Pollen morphology and exine ultrastructure of selected species of Waltheria L. (Byttnerioideae-Malvaceae)

2015 ◽  
Vol 221 ◽  
pp. 204-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marileide Dias Saba ◽  
Francisco de Assis Ribeiro dos Santos
1999 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 744-767
Author(s):  
Danielle Lobreau-Callen ◽  
Joël Jérémie ◽  
Maria Suarez-Cervera

This palynological study of the genus Utricularia (Lentibulariaceae) deals with 39 species spread through 26 of the 35 sections that compose the genus. The pollen varies from tricolporate to zonocolporate or to zonoporate. The tectum is smooth, rarely ornamented (SEM). Nine pollen types are distinguished of which six have been studied with the TEM. The tectum is regular, the infratectum generally granular. The foot-layer is thick if the number of apertures is reduced and thin or absent if the endoapertures form an endocingulum. The endexine is thick if the foot-layer is thin, and made up of lamellae and rarely of costae bordering the endoapertures. In the porate pollen, the foot-layer and endexine are absent. Diverse in the terrestrial and lithophytic species, the pollen tends to be oblate and planaperturate in the epiphytes, zonocolporate with numerous apertures in the floating aquatic species, and ornamented in those of flowing water. The species considered the most primitive are terrestrial with tricolporate pollen. All the other types are derived, especially those with a significant increase in the number of apertures, associated or not with the absence of a foot-layer or an endexine. In the genus Utricularia and the Lentibulariaceae in general, the variation in pollen is much less related to habitat than to the evolutionary history of each species.Key words: pollen, morphology, exine, ultrastructure, Utricularia, Lentibulariaceae.


Palynology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 188-212
Author(s):  
Montserrath Medina-Acosta ◽  
Rosaura Grether ◽  
Angélica Martínez-Bernal ◽  
Elia Ramírez-Arriaga

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 584-591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lidian Ribeiro de Souza ◽  
Francisco de Assis Ribeiro dos Santos ◽  
Daniela Santos Carneiro-Torres

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 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 238-247
Author(s):  
Massoud Ranjbar ◽  
Narges Rahchamani

Scrophularia dianatnejadii Ranjbar & Rahchamani, a new species from Tehran Province in northern Iran, is described and illustrated. It is closely related to S. amplexicaulis Benth. and shares with it some diagnostic morphological characters such as habit, plant indument, phyllotaxy, and corolla shape and color. Both species are placed in Scrophularia L. sect. Mimulopsis Boiss. Macro- and micromorphological characters of the two are examined and compared. Pollen morphology of these species is investigated using SEM. Detailed descriptions, illustrations, distribution maps, and conservation status of both species are provided.


2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yifeng YAO ◽  
Qi ZHAO ◽  
Subir BERA ◽  
Xiaoli LI ◽  
Chengsen LI

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.


2021 ◽  
Vol 307 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Jung Kong ◽  
Jun-Ho Song ◽  
Suk-Pyo Hong
Keyword(s):  

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