Abstract: | This correlated immunofluorescence and electron microscope study reveals that the microtubule arrays during meiosis in Timmiella barbuloides mirror those in other mosses but the organization of the metaphase I spindle is quite different. In other mosses the sagittiform metaphase I spindle initially contains four bands of microtubules derived from the tetrahedral system present at prophase. These bands converge towards the division axis and each half spindle contains two focal points of microtubules straddling a cleavage furrow. In Timmiella the sagittiform spindle also contains four microtubular foci derived from the preprophasic tetrahedron. However, one of these contributes to one half spindle, the other half deriving from the three remaining foci orientated at approximately 120° to each other. In contrast to other mosses the sporocytes in Timmiella are hardly lobed, the cleavage-furrows ill-defined, the prophasic plastid positioning in the lobes is also more variable and the organelle band in meiocytes comprises mitochondria alone. |