José Luis Vesprini
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
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Featured researches published by José Luis Vesprini.
Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2016
Ettore Pacini; Massimo Nepi; José Luis Vesprini
Abstract. Nectaries differ in many aspects but a common feature is some kind of advantage for the plant conferred by foraging of consumers which may defend the plant from predators in the case of extrafloral nectaries, or be agents of pollination in the case of floral nectaries. This minireview is concerned mainly with floral nectaries and examines the following characteristics: position in flower; nectary structure; origin of carbohydrates, aminoacids and proteins; manner of exposure of nectar; site of nectar presentation; volume and production of nectar in time; sexual expression of flower and nectary morphology; nectar composition and floral sexual expression; variability of nectar composition; fate of nectar; energy cost of nectar production. The species of certain large families, such as Brassicaceae, Lamiaceae and Asteraceae, resemble each other in nectary organisation; other families, such as Cucurbitaceae and Ranunculaceae, have various types of organisation. A scheme is presented to illustrate factors influencing nectary and nectar biodiversity.
Grana | 2002
José Luis Vesprini; Massimo Nepi; Laura Cresti; Massimo Guarnieri; Ettore Pacini
Pollen grains of Helleborus foetidus and H. bocconei were exposed to low temperature treatments to simulate the natural events in pollen presentation of these two winter flowering species and to analyze the pollen carbohydrate content (glucose, fructose, sucrose and starch). In both species, cytoplasmic polysaccharides, monosaccharides and sucrose were found, while only Helleborus foetidus contained starch. Polysaccharide, sucrose and monosaccharide content varied as low temperature exposure time varied, a decrease in temperature decreases polysaccharide content and increases sucrose and monosaccharides. The relative quantities of the various types of carbohydrates were not affected by variations in the naturally occurring thermal cycles. Treatments did not greatly affect pollen viability. Although the occurrence of carbohydrates in pollen is known since many years, their function is still unclear. The findings of this research suggest a role of cytoplasmic pollen carbohydrates in resistance to low temperature exposure. The inter-conversion of carbohydrate type may be an adaptation for sustaining viability during pollen presentation that is particularly important for a winter flowering species such as Helleborus foetidus and H. bocconei .
Caryologia | 2006
Luigi Brighigna; Alessio Papini; Eva Milocani; José Luis Vesprini
Abstract We report the ultrastructural aspects and histochemical assay regarding the degenerating nucellar cells of Tillandsia during early female gametophyte development. Nucellar cells degeneration was observed to start during the somatogenesis of the gametophyte. Ultrastructural features of degenerating process and TUNEL assay indicated that the nucellar cells death mechanism is genetically controlled. Mitochondria and cytoplasmic vesicles persisted until cell degeneration was completed. This feature represens a peculiar aspect of the PCD mechanism in this specific case.
Flora | 2000
Marta B. Bianchi; Peter E. Gibbs; Darién E. Prado; José Luis Vesprini
Summary The breeding systems of seven understorey species in a Chaco woodland in NE Argentina were studied by means of hand pollinations and fluorescence microscopy observations of post-pollination events. Six species showed self-incompatibility (SI), with heteromorphic SI in Erythroxylum microphyllum , and probable homomorphic gametophytic SI (stylar inhibition of selfpollen tubes) in Aechmea distichantha, Bromelia serra, Cleistocactus baumannii, Dyckia ferox and Grabowskia duplicata. Opuntia retrorsa was self-compatible. A notable feature of inter-morph cross-compatibility in E. microphyllum was differential fruiting success using pollen from different stamen whorls of the long-style morpho The high incidence of self-incompatibility in the understorey component of this Chaco woodland is similar to that found in some South American montane forests, and is in contrast to the widespread self-compatibility reported for this stratum in some neotropical forests. It is proposed that these breeding system differences are probably linked to the different taxonomic families represented in the understorey strata of these communities and are not a consequence of adaptations to pollination biology or other ecological factors.
Plant Biology | 2008
José Luis Vesprini; Massimo Nepi; F. Ciampolini; Ettore Pacini
We used electron microscopy to investigate the fine structure of nectary secretions of Helleborus foetidus. During the secretion period, epidermal cells of nectaries discharge the whole contents of the cytoplasm into the nectary cavity. The external wall of the cell breaks, releasing the cytoplasm as a dense aggregate that later disperses in the nectary cavity. Cell components, such as chromatin, plastids, mitochondria, lipid droplets and membranes, were found in the nectar of H. foetidus, evincing the complex nature of the secreted material. These results confirm that nectar secretion in H. foetidus is of the holocrine type.
Plant Biosystems | 2000
José Luis Vesprini; Ettore Pacini
ABSTRACT The results of various types of manual and free pollination are reported in Helleborus bocconei and Helleborus foetidus, two sympatric species of the understorey of submediterranean woods that flower in January–March and are pollinated by bumble-bees of the genus Bombus. Both species were found to be partially self-compatible even if at different rates; geitonogamy seems to be more frequent in H. foetidus and spontaneous self-pollination does not usually occur for morphological reasons, and the species are not apomictic. Efficiency in seed production after free pollination was very high indicating that in spite of harsh climatic condition, there were no limitations imposed by pollen or pollinators.
Rodriguésia | 2018
Rodrigo M. Freire; Ignacio Barberis; José Luis Vesprini
Aechmea distichantha, a widely-distributed facultative epiphytic bromeliad species, is present from rainforests to xerophytic forests. At its southernmost distribution (Humid Chaco) it grows in the understory and forest edges. This animal-pollinated bromeliad shows high phenotypic plasticity on its vegetative traits, but there is no information about plasticity on its reproductive traits. Infructescences from shade plants were heavier, had longer rachis, more spikelets, higher number of fruits/spikelet and higher number of seeds/fruit than those from sun plants, but they presented similar number of open flowers. The number of visitation events was similar in both habitats, but more flowers were visited in the sun than in the shade. Flowers were visited by seven species (six insects and one hummingbird). In the sun, the carpenter bee was the most frequent visitor and visited almost all flowers, whereas in the shade different species of visitors attained similar proportion of visits and number of visited flowers. Despite visitation events were similar in both habitats, plants growing in the shade set more seeds/fruit than plants growing in the sun. The higher proportion of visits accomplished by carpenter bees compared to hummingbirds is probably a consequence of the climatic conditions in the austral location of these populations.
Flora | 2010
José Luis Vesprini; Ettore Pacini
Anales Del Jardin Botanico De Madrid | 2010
Ana María González; José Luis Vesprini
Botany | 2012
José Luis Vesprini; Ettore Pacini; Massimo Nepi