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A Note on Remarkable Exines in Acalyphoideae (Euphorbiaceae)
Authors:Masamichi Takahashi  Joan W Nowicke  Grady L Webster
Institution:1. Department of Biology , Kagawa University , Takamatsu, 760, Japan;2. Department of Botany, NHB 166 , National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC, 20560, USA;3. Section of Plant Biology , University of California , Davis, CA, 95616, USA
Abstract: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.
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