Abstract
Thalassodendron pachyrhizum den Hartog is dioecious with inflorescences on short laterals from upright stems. The male inflorescence consists of two flowers which are morphologically identical but developmentally different. Each male flower has two laterally fused anthers, each of which contains four loculi surrounding a vascular bundle. Filiform pollen grains are arranged in coils. The walls of pollen grains contain cellulosic microfibrils embedded in a protein and carbohydrate matrix, and lack an exine layer. The female inflorescence produces two morphologically and developmentally identical flowers, each having an ovary with a short style containing two vascular bundles and leading to two long, slender stigmas. Both male and female inflorescences are enclosed in several alternating bracts. The innermost bract differs from the others by lacking a ligule. Squamulae intravaginales are present in all inflorescences. In each inflorescence, only one ovary develops into the seed which germinates on the parent plant. Young seedlings have an aril-like structure which disappears at a later stage of seedling development. The seedling produces, firstly, an aberrant seedling leaf and a scarious seedling sheath, then several true foliage leaves and finally several root primordia. The mature seedling separates from its protecting bract and detaches from the parent plant. The floral and seedling morphology and anatomy are compared with other closely related genera in the Cymodoceaceae and unique features are assessed. The frequency of floral and seedling production is discussed in relation to the distribution of T. pachyrhizum.
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