2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2014.06.024
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Spectral fluorescence variation of pollen and spores from recent peat-forming plants

Abstract: The fluorescence properties of spores and pollen grains examined under ultraviolet incident light are used to assess the maturity of sedimentary organic matter and may have other applications in relation to recent sediments, in areas such as palaeoenvironmental research. In this study pollen grains and spores from 33 species common in peat ecosystems were mounted on a glass slide in accordance with standard palynologycal procedures for recent plants. The main objective of this work was to assess the variabilit… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The spectrum obtained with Solution 2 gives two main peaks at 424 and 456 nm, then absorbance diminishes and slightly increases again for 718 nm up to a scarce 20% of the main peaks. Flavonoids can account for 2-5% of pollen dry weight [2], but the specific compounds depend on geographical area [46], and FT-IR spectroscopy or spectral fluorescence analysis should be required to identify them [47,48]. This would complicate our analysis.…”
Section: Dyes Preparation and Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The spectrum obtained with Solution 2 gives two main peaks at 424 and 456 nm, then absorbance diminishes and slightly increases again for 718 nm up to a scarce 20% of the main peaks. Flavonoids can account for 2-5% of pollen dry weight [2], but the specific compounds depend on geographical area [46], and FT-IR spectroscopy or spectral fluorescence analysis should be required to identify them [47,48]. This would complicate our analysis.…”
Section: Dyes Preparation and Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the sporopollenin itself also shows some autofluorescence 71 , 72 , the smooth, protruding intine wall could clearly be distinguished (Fig. 1 a).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Natural autofluorescence of sporopollenin in the pollen wall can also be used for taxonomic identification and sorting of environmental pollen samples (e.g., airborne pollen [24]) and fossil pollen from sediments [23,25]. While such autofluorescence is relatively uniform within species, users should be aware that exceptions have been observed [26]. Gating based on fluorescence may be further enhanced in the case of fluorescently-tagged lines (FTLs) [27], membranepermeable DNA stains [9], or the latter combined with SSC variation [28].…”
Section: Whole Mature Pollen and Sporesmentioning
confidence: 99%