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The morphogenesis of dimorphic pollen and anthers in Tripogandra amplexicaulis. Light microscopy and growth analysis
Author(s) -
Mattsson Ole
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
nordic journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.333
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1756-1051
pISSN - 0107-055X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1756-1051.1983.tb01456.x
Subject(s) - stamen , biology , pollen , tapetum , botany , locule , microspore , spore , anthesis , cultivar
A characteristic of the genus Tripogandra is the presence of two dissimilar whorls of anthers. In T. amplexicaulis the short filamented anthers (S anthers) develop fertile, spheroidal pollen, the long filamented ones (L anthers) develop elongated spores, which degenerate prior to anthesis. Meiosis is regular in both types but occurs approximately two days later in the L anthers. Developmental traits of the L spores are a continuous, uniaxial extension and a sigmoid course of growth in volume accompanied by progressive vacuolarization and growth of starch grains and usually no division. The number of spores in the L anthers amounts to only 60 % of that in the S anthers, but the values for anther fresh weight and pollen sac volume of the former eventually exceed those of the latter and the relative growth rate in these variables is consistently higher in the L anthers. The relative rate in dry weight, however, is similar for both anthers and the absolute rate is clearly lower in the L anthers. These growth characteristics are reflected in a greater vacuolarization of both spores and the amoeboid tapetum in the L anthers. Cytological features of male sterile plants with hypotrophy of the tapetum are related to the sterility syndrome of the L anthers and a common hypothesis for the deviating features is presented.