4.2 Article

Pollen morphology of some Euphorbia taxa and its systematic significance

Journal

PALYNOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/01916122.2023.2165550

Keywords

Euphorbia; LM; SEM; pollen morphology

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The objective of this study is to determine the pollen morphologies of different Euphorbia L. Turkish taxa using LM and SEM. PCA and cluster analysis were also employed to examine similarity grouping. The results showed that 24 taxa have tricolporate pollen grains, while three others have tricolpate and tricolporate pollen grains. The study also found perforated pattern and ornamentations on the pollen grains. In terms of shape, six taxa had prolate-spheroidal pollen, while 20 had oblate-spheroidal pollen. The PCA explained 92.16% of the variation and the UPGMA dendrogram identified four taxonomic groupings.
The current study's objective is to infer the specific pollen morphologies of 27 different Euphorbia L. Turkish taxa were cultivated using LM and SEM. Additionally, principal component analysis (PCA) is developed and cluster analysis is used to examine similarity grouping in this study. The results of the current study showed that tricolporate pollen grains are present in 24 different taxa of Euphorbia, whereas three other taxa E. denticulate, E. esula subsp. tommassiniana, and E. orientalis have tricolpate and tricolporate pollen grains. The results of this study also revealed that pollen grains frequently have a perforated pattern. The use of ornamentations with reticulate- and rugulate-perforate surfaces has also been discovered. The current study revealed that six taxa of Euphorbia have prolate-spheroidal pollen shapes, while 20 of the 27 Euphorbia under study have oblate-spheroidal pollen shapes. But only the pollen of E. grisophylla, 1 of the 27 tested Euphorbia taxa, has a subprolate shape. On the other hand, the PCA results explained 92.16% of the variation, and the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) dendrogram identified four taxonomic groupings, as follows: types 1-4.

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