IBONE   05434
INSTITUTO DE BOTANICA DEL NORDESTE
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Embryological studies in Thinouia mucronata and Serjania meridionalis (Paullinieae, Sapindaceae): development of gametophytes in both floral morphs and its phylogenetic implications
Autor/es:
FERRUCCI MARÍA SILVIA; SOLÍS, STELLA M.
Revista:
Brazilian Journal of Botany
Editorial:
SPRINGER WIEN
Referencias:
Lugar: Sao Paulo; Año: 2021
Resumen:
The tribe Paullinieae is distinguished by a monoecious reproductive system; it exhibits two floral morphs, namely staminateflowers, with gynoecium reduced to a pistillode, and morphologically hermaphrodite but functionally pistillate flowers. Theaim of this study was to analyze the development of sporogenesis and gametogenesis in flowers of Thinouia mucronata Radlk.(subtribe Thinouiinae) and Serjania meridionalis Cambess. (subtribe Paulliniinae) and to elucidate the moment when pollengrains of pistillate flowers and the ovule of staminate ones stopped their development. Light and scanning electron microscopy was applied using standard techniques. In T. mucronata flowers are actinomorphic; the pistillate ones have anatropous,pseudocrassinucellate ovules, without hypostase and with placental obturator, and stamens with indehiscent anthers andwell-developed pollen grains that remain inside the pollen sac at the end of anthesis. Serjania meridionalis has zygomorphicflowers, the pistillate ones have campylotropous, crassinucellate ovules, with presence of hypostase, and funicular obturator,and stamens with indehiscent anthers collapsed at the end of anthesis, showing remnants of aborted sporogenous tissue ineach pollen sac. Both species share the anatomy of the anther wall; microsporocytes form tetrahedral or decussate tetrads;monads are bicellular; the pistillode has abortive megaspore; gynoecium with bithegmic ovules and Polygonum-type megagametophyte. One difference in antheral wall ontogeny between species was that T. mucronata displayed the dicotyledoneustype development, whereas S. meridionalis exhibited the basic type. These embryological characters clearly support thebasal position of Thinouia in the tribe recently validated from molecular phylogeny studies and supported by the presentmorphological data.