Stefany Liau-Kang, Rafael Fernandes Barduzzi, Gaston Lozano Calderón, Euclydes Marega Junior, Marcelo Fragomeni Simon, Francisco de Assis Ribeiro dos Santos, Leonardo Maurici Borges
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Pollen is a source of information on the reproduction, ecology, evolution, and systematics of plants. Mimosa, one of the largest genera in Leguminosae, has pollen organized in tetrads or polyads, with variation in the arrangement, ornamentation, and size of grains. Despite such morphological diversity, pollen has been described for less than 25% of the more than 600 species in the genus. Here, we increase the current knowledge about Mimosa pollen disparity by extending taxon sampling to 31%. Samples were studied under light and scanning electron microscopy. Novel pollen descriptions and data gathered from the literature were used to infer a pollen morphospace and calculate Mimosa pollen disparity. We find tetrads to be the main dispersion unit, but some taxa also present 8, 12 or 16-grained polyads. Dispersal unities vary in the disposition of pollen grains and size, while grain ornamentation, number of pores and type of aperture were less variable. Analyses revealed an increase in morphological disparity after novel descriptions and an uneven distribution of such variation across major Mimosa clades. Our results expanded the taxonomic breadth of Mimosa pollen diversity, filling gaps and suggesting that although the general picture of pollen morphology in Mimosa is well-defined, the boundaries of its variation remain to be explored.
期刊介绍:
The Brazilian Journal of Botany is an international journal devoted to publishing a wide-range of research in plant sciences: biogeography, cytogenetics, ecology, economic botany, physiology and biochemistry, morphology and anatomy, molecular biology and diversity phycology, mycology, palynology, and systematics and phylogeny.
The journal considers for publications original articles, short communications, reviews, and letters to the editor.
Manuscripts describing new taxa based on morphological data only are suitable for submission; however information from multiple sources, such as ultrastructure, phytochemistry and molecular evidence are desirable.
Floristic inventories and checklists should include new and relevant information on other aspects, such as conservation strategies and biogeographic patterns.
The journal does not consider for publication submissions dealing exclusively with methods and protocols (including micropropagation) and biological activity of extracts with no detailed chemical analysis.