The megagametophyte of Epidendrum scutella, an orchid, was examined with the electron microscope after the entrance and discharge of the pollen tube. The pollen tube enters the embryo sac by growing through the filiform apparatus of a synergid and discharges through a terminal pore into the degenerating cytoplasm of the synergid. The synergid nucleus appears pushed to one side by the discharge of the pollen tube. What is believed to be the remains of the vegetative nucleus has been found in the degenerate synergid, but no trace of the sperm cytoplasm has been seen. The zygote is approximately the same size as the egg. The ribosomes become grouped into polysomes. Both the egg and the zygote apparently completely lack dictyosomes. The polar nuclei partially fuse before fertilization, but fusion of the sperm nucleus with the polar nuclei does not occur and no endosperm is produced. Polysome formation occurs in the central cell and large amounts of tubular, smooth ER are seen. The antipodals remain following fertilization, undergoing ultrastructural changes similar to the central cell.
The pollinium of Epidendrum scutella, both in the anther and on the stigma, was examined with the electron microscope. The sporoderm of the outer tetrads has a sexine and an intine while that of the inner tetrads lacks a sexine, and an intine is formed only after the pollinium is on the stigma. A fibrous wall layer apparently holds the tetrads together. The cytoplasm is filled with plastids, mitochondria, polysomes, vacuoles and vesicles of various sizes, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with narrow cisternae. The vegetative nucleus is oval in form and contains a large nucleolus. The generative nucleus is deeply lobed and contains a well-developed nucleolus. The generative cytoplasm lacks both plastids and mitochondria and has little ER. Dictyosomes are present as well as assorted vesicles. A pocket is present between the plasma membrane of the generative cell and the wall; it contains assorted membranes and ribosome-like particles. After the pollen is on the stigma the wall surrounding the generative cell begins to disappear and gaps develop in it.
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