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POLLEN MORPHOLOGY AND DETAILED STRUCTURE OF FAMILY COMPOSITAE, TRIBE CICHORIEAE. II. SUBTRIBE MICROSERIDINAE
Author(s) -
Feuer Sylvia,
Tomb A. Spencer
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1977.tb15722.x
Subject(s) - biology , pollen , tribe , morphology (biology) , botany , zoology , sociology , anthropology
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.

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