Cannabaceae, moraceae and urticaceae
Publication date
2007-11-22T11:19:37Z
Authors
Punt, W.
Malotaux, M.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Although this is not the procedure followed in most of the contributions
to the Northwest European Pollen Flora, this part combines three families.
The reason for this is the close resemblance of the pollen grains in these
three families that often makes identification of the pollen a problem. It is
of practical importance to have similar pollen types combined into a single
key and considerations of this kind also led to the amalgamation of the
families Sparganiaceae and Typhaceae (Punt, 1975).
In Northwest Europe the family Urticaceae is represented by five species
in two genera. The Cannabaceae comprises two genera each with a single
species while the Moraceae has one genus and two species.
Pollen grains of the three families often show a thickening around the
porus margin. It is, however, difficult to decide whether this is caused by a
thickening of the nexine (costa) or of the sexine (annulus). Various authors
have used different terms for this phenomenon. Sorsa and Huttunen (1975)
chose the term "annulus", whereas Birks (1973) used "costa" and Hyde and
Adams (1958) "aspis", a term introduced by Wodehouse (1935).