Abstract

Abstract Lamellations are visualizable through the staining commonly used in transmission electron microscopy during exine formation on Lycopodium and other spores, and the nexine of pollen grains. The lamellations so exposed consist-of dark tapes at either side of an unstained (white) line. Neither tapes nor white lines are visualizable in the exine of mature spores of Lycopodium. The continued presence of lamellations having tape-white line spacing has been demonstrated with inorganic tracers in the nexine of pollen in which lamellations otherwise appeared to be absent. Through high contrast staining methods for TEM we have observed lamellations in the residual exine following heat treatment (350[ddot]C) of mature spores of Lycopodium clavatum. The surface of these residual exines was etched by treatment with hot 2-aminoethanol and filaments were observed to protrude from the etched surfaces. The residual exine stained darkly. Lycopodium spores heated to 300[ddot]C at 1 kb pressure had long filaments ex...

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