Publication | Open Access
Pollen Viability in Lychee
39
Citations
0
References
1998
Year
BiologyPlant BiologyHand PollinationEngineeringFertilityBotanyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPlant ReproductionPollen DiagramPollen GerminationVitro Pollen GerminationSeed ProcessingPlant PhysiologyPollen Viability
The lychee ( Litchi chinensis Sonn.) has two types of pollen-releasing flowers—M 1 and M 2 . We compared the morphology and viability of these two pollen types, mainly for the two commercial cultivars in Israel: `Mauritius' and `Floridian'. Observation by scanning electron microscope did not reveal any consistent morphological differences between the two pollen types. However, M 2 pollen was found to have a consistent and significant advantage over M 1 pollen in in vitro germination tests. M 2 pollen from `Mauritius', `Floridian', `No Mai Chee', `Wai Chee', and `Early Large Red' had a much higher germination rate at 15, 20, 25, 30, and 35 °C than M 1 pollen from those same cultivars. The optimal incubation temperature for in vitro pollen germination was 30 °C for M 2 pollen of all five cultivars studied; adequate germination rates were also found at 35 and 25 °C. The optimal temperature for M 1 pollen germination was also 30 °C for `Mauritius' and `No Mai Chee', but was not well defined for the other three cultivars. No pronounced advantage of M 2 pollen-tube growth could be discerned 48 h after hand pollination. However, final fruit set was consistently and significantly higher after hand pollination with M 2 pollen, relative to M 1 pollen. Hot (32/27 °C) and warm (27/22 °C) regimes during flower development had a pronounced detrimental effect on pollen viability compared to a cool (22/17 °C) regime. `Floridian' was much more susceptible than `Mauritius' in this respect.