info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Ovule and female gametophyte in representatives of Nymphaea subgenus Hydrocallis and Victoria (Nymphaeaceae; Nymphaeoideae)
Fecha
2015-10Registro en:
Zini, Lucia Melisa; Galati, Beatriz Gloria; Ferrucci, María Silvia; Ovule and female gametophyte in representatives of Nymphaea subgenus Hydrocallis and Victoria (Nymphaeaceae; Nymphaeoideae); Elsevier Science; Aquatic Botany; 120; Part B; 10-2015; 322-332
0304-3770
Autor
Zini, Lucia Melisa
Galati, Beatriz Gloria
Ferrucci, María Silvia
Resumen
Nymphaeaceae occupies an important phylogenetic position because of their placement as one of the basal angiosperms. From this perspective, morphological studies in the family are of great value to understanding plant phylogeny and evolution. Ovule development and female gametophyte in Nymphaea amazonum, N. gardneriana (subgenus Hydrocallis) and in Victoria cruziana were analyzed in order to provide further progress in characters of potential evolutionary interest. The ovules of all species are anatropous, bitegmic, distomic, weakly crasinucellate, and present an epistase. The female gametophyte is four-celled and corresponds to the Schisandra type, distinctive of the Nymphaeales. Comparisons among ovules of the subgenera of Nymphaea and others allied genera show differences with respect to micropyle conformation, thickness of nucellus and outer integument, and its degree of development on the raphal side. The studied species of Nymphaea share an annular outer integument and linear triad of megaspores. These results fill gaps in the current incomplete knowledge of character states especially within Nymphaea. In subgenus Hydrocallis, the ovules have an outer integument not markedly cup-shaped in contrast to subgenus Nymphaea, since the micropyle is closer to the funiculus as in Nuphar. The present observations suggest that the ovule morphology has diversified in Nymphaea and the characters studied clearly show no evidences to support the hypothesis of a monophyletic genus.