Abstract

The wall of pollen grains exhibits morphological variation in many features including apertures, ornamentation and thickness, but the function of these characters remains to be clarified. It has been suggested that they are involved in the accommodation of volume changes (harmomegathy). To investigate this further, we developed a protocol that induces a controlled hydration of the pollen without affecting its metabolism and we applied it to six species differing in their pollen wall morphology. The entry of water caused pollen swelling and volume increase leading to breakage of the wall and/or of the plasma membrane, such that the per cent of intact grains was negatively correlated with the level of hydration. Qualitative and quantitative differences were observed between the species. Breakage of the exine was observed only in pollen lacking apertures and with thin exine. Variation in the exine ornamentation and thickness could explain the interspecific differences observed for the rates of breakage of the plasma membrane. Our results suggest that pollen wall morphology matters for survival and maintenance of pollen integrity further to volume increase due to hydration. We propose a rationale for future studies that should allow disentangling the contribution of different pollen morphological and physiological features to harmomegathy.

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