Literature DB >> 21680358

Pollination of Picea orientalis (Pinaceae): saccus morphology governs pollen.

C J Runions1, K H Rensing, T Takaso, J N Owens.   

Abstract

Sacci of conifer pollen do not function primarily to increase the efficiency of wind pollination as is widely thought. Rather, they are bladders and cause pollen to float upwards in a liquid drop into the ovules. This observation is seemingly unsupported in the case of oriental spruce (Picea orientalis (L.) Link), which has saccate pollen. Ovulate cones are pendant at the time of pollination, which requires that pollen sink into the ovules. Pollen of oriental spruce floats at first but within 1-2 min sinks into the ovule. As sinking does not occur in saccate pollen of other Pinaceae, a variety of techniques was used to determine anatomical differences leading to this uncharacteristic tendency. Light, scanning electron, and confocal microscopy of the pollen surface yielded no significant appearing difference between pollen of oriental spruce and white spruce. However, transmission electron microscopy of freeze-fixed/freeze-substituted hydrated pollen revealed that the ektexine of oriental spruce pollen sacci is porous compared to that of white spruce. Confocal microscopy allowed examination of pollen hydration dynamics. Water enters pollen at the distal pole between sacci, and resulting rapid expansion of the tube cell forces air out of the saccate space. White spruce pollen remains buoyant because of enclosed air pockets in the saccus ektexine. Evolutionary change in pollen wall anatomy with resultant loss of saccus function is correlated with a change in ovulate strobilus orientation at pollination in oriental spruce. A suite of characters interact in the conifer pollination mechanism, and concerted change in these characters may lead to speciation.

Entities:  

Year:  1999        PMID: 21680358

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bot        ISSN: 0002-9122            Impact factor:   3.844


  4 in total

1.  Wettable and unsinkable: the hydrodynamics of saccate pollen grains in relation to the pollination mechanism in the two New Zealand species of Prumnopitys Phil. (Podocarpaceae).

Authors:  Joshua Salter; Brian G Murray; John E Braggins
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 4.357

2.  The mechanism of pollination drop withdrawal in Ginkgo biloba L.

Authors:  Biao Jin; Lei Zhang; Yan Lu; Di Wang; Xiao X Jiang; Min Zhang; Li Wang
Journal:  BMC Plant Biol       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 4.215

3.  Application of proteomics to the study of pollination drops.

Authors:  Natalie Prior; Stefan A Little; Cary Pirone; Julia E Gill; Derek Smith; Jun Han; Darryl Hardie; Stephen J B O'Leary; Rebecca E Wagner; Tyra Cross; Andrea Coulter; Christoph Borchers; Robert W Olafson; Patrick von Aderkas
Journal:  Appl Plant Sci       Date:  2013-04-05       Impact factor: 1.936

4.  Three-dimensional label-free imaging and analysis of Pinus pollen grains using optical diffraction tomography.

Authors:  Geon Kim; SangYun Lee; Seungwoo Shin; YongKeun Park
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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