Abstract
The stigma and style of 94 species of Eucalyptus and two species of Angophora were studied by scanning
electron microscopy and/or light microscopy. All species had papillate stigmas and a stylar canal of
varying length. Angophora species had mop-like stigmas with long papillae that were very similar in
appearance to those of the red bloodwood group of the Corymbia, e.g. E. gummifera. The spotted gum
group of the Corymbia had mop-like stigmas with short papillae and the yellow bloodwoods had tapered
stigmas. The latter group was also charaderised by an extremely thick cuticle on the outer surface of
the style, over 100 �m in thickness in E. watsoniana. All species in Blakella had tapered stigmas with
a lobed surface and relatively few short papillae. The stylar canal had no cuticle in E. papuana.
Eudesmia is a variable subgenus with E. erythrocorys unusual in having long multicellular papillae. Most
Symphyomyrtus species had blunt or pinhead-shaped lobed stigmas with a heavily cutinised stylar canal.
E. deglupta and E. microcorys did not conform to this pattern and had mop-shaped stigmas with long
papillae. Monocalyptus species had blunt stigmas with few papillae and hollow styles and appeared to
form a cohesive group.
On the basis of stigma and style morphology Angophora is more similar to Corymbia than to
Blakella. E. deglupta and E. microcorys are distinct from other Symphyomyrtus species studied.
E. trachyphloia and E. jacobsiana are more similar to E. gummifera than to E. watsoniana or other
yellow bloodwoods.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
27 articles.
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