Pollen tube pathway through the gynoecium of Monotropsis odorata (Monotropaceae) |
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Authors: | A. Randall Olson |
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Affiliation: | A. E. Roland Herbarium, Department of Biology, Nova Scotia Agricultural College, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada, B2N 5E3 |
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Abstract: | Monotropsis odorata Elliott. is one of the most cryptic and relatively rare North American endemic species of the Monotropaceae; therefore, information concerning the biology of this achlorophyllous, mycotrophic angiosperm is limited. Bright field and fluorescence microscopic investigations of postpollination gynoecia reveal that pollen tubes follow a continuous pathway from the receptive surface of the stigma to micropyles of the ovules. The pollen tube pathway is characterized by discrete strands of transmitting tissue connecting an exudate-coated stigma to an exudate-filled, stylar canal that leads directly to exudate-coated placentae. Pollen tube growth appears restricted to those areas associated with an exudate. The gynoecial pathway for pollen tube growth in this taxon conforms to those described from other monotropàceous species. |
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