Abstract

Monotropa uniflora is an achlorophyllous angiosperm consisting of a mycorrhizae-dependent root system that produces floriferous, aerial shoots. Each of the numerous, minute ovules is anatropous, unitegmic, and contains a Polygonum type female gametophyte. Following double fertilization, a lipid-rich, cellular endosperm develops in association with both chalazal and micropylar haustoria. The vacuolate zygote elongates prior to a cytoplasmically unequal division resulting in a small terminal cell subtended by a larger, vacuolate basal cell. The basal cell eventually degenerates, isolating the terminal cell which is completely surrounded by endosperm. The terminal cell undergoes a cytoplasmically equal transverse division resulting in a two-celled embryo embedded in endosperm. In final stages of seed maturation, lipids decrease and reserve proteins increase in the cytoplasm of both the endosperm and embryo. The morphological reduction of the mature embryo may be associated with a specialized mode of nutrition.

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