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      Study on pollen viability and stigma receptivity throughout the flowering period in the selected taxa of the Gesneriaceae family

      1 , 1
      Folia Horticulturae
      Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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          ABSTRACT

          Plants in the Gesneriaceae family are appreciated for their decorative leaves and flowers, ease of cultivation, and shade tolerance. Sexual hybridisation has long been carried out for producing novel hybrids. However, scientific knowledge is lacking on the correct timing of pollination in this family. This study was conducted to elucidate the optimal timing for pollination by screening pollen viability and stigma receptivity throughout the flowering period in eight gesneriad taxa. Pollen viability was evaluated by the in vitro germination test and stigma receptivity was based on stigma morphology and pistil length. The flowering duration varied from 10 days in Alsobia to 18 days in Streptocarpus. While the pollens of Episcia, Kohleria, Saintpaulia, Sinningia, and Smithiantha had totally lost viability 2–5 days before the flowers withered, a slightly contrasting situation was observed in the cases of Alsobia, Deinostigma, and Streptocarpus, where a small portion of pollen grains remained viable towards the end of the flowering period. The highest pollen germination rate was recorded from 1 day in Alsobia, Episcia, and Kohleria, to 9 days in Deinostigma. The reduction in pollen germination was rapid in Alsobia, Saintpaulia, and Smithiantha, and moderate in the remaining taxa. The greatest pollen tube growth occurred at 1–3 days after flower opening and decreased rapidly in all the taxa tested. The longest pistil of 2.03–3.50 cm was observed at 3–8 days of anthesis depending on the plant tested. The findings in this study suggest that higher pollination success may be achieved using pollen grains of newly opened flowers and stigmas of mature flowers in this family.

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          Most cited references35

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          The Receptive Surface of the Angiosperm Stigma

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            Pollen Morphology and Plant Taxonomy

            G Erdtman (1952)
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              Diverse cell signalling pathways regulate pollen-stigma interactions: the search for consensus.

              Siphonogamy, the delivery of nonmotile sperm to the egg via a pollen tube, was a key innovation that allowed flowering plants (angiosperms) to carry out sexual reproduction on land without the need for water. This process begins with a pollen grain (male gametophyte) alighting on and adhering to the stigma of a flower. If conditions are right, the pollen grain germinates to produce a pollen tube. The pollen tube invades the stigma and grows through the style towards the ovary, where it enters an ovule, penetrates the embryo sac (female gametophyte) and releases two sperm cells, one of which fertilizes the egg, while the other fuses with the two polar nuclei of the central cell to form the triploid endosperm. The events before fertilization (pollen-pistil interactions) comprise a series of complex cellular interactions involving a continuous exchange of signals between the haploid pollen and the diploid maternal tissue of the pistil (sporophyte). In recent years, significant progress has been made in elucidating the molecular identity of these signals and the cellular interactions that they regulate. Here we review our current understanding of the cellular and molecular interactions that mediate the earliest of these interactions between the pollen and the pistil that occur on or within the stigma - the 'pollen-stigma interaction'.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Folia Horticulturae
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                2083-5965
                June 01 2023
                June 26 2023
                June 01 2023
                June 01 2023
                June 26 2023
                June 01 2023
                : 35
                : 1
                : 123-133
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Tropical Agriculture and International Cooperation, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology , Pingtung 91201 , Taiwan
                Article
                10.2478/fhort-2023-0009
                82b09bbb-eaf3-47b1-9eb6-7ea9f791c798
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0

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