Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile

Chile is habitat to over 140 species of cactus of which 45% are endemic and most of them grow in the arid northernmost part of the country between 18°-32°S. As the Cactaceae family plants are quite well adapted to arid environments, their fossil pollen may serve as a tool to reconstruct past environ...

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Autores principales: MIESEN,FLOREANA, DE PORRAS,MARÍA EUGENIA, MALDONADO,ANTONIO
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Oceanográficas, Universidad de Concepción 2015
Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-66432015000200010
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spelling oai:scielo:S0717-664320150002000102016-03-01Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern ChileMIESEN,FLOREANADE PORRAS,MARÍA EUGENIAMALDONADO,ANTONIO Chile is habitat to over 140 species of cactus of which 45% are endemic and most of them grow in the arid northernmost part of the country between 18°-32°S. As the Cactaceae family plants are quite well adapted to arid environments, their fossil pollen may serve as a tool to reconstruct past environmental dynamics as well as to trace some issues regarding the family evolution or even some autoecological aspects. Aiming to create a reference atlas to be applied to some of these purposes, the pollen morphology of the following 14 different species of the Cactaceae family from Northern Chile was studied under optical microscopy: Cumulopuntia sphaerica, Maihueniopsis camachoi, Tunilla soehrensii, Echinopsis atacamensis, Echinopsis coquimbana, Haageocereus chilensis, Oreocereus hempelianus, Oreocereus leucotrichus, Copiapoa coquimbana, Eriosyce aurata, Eriosyce subgibbosa, Eulychnia breviflora, Browningia candelaris and Corryocactus brevistylus. Pollen grains of species of the subfamily Opuntioideae are spheroidal, apolar and periporate whereas grains of the subfamily Cactoideae are subspheroidal, bipolar and tricolpate and can be taxonomically differentiated between tribes. The results show that it is possible to identify pollen from the Cactaceae family at the genus level but pollen taxonomic resolution may be complicated to identify up to a specific level. A wider reference collection considering more characters than those included in the present study could improve this aspect in the near future.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessFacultad de Ciencias Naturales y Oceanográficas, Universidad de ConcepciónGayana. Botánica v.72 n.2 20152015-12-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-66432015000200010en10.4067/S0717-66432015000200010
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
description Chile is habitat to over 140 species of cactus of which 45% are endemic and most of them grow in the arid northernmost part of the country between 18°-32°S. As the Cactaceae family plants are quite well adapted to arid environments, their fossil pollen may serve as a tool to reconstruct past environmental dynamics as well as to trace some issues regarding the family evolution or even some autoecological aspects. Aiming to create a reference atlas to be applied to some of these purposes, the pollen morphology of the following 14 different species of the Cactaceae family from Northern Chile was studied under optical microscopy: Cumulopuntia sphaerica, Maihueniopsis camachoi, Tunilla soehrensii, Echinopsis atacamensis, Echinopsis coquimbana, Haageocereus chilensis, Oreocereus hempelianus, Oreocereus leucotrichus, Copiapoa coquimbana, Eriosyce aurata, Eriosyce subgibbosa, Eulychnia breviflora, Browningia candelaris and Corryocactus brevistylus. Pollen grains of species of the subfamily Opuntioideae are spheroidal, apolar and periporate whereas grains of the subfamily Cactoideae are subspheroidal, bipolar and tricolpate and can be taxonomically differentiated between tribes. The results show that it is possible to identify pollen from the Cactaceae family at the genus level but pollen taxonomic resolution may be complicated to identify up to a specific level. A wider reference collection considering more characters than those included in the present study could improve this aspect in the near future.
author MIESEN,FLOREANA
DE PORRAS,MARÍA EUGENIA
MALDONADO,ANTONIO
spellingShingle MIESEN,FLOREANA
DE PORRAS,MARÍA EUGENIA
MALDONADO,ANTONIO
Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
author_facet MIESEN,FLOREANA
DE PORRAS,MARÍA EUGENIA
MALDONADO,ANTONIO
author_sort MIESEN,FLOREANA
title Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
title_short Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
title_full Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
title_fullStr Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
title_full_unstemmed Pollen morphology of Cactaceae in Northern Chile
title_sort pollen morphology of cactaceae in northern chile
publisher Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Oceanográficas, Universidad de Concepción
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-66432015000200010
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AT maldonadoantonio pollenmorphologyofcactaceaeinnorthernchile
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