Abstract

The main objective of this study is to establish the level of pollen abortion prior to its release from the anther in species of Chenopodiaceae in marsh habitats and to compare this level among the taxons, locations and positions of the flowers in the dichasium and the relative positions of the anthers. We established the level of nonfunctional pollen formation in 39 samples belonging to 10 species, using lactophenol cotton blue staining. Aborted pollen grains were found to be significantly smaller than normal ones. The results revealed differences in the percentage of normal grains among different species and tribes studied: Atripliceae (56.1 ± 27.1%), Salicornieae (80.36 ± 16.52%), Suaedeae (54.7 ± 31.2%) and Salsoleae (32.5 ± 25.7%). In some species there were significant differences among the populations studied, but in species of Saliconieae we found no differences either between different positions in the dicasia or in the anther. In the tribes Suaedeae and Salsoleae, we postulate the existence of a system that maintains different levels of partial male sterility among individuals in the populations, which would reduce the autogamous fruit set rate and favor the cross-pollination rates of sterile male individuals. We base this on high intrapopulation variability at those levels, on the constancy with which they are presented in the different populations studied, and on the lack of interannual differences.

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