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1.
All genera within the Ingeae, excluding Wallaceodendron, were examined with the transmission electron microscope. Thin sections reveal two pollen types (Types I and II) distinguished primarily by differences in polyad cohesion and ektexine organization. Type I polyads (only eight-grained species of Calliandra) are calymmate and the ektexine of individual cells is continuous around the grain, organized into a thin, foraminate tectum, irregularly shaped, often basally flared, foraminate columellae and thin, discontinuous foot layer. Type II polyads (16-grained species of Calliandra and remaining Ingeae) are predominantly acalymmate with individual grains typically free from one another or rarely, partially calymmate, i.e., individual grains show limited forms of attachment through small endexinous bridges (Pithecellobium latifolium [Zygia], Lysiloma) or localized appression of adjacent endexines (Pithecellobium daulense [Cathormion]). The adhesion of individual grains through localized fusion of lateral-distal and proximal ektexine in Enterolobium is unique among the partially calymmate Type II polyads. Ektexine in Type II polyads, largely restricted to the distal face, is composed of a thick, channeled tectum, granular interstitium and when present, thin discontinuous foot layer. Lateral-distal and proximal areas exhibit only endexine and, occasionally, a foot layer. The occurrence of nondistal ektexine is restricted to Enterolobium. The pollen data suggest that the acalymmate Ingeae polyads composed of grains with porate apertures, thick, highly channeled tectum, granular interstitium and lack of, or greatly reduced foot layer, are clearly derived within the Mimosoideae. Type I calymmate polyads appear to be independently derived. Ultrastructural data suggest that the Ingeae, excluding the eight-grained Calliandra species, represent a natural grouping with a close affinity to the Acacieae.  相似文献   

2.
Pollen of 110 species from 18 genera in thePortulacaceae has been examined by light and scanning electron microscopy, and a representative number by transmission electron microscopy. Three basic pollen types were found: 3-colpate with thick tectum and foot layer with prominent unbranched columellae and an extremely thin endexine; pantoporate with thick tectum and foot layer with branched columellae enclosing pores and an endexine that is one to two layers thick; pantocolpate with thin tectum and foot layer with broad, short unbranched columellae and an inconspicuous endexine. All pollen types, however, have a spinulose and tubuliferous/punctate ektexine. Also, all the genera except three,Calandrinia H.B.K.,Montia L. andTalinum Adanson are stenopalynous. There is, however, no absolute correlation between pollen morphology and geographical distribution, although both the major centre of palynological diversity and the majority of all species with tricolpate grains occur in South America.  相似文献   

3.
A survey of pollen morphology of 40 species representing eight genera of the primarily North American subtribe Microseridinae reveals seven of the eight genera to have caveate, echinolophate, tricolporate grains, Picrosia being the only taxon with echinate pollen. Sectioned grains reveal the exine to consist of an ektexine and endexine. The ektexine, composed of spines, columellae, and foot layer appears to be of two basic types, one with six or seven levels of horizontally anastomosing columellae which are reduced to a single columellar layer under the paraporal lacunae and the second, a bistratified ektexine not reduced to a single layer below the paraporal lacunae. Sectioned exines of Pyrrhopappus are unusual, having very large columellae fused to the foot layer below ridges and highly reduced columellae under lacunae. Endexine organization is similar in most of the genera. Exceptions to this are Pyrrhopappus and some species of Agoseris, which have an “endexine 2” layer. Subtribe Microseridinae is essentially stenopalynous. The pollen data support most of the relationships suggested by Stebbins in his classification. The genera Agoseris, Microseris, Nothocalais, and Phalacroseris seem to form a natural group while Krigia and Pyrrhopappus form another cohesive series. The position of Picrosia, as an advanced offshoot of Pyrrhopappus, is not supported by the pollen data.  相似文献   

4.
The pollen morphology of 9 species of Paeonia L. has been investigated with both light microscope and scanning electron microscope. In addition, the exine structure of pollen grains of Paeonia suffruticosa and P. lactiflora was examined by transmission electron microscope. Tricolporoidate aperture is an important character of the pollen grains of the Paeonia. The surface of the exine is characterized by reticulate, foveolate and irregularly tuberculate-foveolate sculpture under the SEM. Thin sections of the pollen of this genus shows that the layers of exine are complete i.e. a perforate rectum to semitectum, columellae and foot layers. The endexine is continuous, considerably thickened in the aperture areas and relatively thin or indistinct in the mesocolpia. Paeonia has been placed in Ranunculaceae. But since the beginning of this century many authors have suggested to separating Paeonia from Ranunculaceae. Pollen marphology supports such separation. In Ranunculaceae most pollen grains are tricolpate or have other types of aperture, and exine with spinules and perforations between them. In electron microscopy, the ektexine contains a foot layer, columellae, and perforate rectum, the columellar layer with two types of columellae; the endexine is generally thin. However, the columellar layer of Paeonia has only monomorphic columellae. Some authors considered that there is a close relationship between Paeonia and the Dilleniaceae, but these also differ in the characters of the pollen grains. In Paeonia the constriction of the colpus in equator is in some degree similar to that of Theaceae (Camellia sasanqua Thunb.), Guttiferae (Hypericum L.), Actinidiaceae and Rosaceae. But in the other respects they are quite different. In sum, the pollen morphology of Paeonia is unique. So the palynological information supports Takhtajan's view that Paeonia should be elevated to a family (Paeoniaceae) or order (Paeoniales).  相似文献   

5.
During a routine screening of pollen fertility in the n = 2 chromosome race of Haplopappus gracilis, a spineless pollen wall mutation was discovered that renders the otherwise functional pollen grains completely unrecognizable as Compositae pollen. Normal Haplopappus pollen is characterized by an outer layer, the ektexine, consisting of large spines supported by a roof (tectum), which in turn is supported by collumellae that are joined basally. A large cavity (cavea) stretches from aperture to aperture and separates columellae bases from the final ektexine unit, the foot layer. The spines, tectum, columellae, and columellae bases are filled with perforations (internal foramina), while the foot layer is without them. Immediately underlying the foot layer is a thickened, lamellate, disrupted, internal foramina-free second exine layer, the endexine. In contrast, the mutant pollen ektexine is a jumble of components with randomly dispersed spines as the only clearly definable unit. The endexine layer is similar to the endexine in normal pollen. The mutation apparently disrupts only the organization of ektexine units, and mutant pollen appears to be without the caveae and foot layer characteristic of normal pollen. In genetic tests, the mutant allele is recessive. There is a simple Mendelian pattern of inheritance of the mutant gene, and its phenotype is under sporophytic control.  相似文献   

6.
木通科、大血藤科花粉壁的超微结构研究   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
夏泉  孔杰 《植物研究》1991,11(4):93-98
应用透射电子显微镜(TEM)观察了木通科Decaisnea,Sinofr-anchetia,Holboellia,Stauntonia属以及大血藤科Sargentodoxa属共18种植物花粉壁的超微结构。所观察的木通科和大血藤科植物具较发达的覆盖层和柱状层;外壁内层以及内壁均在萌发沟处明显增厚;基层通常不甚发达。与扫描特征相对应的覆盖层结构特征,显示出类群的特异性。在Stauntonia属,覆盖层富于形态变化,反映出该属在木通科中较进化的地位;大血藤(Sarg-entodoxa cuneata)花粉壁结构隶属木通型花粉结构,表明大血藤科与木通科的密切关系。  相似文献   

7.
Pollen from Simmondsia chinensis (Simmondsiaceae) was examined in LM, SEM, and TEM. The pollen is shed as monads, triangular in shape in polar view, with a 3-porate aperture type in which the pores are large and poorly defined. The tectum is irregularly scabrate, sometimes forming minute “islands” topped with spinules. In thin section, the endexine is thickened and lamellate in the aperture regions, and narrow in the mesoporus; the foot layer is well-defined but noticeably thicker in the mesoporus; and thin columellae support an essentially complete tectum. The pollen of four genera, Buxus, Pachysandra, Sarcococca, and Styloceras, from the Buxaceae to which Simmondsia has been assigned by some authors, was also examined and illustrated. The pollen morphology of two families frequently aligned with Simmondsiaceae, Euphorbiaceae and Pandaceae, is briefly discussed. For the most part pollen morphology supports the treatment of Simmondsia as a monotypic family, Simmondsiaceae.  相似文献   

8.
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.  相似文献   

9.
A survey of pollen morphology in 20 species representing the 11 genera of the North American subtribe Stephanomeriinae by light, scanning electron, and transmission electron microscopy revealed 10 of the 11 genera to have echinate, tricolporate pollen grains, Lygodesmia being the only genus with echinolophate pollen. Sectioned exines of most of the species examined are similar, being composed of ektexine and endexine. The ektexine surface is composed of spines which typically have globose perforate bases. A cavus occurs as a separation between the basis (foot layer) and the columellae in all of the genera examined except Chaetadelpha. Pollen of the two species of Glyptopleura were found to be strikingly different in exomorphology. Pollen of the putatively self-fertile G. marginata has much shorter spines than the closely related G. setulosa. Atrichoseris, Anisocoma, Calycoseris, Glyptopleura, Pinaropappus, Prenanthella, and most species of Malacothrix have pollen which lack paraporal ridges. The remaining genera, Chaetadelpha, Lygodesmia, Rafinesquia, and Stephanomeria have well-developed ridges of fused spine bases around the apertures. Pollen characters, particularly those of the aperture region, have been found to be systematically useful in the subtribe, therefore acetolyzed material gives more useful information than untreated pollen.  相似文献   

10.
The pollen of three closely related genera, Aëtoxylon, Amyxa, and Gonystylus is compared in SEM and TEM with that of Thymelaeaceae, s. s. The Thymelaeaceae have spherical, pantoporate grains with a crotonoid tectum in which the basic subunit is triangular in shape and forms a continuous triangular array. Thin section (TEM) and fractures (SEM) revealed that these subunits are attached to a ringlike network of horizontal rods. Within the Thymelaeaceae, the triangular subunits vary in the number of subdivisions and degree of fusion and form a morphological continuum. Aëtoxylon, Amyxa, and Gonystylus also have spherical, pantoporate pollen but with a tectum in which almost all of the distinction of the subunits appears to have been lost. The structure of the exine in Aëtoxylon, Amyxa, and Gonystylus, however, is unique thus far within the angiosperms. Thin section revealed a thick tectum with a layer of short or even granular columellae, then a thin, discontinuous layer from which larger columellae appear to hang. There is no evidence of an endexine even in the region of the apertures. The distinctive exine structure would support the treatment of Aëtoxylon, Amyxa, and Gonystylus as a separate family, Gonystylaceae, allied to the Thymelaeaceae.  相似文献   

11.
Crude methanol extracts from callus cultures of Nigella arvensis, N. damascena, N. hispanica, N. integrifolia, and N. sativa were investigated for their anti-microbial activity. Growth inhibition was determined in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial strains as well as in yeast by using a broth-microdilution method. The results showed that the extracts of all calli tested exhibited significant anti-microbial activity, especially against Bacillus cereus, Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis. Compared with other Nigella species, a callus culture of N. hispanica was the most effective against the microorganisms used in this study.  相似文献   

12.
The pollen morphology of all 23 Japanese species ofSymplocos (1 of subgenusEusymplocos, and 22 of subgenusHopea) was comprehensively studied using LM, SEM and TEM, and found to be classifiable into two types (Type I and II) primarily on the basis of wall structure. Type I, characterized by a thick tectum lacking a supratectal structure and reduced columellae, occurs in subgenusEusymplocos, while Type II, characterized by a thin tectum with a supratectal structure and generally distinct columellae, occurs in subgenusHopea. Resemblances in wall structure suggest a closer relationship of subgenusEusymplocos to subgenusMicrosymplocos as well as of subgenusHopea to subgenusEpigenia. This fact contradicts the earlier proposed infrageneric classification, and may require its revision. Within Type II, five subtypes are recognized primarily on the basis of sculpture combined with other pollen characters. Systematic value of sculpture (i.e., subtype), aperture morphology and “globules”, as well as certain species relationships based on those characters, are also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The pollen of three monotypic genera, Circaeaster, Kingdonia, and Sargentodoxa has been examined by light and scanning electron microscopy and in the case of the last genus, also by transmission electron microscopy. The type of tectum found in Circaeaster and Kingdonia, derivations of a compound layer of striae, has a restricted distribution in the Order Ranunculales. Of 64 genera examined in this order only six had species with a similar tectum. They include Achlys, Epimedium, Jeffersonia, and Vancouveria of the Berberidaceae s.l., the controversial Hydrastis, and Trollius of the Ranunculaceae. Circaeaster and Kingdonia have been considered as related since both have rare and primitive vegetative characteristics, the most notable being open dichotomous leaf venation. They are probably best treated as a ditypic family, Circaeasteraceae. The pollen of Sargentodoxa, especially the structure of the exine, closely resembles that of the Lardizabalaceae. However, the fruits of Sargentodoxa have been considered to be distinct from those of the Lardizabalaceae, suggesting that it be treated as a separate, but closely allied, family.  相似文献   

14.
Of all species comprising the two genera of the Cabombaceae, only Brasenia schreberi J. F. Gmel. and Cabomba caroliniana Gray have been critically investigated with regard to their pollination biology. Brasenia schreberi has been shown to be anemophilous, while C. caroliniana has an entomophilous (myophilous) pollination syndrome. In the present paper, a number of pollen and pollen-related characters, including pollen size, shape, quantity, terminal settling velocity, pollen-ovule ratios, and overall exine architecture of B. schreberi and C. caroliniana are evaluated. Pollen from both species is elliptic, monosulcate, and has a tectate-columellate sporoderm with supratectal surface ornamentation. Grains of B. schreberi are small, produced in copious amounts, and settle relatively slowly. Flowers of this species have large pollen-ovule ratios. The exine of B. schreberi pollen is scabrate, relatively thin, has a uniformly thick sexine composed of a two-zoned (homogeneous/granular) tectum and distinct columellae, and a homogeneous nexine. Pollen of C. caroliniana is relatively large, produced in small quantities, and has a rapid terminal settling velocity. Flowers exhibit small pollen-ovule ratios. Exine organization of C. caroliniana pollen is typically two times thicker than that of B. schreberi; ornamentation is striate. Nonapertural sexine regions have a thick tectum and well-defined columellae, with both sexine components traversed by a dense system of channels. The nexine is relatively thin. All of the palynological characters examined correlate well with the anemophilous and entomophilous syndromes of B. schreberi and C. caroliniana, respectively. Moreover, several other parameters of exine ultrastructure from each species exhibit positive correlations with the respective pollination mechanisms, including: tectum thickness, columellae diameter, tectum-nexine ratios, and the consistency, distribution, and total amount of pollenkitt present. Overall exine ultrastructure is also discussed from a historical perspective as well as with respect to its phylogenetic significance.  相似文献   

15.
As part of an extensive study of pollen of Euphorbiaceae that combines transmission electron microscopy with scanning electron microscopy, distinctive exines are reported and documented for certain Acalyphoideae. Cheilosa and Neoscortechinia, which comprise the tribe Cheiloseae, are the only Acalyphoideae with an echinate tectum, but their apertures and exine structure do not support a relationship to Oldfieldioideae. In Ditaxis, one of the three mesocolpia is much smaller than the other two and the pollen can be easily distinguished from all other Euphorbiaceae. In SEM, the tectum of Pycnocoma appears almost complete, but in TEM the exine consists of irregular, mostly discrete tectal elements that narrow to points (=columellae) at the interface with the threadlike footlayer. The operculate grains of Alchornea and Boquillonia have exines with a poorly differentiated double layer of columellae in the mesocolpium, but nearer the endoaperture the lower tier becomes greatly elongated and appears to rest directly on the endexine. Plukenetia polyadenia has a complete tectum and a thick exine with a predominant infratectum of large, occasionally branched columellae that nearer the tectum are combined with densely spaced granules. Plukenetia penninervia has a reticulate tectum of crenate muri and short, sparse columellae. The pollen diversity in Acalyphoideae suggests that the subfamily, many tribes and even genera may not be monophyletic.  相似文献   

16.
Anthemideae (Asteroideae: Asteraceae) pollen grains have basal columellae, a structural type called “anthemoid” in earlier publications. To survey structure variation in Anthemideae pollen, we examined freeze-sectioned grains from 45 species within 23 representative genera using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). From resulting data and a literature review, we concluded that: 1) pollen of Anthemideae taxa is qualitatively identical except for Ursinia (grains essentially lack basal columellae) and the Artemisia group (branches of basal columellae are complex and interwoven); 2) the double tectum (a term introduced in this study) is a synapomorphy of Asteroideae and plesiomorphic in Anthemideae; 3) apomorphies of Anthemideae grains include large basal columellae, a thick foot layer, and absence of internal foramina; and 4) Anthemideae pollen is qualitatively different from similar pollen in Lactucoideae, a distinction we recognized by restricting “anthemoid” to Anthemideae grains. Ursinia grains have occasional basal columellae and features resembling rolled-up columellae; we consider these vestiges of a reversal to the plesiomorphic condition. To assess quantitative structural variation, 2,200 image-analysis measurements were taken from 73 SEM micrographs. Intrageneric variation was analyzed by standard deviation, and intergeneric variation by principal components analysis. Compared to other Anthemideae taxa, the structural elements of Artemisia grains have reduced dimensions and variability. Otherwise, structural radiation of Anthemideae pollen has produced a phenetic continuum.  相似文献   

17.
Pollen of 16 species of Parkia (ca. 30 spp.) was examined in the light, scanning and transmission electron microscopes (LM, SEM and TEM). Pollen is shed as large (61-236 μm), globose, 16–32-grained polyads that remain united following acetolysis. Thin sections reveal that polyad cohesion is maintained through fusion and/or adhesion and/or appression of adjacent ektexines in lateral and/or proximal and/or distal regions. In lateral and proximal regions the ektexine is often embedded in a dense granular endexinous matrix. Individual grains of the polyad are clearly outlined in most species but are completely obscured in several New World species. Sculpturing varies both in pattern and type of element. Nonuniformly sculptured polyads, in which the sculpturing of individual grains differs between the peripheral and central portions of the distal face, occur only among Old World species. Uniformly sculptured polyads occur among both New and Old World taxa. Two main sculpturing types are present among Parkia species: verrucate and tectate-perforate, the latter particularly well developed in the reticulate polyads of the neotropical P. ulei and P. multijuga p.p. Ultrastructurally, all Parkia polyads exhibit ektexine and endexine continuous around the individual grain. Distal ektexine is prominent and clearly stratified, usually exhibiting a thick, perforate tectum, columellate interstitium, and a thin, locally discontinuous foot layer. Lateral and proximal ektexine is significantly thinner and less structured. Individual grains within the polyad possess three to four peripheral-distal apertures usually at the points of contact between adjacent grains. Proximal and central grain apertures occur in most, but not all, species. Polyad characters suggest a particularly close relationship among the New World species P. decussata, P. discolor, P. gigantocarpa, P. igneiflora, and P. nitida. Parkia ulei, though sculpturally closest to P. multijuga p.p., is ultrastructurally most similar to the African P. biglobosa. The large tectate-perforate-fossulate polyads of P. pendula and P. platyparkia are unique in the New World.  相似文献   

18.
Beschorneria yuccoides (Agavaceae) microspores are arranged mostly in planar tetrads. Later on, the pollen grains of the tetrad usually fall apart, but sometimes remain loosely connected by ektexine elements. The ektexine consists of a tectum, of short columellae, and of a thin, discontinuous foot layer. An endexine is absent. The bilayered intine is without any additional thickening that would usually indicate an aperture region. From this point of view the pollen grain might be considered as omniaperturate. The pollen ornamentation is reticulate with wide lumina and robust, smooth muri.

The pollen grains show an indistinct sulcus characterised by a loose reticulate ornamentation. The sulcus is not exactly at the distal pole, but shifted towards the equator. No pollen tubes are formed regularly at the sulcus. Instead, pollen tubes are normally formed at the proximal pollen face. The proximal area, indicating a large germination field, is morphologically and functionally clearly an aperture (a germination zone); however, it does not represent a sulcus. The proximal face of all pollen grains appears as ornamented, with some exine lumps.

Asimina triloba (Annonaceae) pollen is shed in permanent planar or decussate tetrads. The distal sides are microreticulate to foveolate, and do not show an aperture; the psilate proximal sides are the germination areas of A. triloba.

The presence of apertures placed at the proximal pole was reported for distinct taxa of several angiosperm families. For Drosera, Dionaea (Droseraceae) and most probably for the diaperturate Cuphea species (Lythraceae) the existence of polar germination areas can be excluded. However, in some Annonaceae taxa with permanent tetrads (Annona cherimola, Asimina triloba) a situation similar to Beschorneria might be present, and indeed a proximal polar pollen tube is formed. Beschorneria yuccoides, Annona cherimola and Asimina triloba are unequivocal examples of angiosperm pollen with an exactly proximal aperture (germination area).  相似文献   

19.
A new lignitised, slightly compressed pollen organ, Erdtmanitheca portucalensis, with affinities to extinct Erdtmanithecales from the Early Cretaceous (Aptian–Albian) of Vale de Água (Lusitanian Basin, western Portugal), is described. The pollen organ is composed of loosely arranged microsporophylls radiating from a central core. The estimated number of microsporophylls is about 100–150. The microsporophylls are sessile and ellipsoidal to barrel-shaped with a flattened or slightly apically depression containing about ten narrow sporangia. The sporangia enclose abundant well-preserved pollen grains of Eucommiidites-type. Pollen grains found in situ are elliptical in equatorial outline, about 16.0–27.2 μm long and 11.9–16.4 μm wide. The main (distal) colpus is long with expanded rounded ends. It is flanked by two subsidiary colpi in an almost equatorial position. The surface of the pollen wall is psilate and occasionally punctate. The ektexine is composed of a distinct tectum, granular infratectal layer and a thin foot layer. The endexine is thick and laminar. The new Early Cretaceous Portuguese pollen-organ is similar in several respects to that of Erdtmanitheca texensis described from the Late Cretaceous of Texas, USA. The new fossil species further documents the importance of the Bennettitales-Erdtmanithecales-Gnetales group in the Early Cretaceous floras of Portugal extending the stratigraphic and geographical distribution of the genus with regard to systematic and phylogenetic significance of the Eucommiidites-producing plants that may have been co-occurring with the Early Cretaceous diversification of angiosperms. It is ascertained that perforate tectum occurs in pollen grains with a well-developed foot layer as well as in pollen grains in which a foot layer is poorly developed or lacking, and that pollen features do not support a separation of the Erdtmanithecales seeds and pollen organs.  相似文献   

20.
The neotropical subtribe Cuspariinae (Rutaceae) comprises as many as 26 genera and over 125 species. Pollen grains from 111 collections representing 71 species and 24 genera were examined by LM, SEM, and TEM. The pollen morphology of this subtribe is very diverse. Grains are mostly 3–6-aperturate and colporate, rarely porate (Spiranthera) or pantocolporate (Almeidea). Exine sculpturing is most commonly reticulate, sometimes perforate, foveolate-perforate, foveolate, foveolate-reticulate, reticulate, striate-reticulate, echinate, clavate, or baculate. The exine structure is columellate and tectate-perforate, columellate and semitectate, or intectate and is stratified into ektexine and endexine. The exine ofLeptothyrsa is distinctive in that the ektexine of the mesocolpium is longitudinally deeply ridged. The pollen ofHortia, characterized by a psilate exine with rare perforations, a very thick foot-layer, and reduced columellae, is unlike that of any member of the Cuspariinae and offers no support for the transfer of this genus from the Toddalioideae. The pollen data correlate with macromorphological characters and are taxonomically useful.  相似文献   

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