Salient features of structure of the spermatozoid of a fern (Pteridium aquilinum) have been determined by a combination of visual and ultraviolet microscopy, with electron microscopy of shadow-cast whole mounts and thin sections, using magnifications up to but not exceeding 50,000 diameters. Attention has been concentrated on the arrangement rather than on the internal details of the various parts. The most important component, apart from the spirally wound nucleus, numerous (about 40) cilia, and mitochondria, is a sheet of parallel fibres spirally wound near the surface of a cone of cytoplasm to which all the other major components are in various ways attached. The diameter of the individual fibres is of the order of 200 A. A few details are given of other minor cell constituents including additional mechanical materials, starch-containing leucoplasts, and the smaller cytoplasmic inclusions.
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1 December 1959
Content prior to 1962 was published under the journal name
The Journal of Biophysical and Biochemical Cytology
Article|
December 01 1959
Observations on the Microanatomy of the Spermatozoid of the Bracken Fern (Pteridium aquilinum)
Irene Manton
Irene Manton
From the Department of Botany, The University, Leeds, England
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Irene Manton
From the Department of Botany, The University, Leeds, England
Received:
June 06 1959
Copyright, 1959, by The Rockefeller Institute
1959
J Biophys and Biochem Cytol (1959) 6 (3): 413–418.
Article history
Received:
June 06 1959
Citation
Irene Manton; Observations on the Microanatomy of the Spermatozoid of the Bracken Fern (Pteridium aquilinum) . J Biophys and Biochem Cytol 1 December 1959; 6 (3): 413–418. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.6.3.413
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