The members of Cyperaceae, referred to as sedges, are common in the Punjab as nearly 36 species are known from the state flora (Nair 1978) and 25 species are recorded from Patiala itself (Sharma and Bir 1978). Inspite of a large amount of work on the cytology of sedges both in India and elsewhere, studies on the mitotic chromosomes are few and practically no work has been done on the members of north Indian plains. Therefore, the present work on karyotypes of 10 species belonging to four genera was taken up not much with the idea of recording the chromosome numbers but with the objective of bringing out the variability, if any, amongst individuals of different populations.
Materials and methodsCertain sedges offer a distinctive advantage in that in the young pollen, mitosis can be studied with a fairly good ease and the presence of a single set of chromo somes makes the analysis of karyotypes easy. For pollen mitosis, not earlier ob served in sedges, young spikes were fixed in 1:3 mixture of glacial acetic acid and ethyl alcohol for 24 hours. Acetocarmine squashes of young pollen were made and slides made permanent in euparol following usual procedures. Camera lucida drawings of mitotic chromosomes were made at a constant magnification for all the species so as to note the comparable chromosome sizes. Following Stebbins (1971), chromosomes were marked with respect to the position of centromere (V-meta centric, L-submetacentric and J-acrocentric). Idiograms were drawn at constant magnification with primary constrictions represented by 2mm gap and secondary constriction by 1mm gap. Chromosome gradient index (GI)I and chromosome symmetry index (SI)2 are calculated according to Pritchard (1967). In GI and SI values, an arbitrary value of 50 is taken as a threshold between symmetrical and asymmetrical karyotypes, species scoring values above this figure have symmetrical karyotypes while those with lower values indicate the asymmetrical condition. Vouchers are preserved in PUN.1 GI is affected by size of chromosomes.More the difference in smallest and largest chromo some, less will be the value of GI and karyotype will be asymmetrical. 2 If in a taxon short and long arms of chromosomes are equal or almost equal (i.e. chromo some are meta or submetacentric), SI value will be high and karyotype is symmetrical and if the differences in short and long arms of chromosomes are greater, the position will be reverse.