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POLLEN MORPHOLOGY OF THE DILLENIACEAE AND ACTINIDIACEAE
Authors:William C Dickison  Joan W Nowicke  John J Skvarla
Institution:1. Department of Botany, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 27514;2. Botany Department, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 20560;3. Department of Botany and Microbiology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, 73069
Abstract:Pollen of 53 species of Dilleniaceae and Actinidiaceae was examined by light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and a selected group in transmission electron microscopy. Dilleniaceae pollen ranges from tricolpate, tricolporate, tetracolpate, and incipiently inaperturate. Tricolpate types occur only among the Old World subfamily Dillenioideae and the compound aperturate (3-colporate) condition is restricted to the subfamily Tetraceroideae. Within the Dilleniaceae the tricolpate pollen type with elongated apertures is considered primitive, having given rise to the 3-colporate and 4-colpate conditions. The striking pollen dimorphism in the Neotropical species of Tetracera, all of which are androdioecious, is documented; however, in contrast to previous reports, pollen from bisexual flowers appears to be incipiently inaperturate and not pantoporate. The inaperturate condition is interpretated as an early stage in the evolution of outcrossing. Pollen morphology does not support a close relationship between Dilleniaceae and Actinidiaceae. Pollen morphological differences that can be noted between these families are: tectum complete and predominantly psilate or psilate-granular in Actinidiaceae, tectum incomplete, punctate to reticulate in Dilleniaceae; an equatorial bridge of ektexine over the endoaperture usually present in Actinidiaceae, absent in Dilleniaceae; columellae reduced in Actinidiaceae, columellae usually well-developed in Dilleniaceae. Pollen morphology does not argue against a close relationship between Actinidiaceae and Theaceae.
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