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Research Articles

Contribution to the pollen morphology of Astragalus L. section Aegacantha Bunge (Galegeae-Fabaceae) and its systematic significance

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Article: 2264352 | Published online: 08 Dec 2023
 

Abstract

Astragalus L. sect. Aegacantha Bunge includes 57 described species, mostly confined to Southwest Asia and Central Asia. We studied the pollen morphology of 17 species of this section present in Pakistan. Pollen morphology of sect. Aegacantha species is poorly investigated despite its systematic importance. The main aim of this study is to determine and document the pollen characters that can assist in the taxonomic identification of species in this difficult section. Pollen slides were prepared following acetolysis and examined by both light and scanning electron microscopy. Pollen size varies, with the polar axis ranging from 32.91 to 43.10 μm and the equatorial axis from 22.91 to 28.47 μm. Pollen is sub-prolate (1.15–1.33) to prolate (1.34–2.00) in shape, small to medium in size, radially symmetrical, isopolar, trizonocolporate to tricolporate, and monad. Sculpture variations (i.e. reticulate, microreticulate, perforate, microperforate, regulate, microregulate and granulate) were observed around the apertural, meridional and polar regions. Ordination analysis (principal component analysis (PCA)) revealed that the quantitative characters of pollen morphology are the most reliable characters for delimitation of species within section Aegacantha. Cluster analysis (unweighted pair group method using arithmetic average (UPGMA)) shows a partial relationship between the Aegacantha taxa clustered based on pollen characters and supports the general morphology. Further, this study shows that the pollen traits provide a baseline for phylogenetic optimisation in the investigated Aegacantha section.

Acknowledgements

The present study was financially supported by the ALP project ‘Ex-situ conservation of wild edible and medicinal plants from poorly explored bio-diversity hotspot of Pakistan’ (CS-245). The authors are grateful to the National Herbarium of Pakistan (RAW), for providing specimens for this study. The authors also thank the Centralized Resource Laboratories (CRL), Department of Physics, University of Peshawar, for providing SEM facilities for this work.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no potential conflict of interest.

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