Folding of Pollen Grains

ORAL

Abstract

At dehiscence, which occurs when the anther reaches maturity and opens, pollen grains dehydrate and their volume is reduced. The pollen wall deforms to accommodate the volume loss, and the deformation pathway depends on the initial turgid pollen grain geometry and the mechanical properties of the pollen wall. We demonstrate, using both experimental and theoretical approaches, that the design of the apertures (areas on the pollen wall where the stretching and the bending modulus are reduced) is critical for controlling the folding pattern, and ensures the pollen grain viability. An excellent fit to the experiments is obtained using a discretized version of the theory of thin elastic shells.

Authors

  • Eleni Katifori

    Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge MA

  • Silas Alben

    School of Mathematics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Enrique Cerda

    Departamento de Fisica, Universidad de Santiago, Chile, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Departamento de Fisica, Universidad de Santiago de Chile

  • David Nelson

    Department of Physics, Harvard University

  • Jacques Dumais

    Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University