Floral Morphology of the family compositae, III. Embryology of Siegesbeckia orientalis L
Australian Journal of Botany
13(1) 1 - 10
Published: 1965
Abstract
The capitulum is heterogamous and globose with a biseriate involucre, the outer most bracts being radiating and glandular wuhile the inner are boat-shaped, enclosing the ray florets. The disc florets are also subtended by bracts, although one or two central bracts do not bear florets. The corolla of the ray florets is bilabiate in material collected from Mussoorie, India, while posterior lip is suppressed in that form Mt.Abu. The stamen and the style correspond to types 2 and V11 respectively of Small (1919). Occasional staminodes in the ray florets represent a reversionary feature.
The development and structure of the microsporangium is described. An ephemeral cell plate is formed after meiosis 1 of the sporocytes. The mature pollen grain is tricellular; the male garnets are elongated and laxly spiral.
The ovule develops slightly to one side of the base of the loculus, and a funicular vascular bundle branches in the integument. The endothelium is uniseriate, later becoming multiseriate at the two ends of the embryo sac, and it develops a cuticle on its inner face which persists in the seed after the endothelium degenerates. The development of the embryo sac is of the Polygonum type. The antipodals and one synergid become haustorial after fertilization. Supernumery pollen tubes were noted. Failure of fertilization in exceptional cases results in unusaul behaviour of the endothelium, degeneration of the embryo sacs, and seed sterility.
The endosperm is nuclear, later becoming cellular, and is outermost layer persists in the seed. Embryogeny is of the asterad type.
https://doi.org/10.1071/BT9650001
© CSIRO 1965