Abstract

Data on structural and functional aspects of mitotic diplospory and later stages of apomictic seed formation are reported forPoa palustris andP. nemoralis. In this study, the plant material of two Russian populations ofP. nemoralis andP. palustris were used for transmission electron microscope observations. Seed formation was investigated by phase contrast microscopy in two populations ofP. nemoralis collected in The Netherlands. The processes of transformation of the megasporocytes to the megaspore mother cells of diplosporous embryo sacs, and thereafter to one- and two-nucleate diplosporous embryo sacs (Antennaria type) were characterized by an increase of cell size, structural and functional reorganization of the nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm, and cell isolation as a result of thickening of the cell wall. These were accompanied by an increase in the cell metabolic activity inferred from visual evidence of the activation of nucleus, nucleolus, endoplasmic reticulum, dictyosomes, mitochondria, and from the appearance of a dense population of ribosomes and polysomes. The diplosporous embryo sac of the Antennaria type was characteristic for bothP. nemoralis andP. palustris. No signs of the presence of synaptonemal complexes were observed during the process of diplosporous-embryo-sac megaspore mother cell differentiation and division. About 90–95% of the diploid egg cells of diplosporous embryo sacs were able to produce apomictic embryos. These embryos developed before anthesis. However, many of them degenerated at the globular stage because of lack of endosperm. The ultrastructural events occurring during the process of diplospory of apomictic species, and meiosis and megagametogenesis of sexually reproduced plants are discussed.

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