Differential Staining of Aborted and Nonaborted Pollen
- 1 January 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Stain Technology
- Vol. 44 (3) , 117-122
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10520296909063335
Abstract
A single staining solution was made by compounding it in the following order (dyes were from British Drug Houses): ethanol, 10 ml; 1% malachite green in 95% ethanol, 1 ml; distilled water, 50 ml; glycerol 25 ml; phenol, 5 gm; chloral hydrate, 5 gm; acid fuchsin 1% in water, 5 ml; orange G, 1% in water 0.5 ml; and glacial acetic acid, 1–4 ml. For best results in differentiation to give green pollen walls and red protoplasm, the staining solution should be acidified with glacial acetic acid. The amount of acid to be added depends upon thickness of the pollen walls: for very thin-walled pollen, 1 ml; for moderately thin walls, 2 ml; and for thick-walled or spiny-walled pollen, 3 ml of acid. For pollen inside non-dehiscent anthers, 4 ml of acid should be used. Staining is hastened by flaming the slide (for loose thin-walled pollen) or by immersing thick-walled pollen or anthers for 24–48 hr at 50 C. In the typical stain, aborted pollen grains are green; nonaborted, red. The method is useful for pollen inside nondehiscent anthers if these are small and not too deeply coloured naturally. The stain is very durable, especially if the coverslips are sealed with param wax. The staining solution will keep well for about a month. It is useful both for angiosperms and gymnosperm microgametes.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- A SQUASH TECHNIQUE FOR CHROMOSOME MORPHOLOGICAL STUDIESHereditas, 2009
- Evaluation of Seven Tetrazolium Salts as Vital Pollen Stains in Cotton Gossypium hirsutum L.1Crop Science, 1964
- The Cytochemical Reduction of Nitro Blue Tetrazolium as an Index of Pollen ViabilityAmerican Journal of Botany, 1964
- VITAL-STAIN TESTING OF POLLEN VIABILITY IN COTTONJournal of Heredity, 1964