Pollen

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Pollen grains with different surfaces from different plants: Lilium auratum with monocolpate pollen grains; the others have tricolpate pollen grains: sunflower ( Helianthus annuus ), morning glory ( Ipomoea purpurea ), Sildalcea malviflora , evening primrose ( Oenothera fruticosa ) and castor bean ( Ricinus communis ).

The pollen ( latin pollen , very fine flour, flour dust ' ) or pollen is the most flour-like mass, in the stamens of seed plants is formed. It consists of the pollen grains. As a result of a reduction division ( meiosis ) , these are haploid , i. H. their cells only have a single set of chromosomes . They thus correspond to the gametophytes of the mosses and ferns (see the article Diplohaplont ).

Pollen grains are surrounded by a resistant wall, the sporoderm, which, among other things, consists of sporopollenin . They serve to bring the male gametes (germ cells) protected to the female receiving organs and thus enable pollination and subsequently fertilization .

construction

Pollen grains
Pollen grain from hibiscus . The white bar is 170 µm long.

Pollen grains are very diverse in size, shape and surface structure and can often be assigned to the respective species or at least genera on the basis of these characteristics. Most pollen grains are between 10 and 100 micrometers in size, the largest are Cucurbita with 170 to 180 micrometers in diameter.

Intine and Exine

Pollen grains have a resistant wall, which is called the sporoderm here . The sporoderm consists of two layer complexes: the inner intine and the outer exine.

The intine is usually tender and not particularly resistant. It often consists of two to three layers, the outermost layer having a high pectin content, which makes it easy to detach from the exine. The inner layers consist mainly of cellulose fibrils. When the pollen grain germinates, the vegetative cell surrounded by the intine grows into a pollen tube.

The main component of the exine is the resistant sporopollenin , which builds up the exine in granules around six nanometers in size. This consists of two layers: the inner endexin and the outer ectexin .

  • In the gymnosperms (Nacktsamer) the endexine has a lamellar structure. The ectexin in turn consists of an inner foot layer and an outer compact layer that envelop a granular or alveolar middle layer.
  • In angiosperms , the endexine has a granular structure. The endexins and the dense foot layer of the ectexins are combined to form the nexine. The rest of the ectexins form the sexins , which are usually very strongly structured. If the sexine consists of rods, clubs, cones, warts and similar structures, but without an outer layer, one speaks of intectate pollen grains. In the case of tectate pollen grains, the columns (Columellae, Bacula) are connected on the outside to form a layer, the tectum . The tectum, on the other hand, can be very diverse: openwork, multi-layered, and in turn sculptured.
Various substances are deposited or stored in the cavities of the tectum:
  • Pollen putty (or pollen glue) is an oily substance made up of lipids and carotenoids and causes the pollen grains to adhere to the pollinators. Pollen putty is only produced by angiosperms, but it can also be absent.
  • Incompatibility proteins : These are used to prevent self-fertilization.

The structure of the exine is determined by the pollen grain. The material, the sporopollenin, is, however, formed by the tapetum of the anther wall and deposited on the pollen grain.

Apertures

On the pollen grains there are one or mostly several germ openings (apertures). The exine is missing at these points. The pollen tube can grow through one of the apertures when the pollen germinates. The pollen grain has a proximal pole, which is the pole pointing into the center of the pollen tetrad, and a distal pole. The equatorial plane is perpendicular to the poles.

  • Pollen without an aperture is called inaperturat, those with an aperturat.
  • Longitudinal germinal folds are called sulcus if they lie at the distal pole. The pollen is then sulcat. This is true for most naked people.
  • Equatorial germ folds or those distributed over the entire surface are called colpus, the pollen colpat.
  • Ulcus is a rounded germ pore at the distal pole (adjective ulcerat).
  • Porus is a germ pore on the equatorial pole or on the entire surface (adjective porat).
  • Composite openings for germs are called colporat.

According to the number of germ openings, a distinction is made between mono- (one), tri- (three), stephano- (more than three in the equatorial plane) and panto-aperturate (more than three spread over the entire surface) pollen. Structures located in the equatorial plane are designated with the syllable zono-.

In the monocot and the basal dicots ( Magnoliidae ) mono-aperturate pollen predominates. Among the Rosopsida , tricolpate pollen and its modifications are predominant.

The aperture can be covered by an operculum, a structure completely separate from the rest of the sexine.

Electrostatic charge

Pollen often carries static electrical charges . Since many flowering plants are capable of active electrical orientation , the plant can register the arrival of pollen (also adhering to insects) in the flower and, for example, open the flowers further. The electrical field it creates can change the plant within seconds to respond to incoming pollen or insects. But even with wind pollination, the difference in charge of the pollen is a selective advantage. This phenomenon is used for industrial electrostatic dusting .

Units of propagation

In most cases, the pollen grains are spread out individually, i.e. as monads . In addition, they can also be released into the air in groups of two or four grains, in which case one speaks of dyads or tetrads. Tetrads form when the daughter cells of a pollen mother cell stick together. This is the case with the Ericaceae , for example . In the Cyperaceae three of the four daughter cells are reduced, so that pseudomonads arise.

Pollen grains can be held together in larger groups with pollen putty; Viscine threads, sticky threads made of sporopollenin, cellulose and / or proteins are another possibility. If the pollen grains of several pollen mother cells remain connected to each other, polyads of 8, 16 or 32 pollen grains arise , for example in the Mimosoideae . Larger groups are also known as massulae (singular: massula; diminutive of the Latin massa , (dough) mass). Examples are the acacias and many orchids .

If the entire contents of one or more pollen sacs remain connected, they are called pollinium . The pollinium is often surrounded by a common sporopollenin shell and occurs in some representatives of the Apocynaceae and orchids. A pollinarium is a pollinium with the appendage organs that serve to spread; in the case of orchids these are stems and adhesive discs. In Strasburger the definition differs from this as pollinium from one pollen sac, pollinarium from several pollen sacs.

There is a relationship between the size of the pollen packets and the pollinators. The more specifically a pollinator is adapted to a type of plant, for example orchids, the larger the pollen packages that are given to it. In the case of non-specific pollinators (e.g. many beetles), the individual pollen packets are small, since the probability that the pollinator will visit a flower of the same species again is low.

Development of the pollen grain

A western honey bee transporting pollen

Pollen grains are formed in the pollen sacs of the anthers of a stamen . After meiosis, four haploid pollen grains emerge from each pollen mother cell (also called microspore mother cell ) . In each pollen grain at least one further cell division takes place during the maturation, whereby in the angiosperms one or two small generative cells and a larger, surrounding this vegetative cell arise. The number of cells in the naked samers is higher, up to a maximum of 50. The pollen grains are fed by the tapetum, the innermost layer of the anther wall. Reserve substances ( proteins , carbohydrates and lipids ) are stored in the vegetative cell , and moisture is removed from the pollen grain during maturation.

The formation of the pollen grain wall begins in the unicellular stage with the formation of a primexine by the pollen cell . This consists mainly of cellulose and serves as a matrix in which the sporopollenin formed by the surrounding tapetum is stored. After the primexins have formed, the pollen cell surrounds itself with the intine, from which the wall of the pollen tube later emerges during pollen germination.

Spread of pollen

Main article pollination

Bumblebee ( Bombus terrestris ) on a globular thistle during pollination.

The pollen is spread by the wind ( anemogamy ), water (hydrogamy) or by animals ( zoogamy ) (e.g. insects , birds ; see also bird flower ). Pollen has been around for an estimated 300 million years and is essential for pollination for more than half of plants. The pollen can be transferred from one flower to another ( pollination ).

Pollen science

Since pollen is widely distributed by the wind, among other things, and is often retained in lake sediments or peat , it is of great interest in geology and climate research . Based on the pollen found, conclusions can be drawn, for example, about the history of the forest in Central Europe and thus also about the climate of a geological period. The science that deals with this topic is called palynology . The origin of the honey can be determined based on the pollen it contains. This field of activity is known as melissa palynology . Pollen analyzes are also used to solve crimes ( forensic palynology ). In 1959, a murder in Austria was solved for the first time using pollen analysis.

Importance to humans

Collected clumps of pollen
Pollen, e.g. B. Phacelia (purple)

harvest

Former bee on return to the hive, with filled "pollen pants"
Pollen from various plants is used as food for the bees' brood

In beekeeping , a special device called a pollen trap can be attached to the entrance (entrance hole) of a beehive . This is essentially a grid through which the returning flying bees have to squeeze their way through, whereby they lose their “pollen pants”. The pollen clumps fall into a collecting vessel, which is usually emptied twice a day. The pollen obtained in this way must then be cleaned immediately (sort out foreign bodies) and dried. Like the bee bread , which also consists predominantly of pollen, the pollen is edible.

The pollen trap should be removed regularly so that the protein supply necessary for rearing the bees is guaranteed.

Allergies

The pollen carried by the wind is problematic for many people with allergies . After contact with an aqueous phase, the pollen grains release a number of proteins, lipids and sugars. A specific immune reaction develops to some proteins and lipids, which triggers an allergic reaction on the second and every subsequent contact . This can be associated with reddened and watery eyes, sneezing and runny nose ( allergic rhinitis ). In the countryside the pollen concentrations are high in the morning, in the city in the evening. The Iatropalynologie deals with the elucidation of these effects.

Pollen calendar

According to the phenological calendar, due to the climate in Central Europe, the following types of pollen are usually found, depending on the regionally prevailing weather :

See also

literature

swell

further reading

  • H. Halbritter, S. Ulrich, F. Grimsson, M. Weber, R. Zetter, M. Hesse, R. Buchner, M. Svojtka: Illustrated Pollen Terminology . 2nd Edition, SpringerOpen, Vienna 2018, Open Access (PDF download)
  • W. Punt, PP Hoen, S. Blackmore, S. Nilsson, A. Le Thomas: Glossary of pollen and spore terminology. In: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. Volume 143, 2007, pp. 1–81, doi: 10.1016 / j.revpalbo.2006.06.008 , online (PDF; 1.56 MB).
  • Karl Gransier: The use of pollen traps to investigate the pollen input of the honey bee (Apis mellifera carnica, Pollmann) with special consideration of the effects on the behavior and performance of the bee colony. Dissertation, Bonn 1984.
  • Enoch Zander : pollen design and determination of origin for blossom honey. with 778 illustrations on 80 plates, Verlag der Reichsfachgruppe Beekeeper, Berlin 1935 DNB-Link
  • Antonia Zurbuchen, Andreas Müller: Wild bee protection - from science to practice. Zurich, Bristol Foundation; Bern, Stuttgart, Vienna, Haupt-Verlag, 2012, ISBN 978-3-258-07722-2 .

Web links

Wiktionary: Pollen  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations
Commons : Pollen  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Duden | Pollen | Spelling, meaning, definition, origin. Retrieved August 26, 2017 .
  2. Peter Schütt , Hans Joachim Schuck, Bernd Stimm (ed.): Lexicon of tree and shrub species. The standard work of forest botany. Morphology, pathology, ecology and systematics of important tree and shrub species . Nikol, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-933203-53-8 , pp. 390 (reprinted 1992).
  3. a b Glossary of pollen and spore terminology .
  4. a b Y. Dai, SE Law: Modeling the transient electric field produced by a charged pollen cloud entering a flower. In: Industry Applications Conference, 1995. Thirtieth IAS Annual Meeting, IAS '95., Conference Record of the 1995 IEEE.
  5. ^ Yiftach Vaknin, S. Gan-Mor, A. Bechar, B. Ronen, D. Eisikowitch: The role of electrostatic forces in pollination. In: Plant Systematics and Evolution. 222, Vol. 1-4, 2000, pp. 133-142.
  6. ^ Yiftach Vaknin, Samuel Gan-mor, Avital Bechar, Beni Ronen, Dan Eisikowitch: Are flowers morphologically adapted to take advantage of electrostatic forces in pollination? In: New Phytologist 152, No. 2, 2001, pp. 301-306, doi: 10.1046 / j.0028-646X.2001.00263.x .
  7. Dominic Clarke: Detection and learning of floral electric fields by bumblebees. In: Science . Online advance publication of February 21, 2013, doi: 10.1126 / science.1230883 .
  8. George E. Bowker, Hugh C. Crenshaw: Electrostatic forces in wind-pollination — Part 1: Measurement of the electrostatic charge on pollen. In: Atmospheric Environment 41, No. 8, 2007, pp. 1587–1595, doi: 10.1016 / j.atmosenv.2006.10.047 .
  9. ^ S. Edward Law: Agricultural electrostatic spray application: a review of significant research and development during the 20th century. In: Journal of Electrostatics. 51, 2001, pp. 25-42, doi: 10.1016 / S0304-3886 (01) 00040-7 .
  10. ^ Wagenitz: Dictionary of Botany. 2003, p. 192.
  11. ^ Wagenitz: Dictionary of Botany. 2003, p. 256 f.
  12. Peter Leins, Claudia Erbar: Blossom and Fruit. Aspects of morphology, evolutionary history, phylogeny, function and ecology . Schweizerbart, Stuttgart 2000, ISBN 3-510-65194-4 , pp. 63,189 .
  13. Strasburger. 2002, p. 761.
  14. Peter Leins, Claudia Erbar: Blossom and Fruit. Aspects of morphology, evolutionary history, phylogeny, function and ecology . Schweizerbart, Stuttgart 2000, ISBN 3-510-65194-4 , pp. 63.154 .
  15. BM Johri (ed.): Embryology of Angiosperms. Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg / New York / Tokyo 1984, p. 197.
  16. BM Johri (ed.): Embryology of Angiosperms. Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg / New York / Tokyo 1984, p. 230.
  17. BM Johri (ed.): Embryology of Angiosperms. Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg / New York / Tokyo 1984, p. 232 f.
  18. BM Johri (ed.): Embryology of Angiosperms. Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg / New York / Tokyo 1984, p. 242.
  19. Eat pollen
  20. Early pollen of the purple alder