How to translate text using browser tools
27 March 2014 The trichotomosulcate asparagoids: pollen morphology of Hemerocallidaceae in relation to systematics and pollination biology
Carol A. Furness, John G. Conran, Thomas Gregory, Paula J. Rudall
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

We examined pollen of 19 genera of Hemerocallidaceae by using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and one genus (Dianella) by using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Pollen was generally small in size, with a rounded triangular outline when hydrated, and a characteristic three-armed aperture, a distal trichotomosulcus. The pollen surface was finely sculptured and the exine was thin. Microreticulate pollen is a potential synapomorphy for several species of the ‘crown phormioid’ subclade recognised in molecular analyses. Perforate and fossulate pollen supports a relationship between several species of Dianella. Microrugulate pollen is more frequent in the johnsonioids than in the phormioids. Hemerocallis is distinguished by elongated monosulcate pollen, a relatively thick exine with a pronounced reticulate surface, and large globules of attached pollenkitt. We hypothesise that Hemerocallidaceae are ancestrally buzz-pollinated, and their pollen morphology is an adaptation to this pollination type. A reversal to butterfly or moth pollination occurred in Hemerocallis, with associated changes in pollen morphology.

© CSIRO 2014
Carol A. Furness, John G. Conran, Thomas Gregory, and Paula J. Rudall "The trichotomosulcate asparagoids: pollen morphology of Hemerocallidaceae in relation to systematics and pollination biology," Australian Systematic Botany 26(6), 393-407, (27 March 2014). https://doi.org/10.1071/SB13046
Received: 2 November 2013; Accepted: 29 January 2014; Published: 27 March 2014
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top