4.5 Article

Pollen morphology of selected melliferous plants and its taxonomic implications using microscopy

Journal

MICROSCOPY RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUE
Volume 85, Issue 7, Pages 2361-2380

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jemt.24091

Keywords

Bee flora; Melliferous plants; Microscopy; Palyno-morph

Funding

  1. Higher Education Commision, Pakistan [NRPU-8420]

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This research explores the morphology and palynological features of melliferous bee flora pollen from arid zones in District Attock, Islamabad Capital and Rawalpindi. The study demonstrates the significance of pollen morphology in correctly identifying honeybee flora species.
This research aimed to explore the melliferous bee flora pollen from arid zones of District Attock, Islamabad Capital and Rawalpindi. Morpho-palynological features has provided key information for the classification and help to explain the taxonomy of several genera and species. Therefore, in this work, we examined the morphological characters of pollen potentially to be used for the species delimitation of bee flora. A total of 18 bee floral species, classified into 12 different families were collected, pressed, identified and then acetolyized to observe the grains under microscopy. Bee pollen can be described by small, medium to large sized morphotypes presenting five types of shapes, prolate spheroidal in (seven species), sub-prolate (six species), oblate spheroidal (three species), oblate and prolate (one species each) was examined. The observed polar and equatorial diameter were found maximum in Zea mays 73.5 mu m and Pelargonium inquinans 66.75 mu m respectively. Pollen of six different types was found namely: tricolporate, 3-zonocolporate, monoportae, tetracolporate, tetraporate and mononsulcate. Whereas highest value of colpi length was measured in Grewia tenax (24.55 mu m). Exine surface nature of pollen was examined echinate psilate and scabrate. Exine thickness noted to be maximum in Verbena tenuisecta (8.40 mu m) and minimum in Citrus macrocarpa (0.4 mu m). Bee floral species considered difficult to identify based on other morphological traits were successfully distinguished using pollen quantitative and qualitative traits, confirming the importance of pollen morphology to diagnose characters to correctly identify honeybee flora.

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