Pollen--tiny and ephemeral but not forgotten: New ideas on their ecology and evolution

Am J Bot. 2016 Mar;103(3):365-74. doi: 10.3732/ajb.1600074. Epub 2016 Mar 15.

Abstract

Ecologists and evolutionary biologists have been interested in the functional biology of pollen since the discovery in the 1800s that pollen grains encompass tiny plants (male gametophytes) that develop and produce sperm cells. After the discovery of double fertilization in flowering plants, botanists in the early 1900s were quick to explore the effects of temperature and maternal nutrients on pollen performance, while evolutionary biologists began studying the nature of haploid selection and pollen competition. A series of technical and theoretic developments have subsequently, but usually separately, expanded our knowledge of the nature of pollen performance and how it evolves. Today, there is a tremendous diversity of interests that touch on pollen performance, ranging from the ecological setting on the stigma, structural and physiological aspects of pollen germination and tube growth, the form of pollen competition and its role in sexual selection in plants, virus transmission, mating system evolution, and inbreeding depression. Given the explosion of technical knowledge of pollen cell biology, computer modeling, and new methods to deal with diversity in a phylogenetic context, we are now more than ever poised for a new era of research that includes complex functional traits that limit or enhance the evolution of these deceptively simple organisms.

Keywords: functional trait; gametophytic competition; haploid selection; male gametophyte; natural selection; performance trait; pollen competition; pollen germination; pollen tube growth; sexual selection.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution*
  • Ecological and Environmental Phenomena*
  • Haploidy
  • Inbreeding
  • Ovule / physiology
  • Pollen / physiology*