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Pollen germination in Welwitschia mirabilis Hook. f.:: differences between the polyplicate pollen producing genera of the Gnetales

Journal

GRANA
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 137-141

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
DOI: 10.1080/00173130500230459

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Pollen grains of the seed plant genera Ephedra L. and Welwitschia Hook. f. (Gnetales) are of similar size, shape, and have a polyplicate exine with alternating thicker and thinner regions. Ephedra pollen is considered inaperturate and the exine is shed during germination, leaving the male gametophyte naked. The shed exine curls up and forms a characteristic structure with transverse striations. Such upcurled exines have been found in situ in Early Cretaceous seeds with affinities to Ephedra. The purpose of this study was to document the germination of Welwitschia pollen and investigate whether they also discard their exine during this process. The pollen grains of Welwitschia are monoaperturate with a distinct, distal sulcus. During germination, the sulcus splits open and the gametophyte expands to a spherical form that extends out of the exine. The pollen tube starts to grow one or two hours later and as in Ephedra, it is displaced towards one side. The exine is not shed but remains as a cap'' that partly covers the male gametophyte. Thus, in this respect the germination process is distinctly different from that in Ephedra and this study demonstrates that discharging the exine during pollen germination is unique to Ephedra, among the polyplicate pollen producing genera in the Gnetales.

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