Welcome to Journal of University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Today is

›› 2000, Vol. 38 ›› Issue (5): 437-445.

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Pollen morphology of the Schisandraceae and its systematic significance

SUN Cheng-Ren   

  • Received:1900-01-01 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2000-09-10
  • Contact: SUN Cheng-Ren

Abstract:

 Pollen morphology of 91 samples, representing 23 species, 6 varieties and 1 form of the
Schisandraceae, was examined under light microscope (LM) and scanning electron microscope
(SEM). Palynological data of 5 species, 4 varieties and 1 form are reported for the first time. The
pollen grains are monads, heteropolar, radiosymmetric and oblate to peroblate in shape. Arrangement
of their colpi is unique in angiosperms. The pollen grains can be divided into two types according to
the number of their clopi: the tricolpate pollen type and the hexacolpate pollen type. The exine
sculpturing is reticulate. The size of luminae and the breadth of muri are correlated with the floral
morphology of the Schisandraceae to a certain extent. Our results do not support the division of the
pollen grains of the Schisandraceae into 4 types according to the size of luminae as proposed by Pra-
glowski. There is also still room of discussion about his conclusion that the pole where the three
longer colpi converge is the distal pole. The evolutionary trends of the pollen grains of the Schisan-
draceae seem to be from fewer to more in the number of colpi, and from smaller to larger in the size
of luminae. The view that Kadsura is more primitive than Schisnadra is not supported by palynolog-
ical data; on the contrary, Kadsura seems to be more advanced than Schisandra at the general level
of evolution. The two genera may be closely related, and might have originated from a common an-
cestor and then evolved parallelly along two different routes.

Key words: Schisandraceae, Schisandra, Kadsura, Pollen morphology