POLLEN WALL AND APERTURE DEVELOPMENT IN HELIANTHUS ANNUUS (COMPOSITAE: HELIANTHEAE) |
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Authors: | Harry T Horner Jr Christine B Pearson |
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Institution: | Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Iowa State University, Ames, 50011 |
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Abstract: | Wall development of tricolpate pollen of sunflower was studied by light and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The wall and colpi are initiated during the tetrad stage, producing a young, spinulate, two-layered exine (ektexine and endexine) separated by a “spacer layer.” After release from the tetrads, the individual microspores round up and enlarge. The exine layers increase in thickness and complexity from sporopollenin contributed by the tapetum and microspores. During the mid-vacuolate microspore stage, the tapetum becomes plasmodial and surrounds the developing microspores. At the vacuolate pollen stage, after the wall and colpi are completely formed, the plasmodial tapetum breaks down and releases its contents into the locule. Some of the contents are presumably utilized by the pollen to make storage reserves while other components, such as lipids and proteins, fill the spaces within the pollen wall exine. Pollen wall ontogeny provides a scheme of terms for mature composite walls in general. The various events associated with microsporogenesis in sunflower are compared with those reported in other pertinent studies. |
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