“…We used Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy to generate chemical data, because it is an efficient method that has demonstrated success in pollen characterisation and classification studies (Bagcıoglu et al, 2015(Bagcıoglu et al, , 2017Bell et al, 2018;Bernard et al, 2015;Dell'Anna et al, 2009;Depciuch et al, 2018;Domínguez et al, 1998;Fraser et al, 2012Fraser et al, , 2014Gottardini et al, 2007;Jardine et al, 2015Julier et al, 2016;Lomax et al, 2008;Pappas et al, 2003;Steemans et al, 2010;Watson et al, 2007;Zimmermann, 2010Zimmermann, , 2018Zimmermann and Kohler, 2014;Zimmermann et al, 2015aZimmermann et al, , b, 2016. The pollen samples were picked onto ZnSe windows for FTIR analysis, which was carried out using a Thermo Scientific (Waltham, MA, USA) Nicolet Nexus FTIR bench unit, attached to a Continuum IR microscope fitted with an MCT-A liquid nitrogen-cooled detector, run in transmission mode using a Reflachromat 15× objective.…”