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- Title
The synstigma turns the fig into a large flower.
- Authors
Teixeira, Simone P; Costa, Marina F B; Basso-Alves, João Paulo; Kjellberg, Finn; Pereira, Rodrigo A S
- Abstract
The synstigma is a structure formed by clusters of two to several stigmas, whether in the same or between different flowers. Although rare in angiosperms, synstigmas are found in c. 500 out of the c. 750 Ficus spp. (Moraceae). This floral structure is associated with fig-fig wasp pollinating mutualism. The synstigma structure and pollen tube pathways were studied in six Ficus spp. from Ficus section Americanae to test the hypothesis that the synstigma allows pollen grains deposited on a stigma to emit pollen tubes that can grow laterally and fertilize surrounding flowers. Syconia containing recently pollinated stigmas were collected and dissected, and the stigmas were processed for analyses with light and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The arrangement of the synstigmas across species can be spaced or congested, with the number of stigmas per synstigma ranging from two to 20. Contact between the stigmas in a synstigma occurs by the intertwining of the stigmatic branches and papillae; their union is firm or loose. The pollen tube grows through live cells of the transmitting tissue until reaching the ovule micropyle. Curved pollen tubes growing from one stigma to another were observed in five out of the six species studied. The curvilinear morphology of pollen tubes probably results from competition by pollen between the stigmas composing a synstigma via chemotropic signals. The synstigma appears to be a key adaptation that ensures seed production by flowers not exploited by the fig wasps in actively pollinated Ficus spp.
- Subjects
SCANNING transmission electron microscopy; POLLEN tube; MORACEAE; POLLEN; LIGHT transmission
- Publication
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2021, Vol 195, Issue 1, p93
- ISSN
0024-4074
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/botlinnean/boaa061