A biometrie and taxonomic study of pollen character variation in Berendtiella and Hemichaena (Scrophulariaceae)

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles L. Argue

The pollen grains of Berendtiella and Hemichaena are single, isopolar, and tricolporate with a microreticulate to reticulate sexine 2. Intra- and inter-specific variability in pollen characters are assessed statistically, and preliminary evaluation of the taxonomic utility of these data is presented. The bearing of the pollen evidence on proposed intratribal categories and the transfer of the genera from the tribe Scrophularieae (Cheloneae) to the tribe Mimuleae are discussed. The proposed close relationship between the genera and the transfer of Diplacus rugosa to Berendtiella are consistent with the pollen data, but suggested affinities between Berendtiella and Diplacus clearly are not. The grains of Berendtiella and Hemichaena resemble the type II pollen of Mimulus, and the uniformity of pollen morphology in members of the Mimuleae other than Mimulus lends support to the recognition of segregate genera in the latter palynologically diverse genus.

2000 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-220
Author(s):  
Charles L Argue

The pollen of all six species of Lyperia (Scrophulariaceae, tribe Manuleae) was investigated by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy of whole and fractured grains. Pollen grains in Lyperia antirrhinoides (L.f.) Hilliard, Lyperia formosa Hilliard, Lyperia tenuiflora Benth., and Lyperia violacea (Jarosz) Benth. differed from those in Lyperia tristis (L.f.) Benth. and Lyperia lychnidea (L.) Druce in number and length of colpi, sculpturing of the colpus margin, reduction of apocolpial lumina size, reduction of exine thickness toward the colpi, ornamentation of the outer nexine surface, arrangement of columellae beneath the muri, direction of cross-sectional compression in elliptical muri, and relative dimensions of the muri and columellae. Pollen grains from 50 representative species of the putatively related genera Sutera and Jamesbrittenia were also examined. Correlations among quantitative pollen characters of tribe Manuleae and the Sutera complex were investigated by principal components analysis. Morphological similarities in the pollen of Lyperia, genera of the Sutera complex, and other Manuleae were summarized by ordination of the principal components data and (or) cluster analysis. The pollen grains of L. lychnidea and L. tristis differed from those of other Lyperia and stood apart from those of Jamesbrittenia, Sutera, and all other Manuleae. Pollen morphology in Sutera and Jamesbrittenia intergrades with that in tricolporate species of Lyperia.Key words: pollen morphology, Scrophulariaceae, Lyperia, Jamesbrittenia, Sutera.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 428 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-240
Author(s):  
HÜLYA ÖZLER ◽  
AHMET KAHRAMAN ◽  
SEVİL PEHLİVAN ◽  
MUSA DOĞAN ◽  
BİROL BAŞER ◽  
...  

The pollen grains of 19 Turkish Salvia species in Aethiopis, Drymosphace, Hemisphace, Hymenosphace and Salvia sections, 13 of which are endemic to Turkey, were investigated, documented and illustrated through Light Microscopy (LM) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). This study provides pollen data of 14 species for the first time. The pollen grains of the species examined are monads, isopolar, radially symmetrical and hexacolpate, mostly medium in size, slightly elliptic to more or less circular in polar view and mainly oblate-spheroidal in equatorial view. Two different ornamentation types are recognized on exine sculpturing; reticulate-perforate and bireticulate. The present results do not generally support the traditional infrageneric classification of Salvia, but provide useful pollen characters for species delimitation.


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.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 497 (2) ◽  
pp. 79-96
Author(s):  
ANDRÉA ONOFRE DE ARAUJO ◽  
MAURO PEIXOTO ◽  
CINTIA NEVES DE SOUZA ◽  
EDUARDO CUSTÓDIO GASPARINO ◽  
JULIANA TOLEDO FARIA ◽  
...  

A natural hybrid between Goyazia and Mandirola (Gloxiniinae, Gesneriaceae) from Cerrado (Brazil) is here described, supported by pollen morphology, cytological data and morphological characters. The microsporogenesis of Mandirola hirsuta and that of the hybrid were analyzed in order to evaluate the cytogenetic characteristics. The haploid chromosome numbers observed were n = 12 for M. hirsuta and n = 11, 13, 16 and 26 for the hybrid. Structural abnormalities (monads, dyads, triads and micronuclei) were observed at the final of the hybrid’s meiosis. High viability rates of the pollen were recorded for Goyazia and Mandirola (>90%) and low viability for the hybrid (34.7%). The pollen grains were acetolyzed, measured and photographed for pollen morphology analysis. Quantitative pollen data were analyzed through descriptive and multivariate statistics. The hybrid has intermediate pollen characteristics between G. petraea and M. hirsuta; it is more related to G. petraea by the measures of diameters and ectoapertures; it is more similar to M. hirsuta mainly regarding the microreticulum on the mesocolpium region. The hybrid and Mandirola share vegetative and flower size, while the colors of the hybrid are similar to Goyazia. Pollen morphology, cytological data and morphological characters brought clear evidence for the recognition of the intergeneric hybrid, which we named as Goydirola x punctata.


2017 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ebadi-Nahari Mostafa ◽  
Nikzat-Siahkolaee Sedigheh ◽  
Eftekharian Rosa

Pollen morphology of nine species representing four genera: Cephalaria Schrad, Dipsacus L., Pterocephalus Vaill. and Scabiosa L. of the family Dipsacaceae in Iran has been investigated by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results showed that pollen grains were triporate and tricolpate. The pollen type of Scabiosa rotata Bieb. (tri- and tetraporate) is the first report in the world. The sizes of pollen grains fall into the classification group magna (pollen grain diameter 50–100 μm). Pollen shapes vary from preoblate to prolate and their polar views were triangulate and lobate. The exine ornamentation varies from gemmate in S. rotata to spinulate in the rest studied species. Species of Scabiosa have been dispersed in UPGMA tree that this confirmed the previous studies about taxonomic problems and species complexity in this genus. These results show the transfer of the some Scabisoa species to Lomelosia Raf. based on palynological characters. Pollen morphology of the family is helpful at the generic and specific level.Bangladesh J. Plant Taxon. 24(2): 129–136, 2017 (December)


Bothalia ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 14 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 849-856 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Frean

Pollen grains of the Euphorbiaceae show a number of pollen types which can be clearly distinguished. Generally different genera are characterized by a specific pollen type.  Euphorbia obesa Hook. f. and Croton gratissimus Burch, subsp.  subgratissimus (Prain) Burtt Davy, represent two genera within the Crotonoideae with different morphology, each type characteristic for the respective genus. Taxonomically, the genus Euphorbia with apetalous flowers consisting of a naked pistil surrounded by several staminate flowers within a cyathium, is considered more advanced than the genus  Croton. In  Croton the inflorescence is a raceme with unisexual flowers. The floral whorls of the male show numerous anthers and both calyx and a showy corolla are present. Both genera are insect pollinated. In both  Euphorbia obesa and  Croton gratissimus the pollen wall in section shows columellae, a structure characteristic of angiosperms. However the present ontogenetic studies show that the formation of the columellae differs entirely in the two pollen types. The final stratification of the wall as well as the morphology of the grains differ and evaluation of the exine structure indicates that phylogenetically Croton pollen shows more advanced characters than  Euphorbia — contradicting the floral phylogeny. This study conducted at light and electron microscope level compares the two pollen types morphologically and ontogenetically, concentrating mainly on the formation of the exine which is tectate-perforate in the prolate tricolpate grain of Euphorbia obesa and semi-tectate in the anaperturate, spheroidal grain of Croton gratissimus. The aim of the study was to evaluate the significance of pollen characters in taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships within the Euphorbiaceae. The differing pollen morphology which is related to the taxonomic grouping of tribes within the subfamily (Crotonoideae) emphasizes diversity, which may result from physiological adaptation. The study shows that the same functional end may well be achieved in different ways and this may be a factor underlying the diversity in the heterogeneous family Euphorbiaceae.


Biologia ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seher Güven ◽  
Seda Okur ◽  
Mine Demırel ◽  
Kamil Coskuncelebi ◽  
Serdar Makbul ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this study, pollen grains and anatomical features of Turkish lilies were investigated under the electron (SEM) and light (LM) microscope. LM and SEM observations showed that the pollen grains are monosulcate, heteropolar, elliptical in polar view and oblate. Numerical results based on combined palynological and anatomical characters were discussed and compared with traditional taxonomic treatments. It was found that the midrib shape, mesophyll type, P/E (polar/equatorial), sulcus length, and lumina width are the most valuable traits in separating the examined taxa. The numerical analysis showed that Lilium candidum L. differs from the rest Turkish Lilium and also confirmed a close relationship between L. szovitsianum Fisch. & Avé-Lall. and L. armenum Miscz. ex Grossh. Also this study is the first report dealing with anatomical and palynological features of all Turkish lilies.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
YU-LAN PENG ◽  
XIN-FEN GAO ◽  
LU PENG

The pollen morphology of 15 species representing four sections of Youngia and 11 species from six other genera of the tribe Cichorieae was investigated. Measurements and observations were conducted through scanning electron microscopy. This study aims to provide new and useful information regarding the extent of pollen morphological diversity within the genus Youngia and related genera in the tribe Cichorieae and thus to contribute to a better understanding of the taxonomy and evolution of these groups. Six pollen types, distinguished primarily by the number of apertures and spines in the polar region, are described. Palynological characters are not useful for the delimitation of Youngia and its closely related genera Crepidiastrum, Ixeridium, and Crepis at the generic level, and did not fully resolve the relationships between the groups. The distinction of Faberia from the other members of the subtribe Crepidinae is supported by the pollen characters. Pollen morphology also did not support that Youngia sect. Desiphylum sensu Babcock and Stebbins may be separated at the generic level either as Tibetoseris or Pseudoyoungia. Four pollen types were found in Youngia s.l., i.e. Y. racemifera type, Y. japonica type, Y. prattii type and Y. sericea type, which partly reflect the sectional classification of Youngia sensu Babcock and Stebbins. The systematic position of Y. racemifera should be reconsidered according to pollen characters. The pollen data suggest that Y. sect. Mesomeris is not monophyletic, and the relationships of its species require further examination.


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.


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