Abstract

Ovular morphology was examined ultrastructurally inPseudotsuga menziesii to determine the effects of the ovule on pollen development. Vesicles containing lipid-like substances traverse cell walls of the inner epidemis of the integument and release their contents at the integument surface to form the integumentary membrane. A major aqueous secretion from the integument into the micropylar canal is proposed to occur by the movement of the integumentary membrane and its invaginations towards the center of the micropylar canal. The cellular degeneration of the nucellar apex results from the breakdown of vacuoles. After this degeneration, electron-dense substances move from the prothallial cells of the female gametophyte towards the nucellus, and many morphological changes in the nucellus, prothallial cells, and micropylar canal take place simultaneously. We interpret these changes to result from another major secretion from the prothallial cells. Egg cytoplasm appears to disorganize for a short time. Simultaneously, substantial amounts of electron dense-substances in the prothallial cells and lipid-like substances in surface cell walls of the female gametophyte move towards the nucellus as components of the third major secretion.

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