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Structural features of Rhododendron luteum flower

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Abstract

The flower of Rhododendron luteum (L.) Sweet has a pentamerous structure with radial symmetry. The anthers filament surface is covered by dense non-glandular hairs to the half of the height. The tubular anther dehisces along creating two openings in the anther-sac walls and the viscous pollen is released through two splits along the anther lobes. The pistil is pentamerous and the axial channel is filled with a mucilaginous secretion product which is continuous with the exudate on the stigma surface. The stigmatic papillae are densely packed and their exudate is stained intensively red for carbohydrates, while pollen grains are stained positively for lipids. The five-locular ovary has isomerous carpels (syncarpous gynoecium) and the ovary surface is covered by numerous, densely-packed glandular and non-glandular hairs protecting the nectar against transpiration. Numerous ovules per locule occur with one integument and a thin-walled megasporiangium. In carpels, oil cells occur sporadically as solitary idioblasts, located around the vascular bundles. Transmitting tissue cells contain a large central, electron translucent vacuole, filling most of the cell containing dark osmiophilic bodies homogenous or granular in appearance.

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Sawidis, T., Theodoridou, T., Weryszko-Chmielewska, E. et al. Structural features of Rhododendron luteum flower. Biologia 66, 610–617 (2011). https://doi.org/10.2478/s11756-011-0059-5

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