio (P/E ratio), width of aperture, and exine ornamentation. The pollen grains of studied species were found to be monad, tricolporate, small to medium in size (P=17.42–30.45 μm, E=9.26–20.18 μm) and to have shapes oblate-spheroidal (0.88–1.0 μm), prolate-spheroidal (1.01–1.14 μm), sub-prolate (1.15–1.33 μm), prolate (1.34–2 μm), and perprolate (>2 μm). The exine ornamentation was perforated-striate, and two different types were identified. The result of quantitative characters has paltry taxonomic importance. The characters studied here delimit at generic level for some genera but not at species level. The obtained result was partially consistent with that of molecular studies published earlier. The pollen size and shape were found to be different between Asian and American species of Photinia. Especially exine sculpture was found to be an important feature to distinguish species of all genera studied. PCA analysis showed that the pollen shape, pollen sculpture, pollen size, and polarity are the key characters to distinguish the species of Photinia and the closely related genera in subfamily Maloideae. Based on pollen exine, two groups (Type I and Type II) were distinguished. The aim of the present study was to find out the taxonomic significance of palynomorphological characteristics in subfamily Maloideae (Rosaceae).


Biologia ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayşe Kaplan

AbstractThe Pollen morphology of 13 taxa 11 of which are endemics belonging to Paronychia Miller (Caryophyllaceae) viz., P. agryloba, P. angorensis, P. arabica subsp. euphratica, P. carica, P. cataonica, P. chinonea, P. condensata, P. davisii, P. dudleyi, P. galatica, P. kurdica subsp. kurdica, P. kurdica subsp. montis-munzur and P. mughlaei from Turkey has been investigated by light (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). LM observations show that pollen grains are usually radially symetrical, isopolar, pantoporate, polygonal (6-gonal) or polygonal-spheroidal. Tectum is psilate or punctate. Tectal surface sparsely-densely spinulose. The numbers of pores are between 6 and 12. On the basis of pollen sizes, P. davisii was the biggest pollen type (23.45 µm) and P. kurdica subsp. kurdica (16.2 µm) was the smallest pollen types. According to exine sculpturing, pollen size and spinule numbers per 1 µm2, three pollen types were distinguished.


2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-466
Author(s):  
Fatih Satil ◽  
Ayla Kaya ◽  
Murat Ünal

Detailed description of fruit, seed and pollen macro- and micromorphological characters of Turkish Chorispora species are provided with illustrations. Typical fruits are linear, straight or strongly curved upward. Nonglandular and glandular trichomes are present or absent. Seeds varied in shape from oblong, oblong-broadly elliptic to subglobose and winged at the apex and base or not. The pollen grains are tricolpate and the basic shape of the pollen grains in species studied is perprolate. The surface sculpturing type is reticulate. Among the studied characters, fruit, seed size and colour, seed shape, fruit trichome structure and pollen size were of taxonomic importance and useful in separating taxa.


1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1225-1231 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. McNeill ◽  
I. J. Bassett

Pollen size, type and number of apertures, and exine thickness are reported for 25 species representative of all four subgenera of Minuartia (Caryophyllaceae) and of the related genera Honkenya and Wilhelmsia. The pollen of the species of Minuartia subgenus Rhodalsine is trizonocolpate with a relatively thin exine and it differs from that of all other species of the subfamily Alsinoideae. Species of this subfamily apparently all have pollen grains that are pantoporate with a thick exine. The relationship of the species of subgenus Rhodalsine with those of Spergularia (subfamily Paronychioideae), a genus which has pollen grains similar to those of subgenus Rhodalsine, is discussed. A new name, Minuartia webbii McNeill and Bramwell, is proposed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Danila ◽  
GRECEBIO JONATHAN D. ALEJANDRO

Abstract. Danila JS, Alejandro GJD. 2020. Pollen morphology and infrageneric classification of selected Callicarpa species (Lamiaceae) from the Philippines and Borneo. Biodiversitas 21: 5736-5746. We used pollen grains of ten species representing the controversial genera Geunsia Blume and Callicarpa L. from the key centers of Malesia - Philippines, and Borneo including other countries in Asia. Herbarium specimens and collected samples from the field were examined using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) in search of new characters to establish conclusive evidence that might contribute to the study of the relationship between Geunsia and Callicarpa. Based on SEM observations, both the investigated pollen grains of Geunsia and Callicarpa are mostly small to medium, spheroidal or circular, prolate to oblate, isopolar, and tricolpate. Moreover, the exine surface is mostly coarsely reticulated with a thin perforated colpus edge and sunken finely granulated colpus membrane. However, exine ornamentation shows possible separation of Geunsia and Callicarpa due to various morphological results observed. Several types of exine ornamentation were found in species of the section Callicarpa, i.e., C. erioclona, C. arborea, C. macrophylla, and C. candicans which attributes in the projected separation of these species while four species in the section Geunsia are united as a group having coarsely reticulate exine. Surprisingly, C. arborea samples give additional support to the hypothesis that rugulate exine sculpture might be its plesiomorphic character due to evolutionary evidence of other exine types of this species. On the other hand, pollen size and shape class of the sections of Geunsia and Callicarpa were both observed with similar features having an average pollen size equivalent to medium and a prolate shape supporting the concept of previous studies to nest Geunsia within Callicarpa. This reveals that pollen morphology is useful in the study of infrageneric classification within these groups. However, further morphological studies involving larger number of specimens are needed especially in the study of exine to prove its consistency as diagnostic character in the study of phylogenetic relationship.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (3) ◽  
pp. 323-376
Author(s):  
Li-E Yang ◽  
Lu Lu ◽  
Kevin S. Burgess ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
De-Zhu Li

Lamiids, a clade composed of approximately 15% of all flowering plants, contains more than 50,000 species dispersed across 49 families and eight orders (APG IV, 2016). This paper is the eighth in a series that analyzes pollen characters across angiosperms. We reconstructed a maximum likelihood tree based on the most recent phylogenetic studies for the Lamiids, comprising 150 terminal genera (including six outgroups) and covering all eight orders and 49 families within the clade. To illustrate pollen diversity across the Lamiids, pollen grains from 22 species (22 genera in 14 families) were imaged under light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. Eighteen pollen characters that were documented from previous publications, websites, and our new observations were coded and optimized onto the reconstructed phylogenetic tree using Fitch parsimony, maximum likelihood, and hierarchical Bayesian analysis. Pollen morphology of the Lamiids is highly diverse, particularly in shape class, pollen size, aperture number, endoaperture shape, supratectal element shape, and tectum sculpture. In addition, some genera show relatively high infrageneric pollen variation within the Lamiids: i.e., Coffea L., Jacquemontia Choisy, Justicia L., Pedicularis L., Psychotria L. nom. cons., Sesamum L., Stachytarpheta Vahl, and Veronica L. The plesiomorphic states for 16 pollen characters were inferred unambiguously, and 10 of them displayed consistent plesiomorphic states under all optimization methods. Seventy-one lineages at or above the family level are characterized by pollen character state transitions. We identified diagnostic character states for monophyletic clades and explored palynological evidence to shed light on unresolved relationships. For example, palynological evidence supports the monophyly of Garryales and Metteniusaceae, and sister relationships between Icacinaceae and Oncothecaceae, as well as between Vahliales and Solanales. The evolutionary patterns of pollen morphology found in this study reconfirm several previously postulated evolutionary trends, which include an increase in aperture number, a transition from equatorially arranged apertures to globally distributed ones, and an increase in exine ornamentation complexity. Furthermore, there is a significant correlation between pollen characters and a number of ecological factors, e.g., pollen size and pollination type, pollen ornamentation and pollination type, and shape class and plant growth form. Our results provide insight into the ecological, environmental, and evolutionary mechanisms driving pollen character state changes in the Lamiids.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise M. D. S. Mouga ◽  
Gabriel R. Schroeder ◽  
Nilton P. Vieira Junior ◽  
Enderlei Dec

The pollen morphology of thirteen species of Cactaceae was studied: M. backebergiana F.G. Buchenau, M. decipiens Scheidw, M. elongata DC, M. gracilis Pfeiff., M. hahniana Werderm., M. marksiana Krainz, M. matudae Bravo, M. nejapensis R.T. Craig & E.Y. Dawson, M. nivosa Link ex Pfeiff., M. plumosa F.A.C. Weber, M. prolifera (Mill.) Haw, M. spinosissima var. “A Peak” Lem. and M. voburnensis Scheer. All analysed pollen grains are monads, with radial symmetry, medium size (M. gracilis, M. marksiana, M. prolifera, large), tricolpates (dimorphs in M. plumosa [3-6 colpus] and M. prolifera [3-6 colpus]), with circular-subcircular amb (quadrangular in M. prolifera and M. plumosa with six colpus). The pollen grains presented differences in relation to the shape and exine thickness. The exine was microechinate and microperforated. The pollen morphological data are unpublished and will aid in studies that use pollen samples. These pollen grains indicate ornamental cacti.


1938 ◽  
Vol 16c (11) ◽  
pp. 445-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. H. Peto

Complete analyses of pollen-mother-cell nuclei at first metaphase, percentage good pollen, pollen diameter and pollen-size distribution were determired for the following poplar species and natural hybrids: Populus grandidentata Michx., P. tremuloides Michx., P. eugenei Simon Louis, P. alba L., P. canescens Sm., natural hybrids of P. alba × P. grandidentata and of P. alba × P. tremuloides.Both of the P. alba and two of the four P. canescens trees examined were triploids (2n = 57) while all other trees examined were diploids (2n = 38). Meiotic observations on the natural hybrids indicated a high degree of homology between the chromosomes of P. alba and the native aspens (P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides), since 17 to 19 bivalents were usually found at first metaphase. In collections from one triploid P. canescens and two diploid alba-grandidentata hybrid trees, failure of a high proportion of the chromosomes to pair was attributed to genetic factors limiting pairing, rather than to non-homology.Pollen characters such as percentage good pollen, pollen diameter, and pollen size distribution were, in most cases, not indicative of the chromosome number or pairing relations at first metaphase. Consequently, triploids could not be detected by pollen observations under the conditions of this experiment. In spite of the lack of correlation between first metaphase and pollen observations, abnormally large pollen grains were observed in collections from several of the trees, and these were considered to contain the diploid or unreduced chromosome complement. The tendency for the poplars to produce unreduced pollen grains probably accounts for the number of triploid trees discovered in Canada and Sweden.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 319 (3) ◽  
pp. 277 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUE-YUN WANG ◽  
WEN-FEN XU ◽  
SHUN-ZHI HE

Epimedium muhuangense (Berberidaceae), a new species from Guizhou, China, is described and illustrated. This species is most closely similar to E. elachyphyllum in having simple leaves, petals shorter than inner sepals, flowers less than 10 mm in diameter and in having the same pollen morphology as well, but differs by having stout, short rhizomes, two opposite, glabrous leaves on flowering stems, and paniculate inflorescences. The chromosomes of E. muhuangense is counted as 2n = 12 and the karyotype is formulated as s 2n = 2x = 6m (2sat) + 6sm. Line illustrations, color photographs, and micrographs of chromosomes and of pollen grains of E. muhuangense are provided.


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