Abstract

The spore wall of Andreaea rothii (Andreaeopsida) is unique among mosses studied by transmission electron microscopy. The exine of other mosses is typically initiated on trilaminar structures of near unit membrane dimensions just outside the plasma membrane. The exine of Andreaea is initiated in the absence of such structures as discrete globules within the coarsely fibrillar network of the sporocyte wall. The sequence of wall layer development, nevertheless, is essentially like that of other mosses. The intine is deposited within the exine and the perine accumulates on the surface of the exine during the latter stages of spore maturation. The mature spore is weakly trilete and inaperturate. The wall consists of three layers, the inner intine, the spongy exine consisting of loosely compacted irregular globules of sporopollenin, and an outer layer of perine. The perine differs ultrastructurally from the exine only in its greater degree of electron opacity. This ultrastructural evidence of departure from the fundamental pattern of exine development in mosses supports the taxonomic isolation of Andreaea from mosses of the Sphagnopsida and Bryopsida.

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