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1.
Numerous anatomically preserved ovules assignable to the genus Mitrospermum have been discovered in Upper Pennsylvanian sediments of Eastern Ohio. Although basically similar to Mitrospermum compressum, the newly discovered specimens exhibit several consistent differences. Ovules are strongly platyspermic, up to 4.2 mm long, 4.0 mm wide, and 0.6 mm thick. In the minor plane, ovules are broadest at the base and taper toward the micropyle. The integument exhibits three topographic regions: endotesta, sclerotesta, and sarcotesta. The sarcotesta is extremely broad in the major plane, where it forms two membranous wings. A single terete vascular bundle enters the base of the ovule, traverses the integument, and divides to form two integumentary bundles and a conspicuous nucellar platform. Integumentary bundles extend toward the tip of the ovule at the margin of the sarcotesta and sclerotesta. A pollen chamber with a prominent nucellar beak is delimited at the tip of the nucellus. Consistent differences in vascularization, size, nature of the seed base, features of the pollen chamber, and the Late Pennsylvanian age demonstrate that the specimens represent a distinct species. The discovery of these ovules extends the stratigraphic range of Mitrospermum to the Upper Pennsylvanian of Ohio.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Amaranthus hypochondriacus ovules are of the crassinucellate type, having several layers of nucellus cells between the micropyle and the embryo sac through which pollen tubes have to penetrate. The ultrastructural features of the micropylar nucellus cells appear to reflect cells with high metabolic activity. With the monoclonal antibodies MAC207 and JIM8 (against arabinogalactan proteins) we have shown that the presence of the two epitopes was different in the gametophytic tissues and embryo sac. The young embryo and suspensor cells are reactive only to Mab JIM8. The selective presence and localization of these two epitopes was also demonstrated in the micropylar nucellus cells. The expression of these arabinogalactan proteins in this ovule seems to be closely aligned with the pathway of the pollen tube, possibly providing directional guides for tube growth inside the ovule.  相似文献   

3.
Four anatomically preserved ovulate cycadeoid cones have been recovered from three localities in Upper Cretaceous (Turonian/Coniacian-Late Campanian) sediments of Vancouver and Hornby Islands, British Columbia, Canada. All of the specimens are preserved by calcareous cellular permineralization and are quite similar to seed cones described as several species of Cycadeoidea and Bennettites. These cones, described as Cycadeoidea maccafferyi sp. nov., consist of tightly packed interseminal scales and ovulate sporophylls with terminal ovules. Two specimens also preserve remains of a small receptacle. Interseminal scales and ovulate sporophylls are oriented parallel to one another. Ovules are distinctly stellate at the base of the micropylar tube, and the sarcotesta consists of both longitudinally oriented tubular cells and large radially elongated cells attached to the sclerotesta. The vascular strand below each ovule is highly contorted in a pattern that is characteristic of contractile tissue in the roots of living plants. These specimens are the most recent anatomically preserved cycadeoid cones yet discovered, revealing details of the reproductive biology shortly before extinction of the clade. Superb preservation of the British Columbia cones confirms that Bennettitales lack a cupule, have radial seeds, and have a vascularized nucellus (but no integumentary tracheids), and that no pollen chamber is produced. Together with a new species of Williamsonia preserved at one of the same localities, these specimens reveal a clear set of contrasting systematic characters for differentiating between isolated seed cones of Williamsoniaceae and Cycadeoidaceae.  相似文献   

4.
Small, anatomically preserved gymnospermous seeds are detailed from late Permian age silicified specimens collected in the Beardmore Glacier region of Antarctica. The seeds are platyspermic with prominent, sarcotestal wings and a simple pollen chamber. The integument consists of a narrow endotesta, a two-parted sclerotesta and a complex sarcotesta. In mature seeds, the nucellus is present as a papery layer, separated from the endotesta by a nucellar and endotestal cuticle. Cellular megagametophytes are present in many of the seeds and commonly contain two archegonia. A multicellular embryo is present within each archegonium. The embryos are at a similar stage of development and provide evidence of simple polyembryony in these seeds. Although the affinities of the seeds are not presently known, they are discussed in the context of other seeds described from Gondwana deposits, as well as the known flora from the Beardmore Glacier area.  相似文献   

5.
Endress PK 《Annals of botany》2011,107(9):1465-1489

Background

Ovules as developmental precursors of seeds are organs of central importance in angiosperm flowers and can be traced back in evolution to the earliest seed plants. Angiosperm ovules are diverse in their position in the ovary, nucellus thickness, number and thickness of integuments, degree and direction of curvature, and histological differentiations. There is a large body of literature on this diversity, and various views on its evolution have been proposed over the course of time. Most recently evo–devo studies have been concentrated on molecular developmental genetics in ovules of model plants.

Scope

The present review provides a synthetic treatment of several aspects of the sporophytic part of ovule diversity, development and evolution, based on extensive research on the vast original literature and on experience from my own comparative studies in a broad range of angiosperm clades.

Conclusions

In angiosperms the presence of an outer integument appears to be instrumental for ovule curvature, as indicated from studies on ovule diversity through the major clades of angiosperms, molecular developmental genetics in model species, abnormal ovules in a broad range of angiosperms, and comparison with gymnosperms with curved ovules. Lobation of integuments is not an atavism indicating evolution from telomes, but simply a morphogenetic constraint from the necessity of closure of the micropyle. Ovule shape is partly dependent on locule architecture, which is especially indicated by the occurrence of orthotropous ovules. Some ovule features are even more conservative than earlier assumed and thus of special interest in angiosperm macrosystematics.  相似文献   

6.
Embryological development of Lachnanthes caroliniana was studied utilizing standard anatomical techniques and SEM. Lachnanthes has a monocotyledonous anther wall development (endothecial cells with spiral secondary wall thickenings), successive microsporogenesis, and amoeboid (periplasmodial) tapetal development. Mature pollen grains are 2-nucleate with a proximal, fusiform generative cell. Ovules are initiated as 5–7 cylindrical primordia from a common placental base. Basal ovular swellings collectively contribute to the enlarged, peltate placenta. Mature ovules are pleurotropous, anatropous, bitegmic, and crassinucellate; the nucellus consists of a chalazal hypostase, radially elongate lateral cells, and a prominent micropylar nucellar cap. Megasporogenesis is successive, forming a linear tetrad of megaspores. Megagametogenesis is monosporic; the female gametophyte is of the Polygonum-type with relatively large, pyriform antipodals. Endosperm formation is helobial, resulting in the establishment of a ring of four thick-walled basal endosperm cells (the chalazal chamber) and numerous free nuclei (in the micropylar chamber). The mature cellular endosperm is filled with starch grains and has a chalazal cavity and a thick-walled peripheral layer. The discoid, peltately attached seeds have marginal wings derived by anticlinal divisions and buckling of the outer integument alone. Inner and middle cuticular layers are present in the seed coat. Lachnanthes is similar to all other investigated members of the Haemodoraceae in major embryological features. The significance of embryological evidence with regard to interfamilial classification is discussed. Future studies of ovule and seed development may prove valuable in phylogenetic studies in assessing the homology of placental, ovule, and seed morphology and anatomy.  相似文献   

7.
Isolated ovules occur in many fossil plant assemblages, where they provide important insights into seed‐plant diversity and evolution. However, in many cases, the ovules cannot be attributed to individual groups of seed plants, restricting systematic and evolutionary assessments that can be made from otherwise well‐characterized fossil taxa. In the present paper, we describe a new kind of ovule discovered in tuffaceous sediments from the Permian‐aged Xuanwei Formation in Guizhou Province, China. This ovule has 180° rotational symmetry and an integument comprising a variably thick sarcotesta, a uniformly thick sclerotesta and a uniformly thin endotesta. The nucellus is attached to the integument at least basally and contains a collapsed seed megaspore; a nucellar apex is absent. Both the integument and nucellus are vascularized by paired bundles in the major plane of the ovule; the integumentary bundles are considerably larger than the nucellar bundles and the nucellar bundles emerge from a conical vascular pad. Generation of a three‐dimensional reconstruction based on serial peels revealed the gross morphology and organization of the ovule and highlighted the presence of features consistent with cardiocarpalean‐type ovules (ovule shape, histological features of the integument) and also features more typical of lagenostomalean‐ and trigonocarpalean‐type ovules (large integumentary bundles, presence of nucellar bundles). To assess the affinity and evolutionary significance of the ovule, it has been included in a cladistic matrix of cardiocarpalean‐, lagenostomalean‐ and trigonocarpalean‐type ovules. Results place the ovule within the cardiocarpalean group of ovules known to have been produced by several plant groups, including cordaitean coniferophytes, pteridosperms and Palaeozoic conifers. The cladistic topology supports generic level distinction of the present species, requiring the establishment of Muricosperma guizhouensis Seyfullah & J.Hilton gen. & sp. nov . Lagenostomalean ovules produced by hydrasperman pteridosperms form a basal paraphyletic grade, whereas trigonocarpalean ovules produced by medullosan pteridosperms form a monophyletic group in which Stephanospermum is paraphyletic with respect to Rhynchosperma and Pachytesta. The results also place the Mississippian ovule Mitrospermum bulbosum apart from all of the Pennsylvanian species of Mitrospermum that form a strongly supported clade. Consequently, M. bulbosum is transferred to the new genus Whitaddera Seyfullah & J.Hilton as W. bulbosa (Long) Seyfullah & J.Hilton. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 164 , 84–108.  相似文献   

8.
New ovules from the Fayetteville Formation (Upper Mississippian) of Arkansas expand our knowledge of the morphology and anatomy of Rhynchosperma and suggest it was produced by a medullosan seed fern. Rhynchosperma has been described as radially symmetrical with a two-layered integument and vascularization in the integument only. The apical portion of the integument is ribbed; the nucellus is fused to the integument and apically differentiated into a dome-shaped pollen chamber. The vascular system is incompletely known and apparently restricted to the base of the integument. The new specimens are like Rhynchosperma in external shape, size, number of ribs, and numerous histological features. However, new data reveal that the nucellus is vascularized by a sheath of tracheids, the integument is vascularized by discrete bundles, the pollen chamber has a nucellar beak, and the nucellus is attached to the integument for a variable distance from the base. In addition, the integument is tripartite with an elaborate apical region; ribs formed by the integument are more pronounced at the apex; and internally open, hollow lobes form a stellate micropylar canal. The presence of a tripartite integument, the nature of the vascular system, the nucellus-integument attachment, the pollen chamber structure, symmetry, and the association with medullosan vegetative remains suggest medullosan affinity for these ovules and strengthens the evidence for the origin of the family before the end of the Lower Carboniferous.  相似文献   

9.
The earliest known ovules in the Late Devonian (Famennian) are borne terminally on fertile branches and are typically enclosed in a cupule. Among these ovules are some that have terete integumentary lobes with little or no fusion. Here, we report a new taxon, Latisemenia longshania, from the Famennian of South China, which bears cupulate ovules that are terminal as well as opposite on the fertile axis. Each ovule has four broad integumentary lobes, which are extensively fused to each other and also to the nucellus. The cupule is uniovulate, and the five flattened cupule segments of each terminal ovule are elongate cuneate and shorter than the ovule. Associated but not attached pinnules are laminate and Sphenopteris-like, with an entire or lobate margin. Latisemenia is the earliest known plant with ovules borne on the side of the fertile axis and may foreshadow the diverse ovule arrangements found among younger seed plant lineages that emerge in the Carboniferous. Following the telome theory, Latisemenia demonstrates derived features in both ovules and cupules, and the shape and fusion of integumentary lobes suggest effective pollination and protection to the nucellus. Along with other recent discoveries from China, Latisemenia extends the palaeogeographic range of the earliest seed plants.  相似文献   

10.
The earliest indication of ovule abortion in almond (Prunus dulcis [Mill.] D. A. Webb ‘Nonpareil‘) is the deposition of callose (as indicated by aniline blue fluorescence) 2 days after pollination which is 2 days before clear histological symptoms of ovule degeneration are evident and 6 days before fertilization of the viable ovule. Callose deposition begins in the chalazal region of the nucellus where the funicular trace enters the ovule and ramifies into the integuments. As ovule abortion progresses, callose deposition in the inner integument extends as a ring around the nucellus. Movement of the fluorescent dye disodium fluorescein (uranin) indicated that translocation from the vascular trace into abortive ovules becomes blocked at the chalazal position. The dye freely penetrates and diffuses into viable ovules but fails to penetrate abortive ovules. Lack of, or delayed and irregular, megagametophyte development was another characteristic of abortive ovules. Biochemical and histochemical analyses of abortive and viable ovules indicated that carbohydrate depletion parallels ovule abortion. These observations lead to the conclusion that ovule abortion is accompanied by blockage in metabolite supply although whether this blockage is the primary cause or a consequence of ovule abortion is uncertain.  相似文献   

11.
J. Kenrick  V. Kaul  E. G. Williams 《Planta》1986,169(2):245-250
In self-incompatible Acacia retinodes Schldl. var. uncifolia J.M. Black there is no inhibition of self pollen tubes before entry into the ovule, but the frequency of fertilized embryo sacs observed after self pollination is only 0.09–0.24 of that observed after outcrossing. Fluorescence- and light-microscope studies of sectioned, squashed or cleared whole ovules indicate that most self pollen tubes are arrested within the first or second layer of cells of the nucellus. The probability that nucellar arrest represents a primitive feature of self-incompatibility is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Aerodynamic analyses showing characteristic airflow patterns and the potential for wind-mediated pollination are presented for models of Paleozoic (Carboniferous) ovules and ovulate cupules (i.e., Genomosperma kidstoni, G. latens, Salpingostoma dasu, Physostoma elegans, Eurystoma angulare, and Stamnostoma huttonense). Lobes on ovules and cupules are shown to produce localized regions of turbulent flow with a concomitant reduction in airflow velocity. Data based upon models that mimic the characteristics of windborne pollen (= pseudopollen) show that these regions of turbulent flow correspond to those in which suspended pseudopollen impact with ovule and/or cupule surfaces. These data have bearing on a sequence of ovule morphologies purported to show the evolution of the integument by the progressive reduction in length of “preintegumentary” lobes and their acropetal fusion. As the preintegumentary lobes of the models studied consolidate around the megasporangium, regions of turbulent flow and high pseudopollen impact become localized around the pollen chamber or salpinx. The general morphologic trend envisioned for the evolution of the ovule is seen to be associated with an aerodynamic streamlining and an increased potential for wind-mediated pollination. Data for hair-bearing ovules and for ovulate cupules are discussed within the context of possible selective pressures favouring streamlining.  相似文献   

13.
以福州生长的成年杉木(Cunninghamia lanceolata(Lamb.) Hook.)为实验材料,采用数码相机实地拍照、体视镜、半薄切片以及扫描电镜等方法,从形态学、解剖学系统观察了杉木大孢子叶球的发育过程。结果显示,2011年10月底至11月初,杉木大孢子叶球形成,此时大孢子叶球呈绿色,体积较小;翌年3月中下旬,大孢子叶球成熟,进入传粉期,期间大孢子叶球经历了由绿变黄的颜色转变、体积增大以及苞片开张的过程。胚珠发育过程中,胚珠原基于1月上旬发生,1月中下旬珠被和珠心组织已分化形成;2月下旬,珠心组织继续发育,形态呈椭圆型,并在其上方形成贮粉室,周围的珠被组织继续生长包围珠心组织,形成珠孔道;3月初珠孔形成,开口达到最大,胚珠的体积继续增大;3月中下旬,胚珠珠孔处开始分泌传粉滴。授粉后,传粉滴消失,珠孔上方的组织停止生长,珠孔开口亦不再增大。研究结果表明杉木大孢子叶球从分化形成到发育成熟需要约5个月的时间,胚珠的形态结构经过长期演化形成了许多适应风媒传粉的结构特征。  相似文献   

14.
 In many plant species with multiovulate ovaries, a considerable reduction in the number of ovules takes place. However, the underlying physiological causes are not clear. In Prunus spp., although flowers present two ovules, usually only one seed is produced. We have followed the development and degeneration of the two ovules in apricot (Prunus armeniaca L.) and examined the extent to which carbohydrates within the ovule might be involved in determining the fate of the ovule. While the primary ovule grows in the days following anthesis, growth of the secondary ovule is arrested. Starch distribution along the different ovular tissues exhibits several changes that are different in the two ovules. Primary ovule growth is inversely related to starch content and this growth takes place independently of pollination since it occurs in the same way in pollinated and unpollinated flowers. In the secondary ovule, starch disappears simultaneously from all ovular structures and callose is layered at the chalazal end of the nucellus. The size of the secondary ovule does not change significantly from anthesis to degeneration, and callose starts to accumulate 5 days after anthesis. Likewise, this process occurs independently of pollination. These results are discussed in terms of the implications of the starch content of ovules in fertilization success and ovule fate. Received: 26 August 1997 / Revision accepted: 17 December 1997  相似文献   

15.
In this paper we present the first results concerning the embryology of Chrysobalanaceae. In it, we document developmental features of anthers, ovules, seeds and gametophytes ofChrysobalanus andLicania (tribe Chrysobalaneae). Based on our results with these two genera, Chrysobalanaceae have a distinctive combination of embryological features. They differ from Rosaceae (in which Chrysobalanaceae were once placed as a tribe or subfamily) in having a tenuinucellate ovule, a small nucellus with the tissue soon disintegrating, and an endothelium. None of our embryological of Rosales, or with other groups such as Fabaceae or Myrtales, which have also been suggested as relatives. We propose, based upon the evidence from embryology, vegetative features, and reproductive morphology, that Chrysobalanaceae might best be placed in the order Theales, probably near the family Theaceae.  相似文献   

16.
The ovules of Amentotaxus are 2–2.5 cm in length and about 1.3 cm in width. Aril, which contains about 14—17 secretory canals in transection, is com- posed of parenchyma. The vascular bundles are absent in aril. The integument is com- posed of ceils of outer, middle, and inner regions. The middle region of the integument is about 10 cells in thickness. The Integuments are basally parenchymatous before pollination and then the cells become elongating and thickenning in middle region after pollination. Finally the micropylar canal is forced to be closed. In addition, there are 8–14 vascular bundles with centripetal xylem arranged in a ring in integument. One of the most remarkable feature of the ovule is that there is a pollen chamber formed at the top of nucellus before pollination. At this time because epidermis of nucellus does not disintegrate, the pollen chamber looks like conical in longitudinal section. After pollination the pollen chamber was becoming closed due to elongation and thickenning of cells in the middle region of integument. At the base of ovule there are 4–5 pairs of bracts which contain a larger secretory cavity and a centripetal xylem in a vascular bundle. It is interesting that wax layer of 30–40 μm thick is covered on the surface of integument, aril and bract. Usually 3–4 microsporangia which are hypodermal in origin, occur in abaxial side of a microsporophyll. In some cases the tapetum is partly enlarging and extruding into the developing tetrahedral tetrads. The mature pollen comprises an antheridial initial and a tube cell. About 20 pollen grains may germinate in the same ovule. The megaspore divide successively 8 times to produce 256 nuclei and then cell wall formation takes place. The female gametophyte is about 830–908 μm in length and 500 μm in width. The archegonia are single, terminal, and 6–7 in number. The mature archgonium, with ventral canal nucleus, is about 430 μm in length and 80–108 μm in width. The female gametophyte is often growing against the upper part of the nuceilus and makes the cells of the latter gradually to be disintegrated. The ovule construction of Amentotaxus is in some degree similar to that of Ginkgo in having a comparatively well developed pollen chamber. The mature pollen of Amentotaxus, which is similar to that of Cephalotaxus is composed of 2-cells. In sum, Amentotaxus perhaps is the most primitive genus in Taxaceae and it is closely related to Cephalotaxus.  相似文献   

17.

Background  

Arabidopsis ovules comprise four morphologically distinct parts: the nucellus, which contains the embryo sac, two integuments that become the seed coat, and the funiculus that anchors the ovule within the carpel. Analysis of developmental mutants has shown that ovule morphogenesis relies on tightly regulated genetic interactions that can serve as a model for developmental regulation. Redundancy, pleiotropic effects and subtle phenotypes may preclude identification of mutants affecting some processes in screens for phenotypic changes. Expression-based gene discovery can be used access such obscured genes.  相似文献   

18.
Of several theories for the origin of the ovule advanced in this century and based largely on fossil evidence, the telomic concept is widely considered the most plausible. Its principal tenet is the evolution of the integument through fusion of sterile branches or telomes around a terminal megasporangium. The only point of agreement in these theories is that the entire nucellus is a megasporangium that retains a single megaspore and the endosporic female gametophyte. Their differences center on the origin of the integument. A new concept offered here on evidence from ovules of both Paleozoic and extant seed plants significantly alters the telomic theory. It proposes that the nucellus is a sporangiophore of stem origin that bears a terminal megasporangium; that at least some of the fused integumentary telomes were fertile; and that among all features cited to characterize ovules, the unique nature of the retained megaspore alone defines the seed habit. Changes in the seed plant megaspore that extended the period of nutrient absorption over the whole course of female gametophyte development, along with complex physiological changes in the nucellus, were probably achieved along a single phylogenetic line beginning in a Late Devonian population of progymnosperms. For such a combination of events to have occurred more than once is highly unlikely, and, therefore, a monophyletic origin for seed plants is proposed. Several primitive features in ovule structure, some not evidenced since the Lower Carboniferous Period, occur in a mutant form of Arabidopsis thaliana isolated from genetically transformed plants. Their recurrence provides additional support for the proposed concept of ovule origin and also suggests that the genetic mechanisms for expression of primitive features in advanced taxa could be initiated in each case by mutation of a single homeotic gene.  相似文献   

19.
SUMMARY Santalales comprise mainly parasitic plants including mistletoes and sandalwoods. Bitegmic ovules similar to those found in most other angiosperms are seen in many members of the order, but other members exhibit evolutionary reductions to the unitegmic and ategmic conditions. In some mistletoes, extreme reduction has resulted in the absence of emergent ovules such that embryo sacs appear to remain embedded in placental tissues. Three santalalean representatives (Comandra, Santalum, and Phoradendron), displaying unitegmic, and ategmic ovules, were studied. Observed ovule morphologies were consistent with published reports, including Phoradendron serotinum, which we interpret as having reduced ategmic ovules, consistent with earlier reports on this species. For further understanding of the nature of the ovule reductions we isolated orthologs of the Arabidopsis genes AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) and BELL1 (BEL1), which are associated with ovule development in this species. We observed ovular expression of ANT and BEL1 in patterns largely resembling those seen in the integumented ovules of Arabidopsis. These genes were found to be expressed in the integument of unitegmic ovules and in the surface layers of ategmic ovules, and in some cases, expression of BEL1 was also observed in the surrounding carpel tissue. We hypothesize that ategmic ovules derive from a fusion of the integuments with the nucellus or that the nucellus has taken on some of the characteristics confined to integuments in ancestral species.  相似文献   

20.
In Sequoiadendron ovules are borne inside the ovulate cone, and pollination drops secreted from these ovules collect pollen. We examined: (1) the relation between ovular position and pollen capture; (2) pollen behavior when in contact with a pollination drop; and (3) ultrastructure of ovules during pollination drop secretion. During wet periods a water sheet forms on the surface of the cone due to bract shape and wettability. Pollination drops persist inside the wetted cone, and pollen capture resumes immediately after drying. Pollen landing on a pollination drop is taken inside the drop and carried into the micropyle when the drop contracts. Several notable ultrastructural features appear in the nucellus, integument, chalaza, and bract lamina during pollination-drop secretion. The abaxial surface of the lamina is covered by a membrane that may contribute to the wettable nature of the surface.  相似文献   

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