Dr. Jeffrey M. Osborn

Dean of the School of Science and Professor of Biology
The College of New Jersey


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Publication Abstract

Doores, A. S., G. El-Ghazaly, and J. M. Osborn.  2007.  Pollen ontogeny in Ephedra americana (Gnetales)  International Journal of Plant Sciences 168: 985-997.

Abstract

Several investigations have focused on mature pollen of Ephedra; however, little is known about pollen ontogeny. This paper is the first to describe the complete pollen developmental sequence in the genus. Combined light, scanning electron, and transmission electron microscopy were used to document all major developmental stages in Ephedra americana. Microspore mother cells are characterized by an unevenly thickened callose envelope. Both tetrahedral and tetragonal tetrads occur, but the majority of tetrads exhibit tetrahedral geometry. Pollen wall development is initiated in regions that will become characteristic plicae. The majority of exine deposition, including formation of the tectum, infratectum, foot layer, and endexine, occurs throughout the tetrad stage, although endexine deposition continues into the free microspore stage. The intine forms during the late free microspore stage. Two types of infratectal elements occur. Granular infratectal elements are the predominant type and develop throughout ontogeny, whereas columellar elements form in the early tetrad stage, but subsequently become indistinguishable. Mature grains are elliptic, have a series of longitudinal plicae, and are inaperturate, yet the exine is very thin in the furrow regions between plicae. Pollen grains with straight and undulated furrows co-occur in the same pollen sac, with the straight morphology dominating. Because several key characters are only revealed during an investigation of the full ontogenetic sequence, this study emphasizes the importance of integrating pollen developmental characters into phylogenetic analyses.

Keywords:

Pollen ontogeny, pollen development, Ephedra, Gnetales, Coniferales, basal angiosperms, anthophyte.