Abstract

We studied the structure of flowers of Galanthus nivalis and Leucojum vernum using cross-sections and longitudal sections of permanent preparations using a light microscope. Genera Galanthus and Leucojum belong to the Galantheae tribe characterized by a unique combination of features of the family Amaryllidaceae, i.e. absence of septal nectaries, poricidal anthers and fruit – fleshy capsule. Both species are represented in the flora of Ukraine and have the life form of bulb ephemeroid of decidous forests. Microscopic surveys of flowers are considered as an instrument for determining yet unknown structural adaptations of plants to specialized ways of pollination and determining the first stages of morphogenesis of fruit, because many features of the fruit appear already at the stage of flower. We determined that the tepals of both studied species have multi-bundle traces of 8–9 vascular bundles. Apical dehiscence of the anthers occurs due to short longitudinal sutures in the upper part of the anthers. The nectar disk on the roof of the inferior ovary is poorly differentiated, and has no vascular bundles. We associate the indicated peculiarities of the flower structure with the offer of pollen as the main reward of the pollinator during buzz-polination, which has not reported for the studied species. Placentation is axile in the lower part of the ovary and parietal in the upper one. We consider that the gynoecium of the studied species is eusyncarpous. The vascular system of the inferior ovary is composed of three dorsal and three septal veins, paired ventral bundles of carpels, which form the traces of ovules, and also small additional bundles in the wall of the ovary. For the first time, we have determined the presence of airy parenchyma in the ovules, ovary roof, the style and anthers’ connectives and have confirmed their presence in the tepals and the wall of the ovary at the stage of flowering. We found differentiation of the mesocarp into photosynthesizing and airy parenchyma, small sizes of cells of the endocardium in the area of the dorsal vein, bifurcate dorsal bundles of the carpels, which could be considered as adaptation of different stages of morphogenesis of fruit to dehiscence. Anatomical peculiarities of the ovaries of G. nivalis and L. vernum: numerous vascular bundles in the pericarp, thick parenchyma mesocarp with air-filled cavities, non-lignified endocarp at the stage of the flower we consider adaptations to the formation of fleshy fruit. The new data we obtained on the anatomical structure of the flowers is a significant addition of information about anthecological and carpological (post-anthetic) peculiarities of the surveyed species.

Highlights

  • The contemporary systematics of monocotyledons is based on molecular data and in its development is the basis for the taxonomic systems

  • Our research revealed that the ovules in G. nivalis and L. vernum are located in both zones of the gynoecium – synascidiate and simplicate

  • The data we obtained helped deepen the knowledge on micromorphological and anatomical peculiarities of flowers of G. nivalis and L. vernum; in particular we elaborated the anatomical structure of tepals, the way of dehiscence of anthers, vertical zonation and type of gynoecium and type of placentation

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Summary

Introduction

The contemporary systematics of monocotyledons is based on molecular data and in its development is the basis for the taxonomic systems. Molecular-phylogenetic analysis does not take into account such important peculiarities of the flower’s structure as presence and height of the zones of the ovary, number of ovules in the locule, features of vascular anatomy of the flower and structure of septal nectaries. Integration of the data of molecular phylogenetics and comparative evolutionary morphology of the flower is a promising direction for the creating of the contemporary evolutionary system of orders, families, subfamilies and genera. Study of micromorphology and vascular anatomy of the flower of monocots is a contemporary method of the study of evolutionary morphology (Fishchuk et al, 2013; Nuraliev & Sokoloff, 2014, Odintsova & Fishchuk, 2017). St.Hil. family have been made by a number of scientists, among them the most active are Meerow et al (2006), Chase et al (2009), García et al (2019)

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