Abstract.
Pollen acquisition for seed production, breeding programs and supplemental pollination can be costly and difficult. The identification of dry particulates for use as pollen diluents would facilitate the use of limited amounts of pollen and aid in accurate pollen application and dispersion. Four powders – Rilsan ES, polyester, wheat flour, and Lycopodium spores – were evaluated as pollen diluents using petunia as a model system. Diluents were combined with petunia pollen at a 5:1 (v/v) ratio. Two types of studies were conducted: (1) storage studies evaluated the viability of pollen combined and held with diluent for different durations; and (2) in vivo studies evaluated pollen tube growth in the styles of flowers pollinated with pollen-diluent mixtures. Pollen germination was not affected when stored as pollen-diluent mixtures for 4 days. Slight detrimental effects on pollen germination were observed after 6 days storage with Rilsan ES powders. Pollination with all the pollen-diluent mixtures resulted in fewer pollen tubes growing in the style compared to controls diluted with heat-killed pollen instead of diluent powders. Lycopodium-pollen mixtures were the most inhibitory, providing only 8% of the tube numbers observed in controls. Pollen mixed with polyester powders, Rilsan ES powders or wheat flour had tube numbers ranging from 47 to 61% of the control, but still had 175 or more pollen tubes per style, which would be sufficient for high rates of seed set in petunia. Wheat flour-pollen mixtures tended to clump and degrade pollen flow. Rilsan ES and polyester were identified as two promising pollen diluent powders that can facilitate accurate metering and distribution of pollen, produce large numbers of pollen tubes, and maintain pollen viability under storage.
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Yi, W., Law, E.S. & Wetzstein, H.Y. Polyester and nylon powders used as pollen diluents preserve pollen germination and tube growth in controlled pollinations. Sex Plant Reprod 15, 265–269 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00497-002-0160-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00497-002-0160-6