Floral and palinological characters in Acanthostyles (Asteraceae, Eupatorieae) and its relationship to pollination.

Authors

  • Mariana A. Grossi
  • Diego G. Gutiérrez
  • Gonzalo J. Marquéz
  • María Luján Luna

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v52.n1.16913

Keywords:

Acanthostyles, anemophily, Austroeupatorium, Eupatorieae, South America.

Abstract

Floral and palinological characters in Acanthostyles (Asteraceae, Eupatorieae) and its relationship to pollination. Wind pollination in Asteraceae is well documented only in few tribes.
Particularly, in Eupatorieae, apparent anemophily has only been reported in 10 species belonging to the genera Critonia, Decachaeta, Eupatorium, Koanophyllon, and Neohintonia, most of which inhabit North and Central America, with only two species from South America. The genus Acanthostyles has only one species, Acanthostyles buniifolius, which is widely distributed in southern South America. This species shows features that may suggest a pollination mechanism mediated by wind. We analyzed in detail some
morphological and palynological traits related to the anemophilous syndrome. As a result, we identified some characters of A. buniifolius associated to wind pollination: presence of loose and pendulous secondary inflorescence with mainly downward oriented small heads, increased of proportion of stigmatic
area in relation to the total length of the style branch, acicular style sweeping laxly arranged and widecaveate, microechinate (= subechinate) pollen. This paper proposes first evidence of possible anemophily for a species of subtribe Dysinaphiinae within the Eupatorieae tribe.

Downloads

Published

2017-05-11

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

“Floral and Palinological Characters in Acanthostyles (Asteraceae, Eupatorieae) and Its Relationship to Pollination”. 2017. Boletín De La Sociedad Argentina De Botánica (Journal of the Argentine Botanical Society 52 (1): 107-19. https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v52.n1.16913.

Similar Articles

191-200 of 515

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)