Pollen Ultrastructural Image Analysis among Ancient Native Olive Genotypes in the Central Eastern Tunisia

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dc.contributor.author Laaribi, I.
dc.contributor.author Mezghani Aïachi, M.
dc.contributor.author Gouta, H.
dc.contributor.author Giordano, C.
dc.contributor.author Salvatici, M. C.
dc.contributor.author Labidi, F.
dc.contributor.author Mars, M.
dc.date.accessioned 2018-01-25T10:08:51Z
dc.date.available 2018-01-25T10:08:51Z
dc.date.issued 2018-01-25
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3701
dc.description Paper en_US
dc.description.abstract The olive tree (Olea europaea L.) is considered as one of the oldest and the most important fruit crops of the Mediterranean basin, which is characterized by the existence of a considerable number of different olive cultivars. Therefore, the olive cultivar identification is crucial to safeguard the genetic patrimony of this species. Different morphological and molecular markers were used to discriminate among cultivars. The aim of the present work was to describe different pollen morphological and ultrastructural parameters (shape, size and exine pattern) as an additional tool for the identification of olive cultivars. Observations were carried on seventy centennial olive accessions grown in the Central Eastern part of Tunisia using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Image analysis (ImageJ). Pollen were threezonocolpate and elliptical-prolate or subprolate. Pollen morphological qualitative traits revealed specific differences among the studied genotypes including variation in whole grain shape and also exine pattern ornamentation as meshes profile and regularity and muri thickness. The quantitatively measured traits were significantly different among pollen from diverse genotypes. Polar and equatorial diameters varied from 21.80 to 29.88 μm and from 14.47 to 21.14 μm, respectively, while the pollen area ranged between 274.58 and 466.35 μm2. Frequency distributions of most measured pollen parameters depicted a normal distribution. The three principal components of the Principal Component Analysis (PCA) accounted for more than 97% of the total variation. The first Principal Component (PC1) was correlated to pollen size. The second (PC2) and the third (PC3) were correlated to exine texture and to pollen shape, respectively. Both morphometric features and exine pattern observations were potentially relevant tools to discriminate among the studied genotypes. Further combination between pollen ultrastructural analysis, morphological and molecular markers is fully desirable, in subsequent work, to improve both reliability and discriminative ability for cultivars classification. Keywords: Exine pattern, Olea europaea L., Pollen micromorphology, Scanning electron. Microscopy. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher JKUAT en_US
dc.subject Microscopy. en_US
dc.subject Scanning electron. en_US
dc.subject Pollen micromorphology, en_US
dc.subject Olea europaea L., en_US
dc.subject Exine pattern, en_US
dc.title Pollen Ultrastructural Image Analysis among Ancient Native Olive Genotypes in the Central Eastern Tunisia en_US
dc.type Working Paper en_US


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