A contribution to the life history of Angophora floribunda (Sm.) Sweet (Myrtaceae)
Australian Journal of Botany
17(3) 457 - 469
Published: 1969
Abstract
The flower buds of Angophora floribunda appear in the last week of November and anthesis occurs in the middle of January the following year. There is no prolonged resting phase at any stage during embryology and the seeds are shed during late February to early March.
In floral development, the petals are the last structures to be formed. Early anther development precedes corresponding stages in the ovules of the same flower, but events in the ovules proceed more rapidly and meiosis occurs simultaneously in the spore mother cells of both organs. The mature two-celled pollen grains are shed when the ovules contain four-or eight-nucleate embryo sacs.
Many flowers bear anthers containing only sterile pollen grains, which occur either singly or as tetrads. Various abnormalities in the development of the pollen are reported, and the anthers containing sterile pollen neither develop fibrous bands in the endothecium nor do they dehisce.
The ovules are bitegminal, crassinucellar, and hemianatropous. Occasional bifurcation of the inner integument was observed and a hypostase differentiates at the four-nucleate stage of the embryo sac. The embryo sac follows the Polygonum type of development and is five-nucleate and four-celled when mature.
The endosperm is Nuclear in origin, and in about half the seeds examined a granular unidentified substance accumulates in the embryo sac. The development of the embryo is irregular and the seedlings bear a collar-like structure at the junction of the hypocotyl and the radicle. The mature embryos are usually dicotyledonous but rarely tricotyledonous.
The seed coat is formed exclusively by the outer integument; in the ripe seed it consists of an outer epidermis of large, palisade-like, thin-walled, tanniniferous cells and an inner crystalliferous layer.
https://doi.org/10.1071/BT9690457
© CSIRO 1969