Ostiole
An ostiole is a small hole or opening through which algae[1] or fungi release their mature spores.
The word is a diminutive of "ostium", "opening".
The term is also used in higher plants, for example to denote the opening of the involuted syconium (fig inflorescence) through which fig wasps enter to pollinate and breed. The species pharamacosycea have an arrangement interlocking pattern but there is an exception because of insipdia because it is partly cover the ostiole. On the adaxial side of the bracts is made out of cubic cells, that has a staining reactions and contain phenolic compounds.
Sometimes a stomatal aperture is called an "ostiole".[2]
See also
References
- ^ Fletcher, R.L. 1987. Seaweeds of the British Isles. Volume 3 Fucophyceae (Phaeophyceae) Part 1 p.304 British Museum (Natural History) ISBN 0-565-00992-3
- ^ "Synergistic Pectin Degradation and Guard Cell Pressurization Underlie Stomatal Pore Formation", doi:10.1104/pp.19.00135
Castro-Cárdenas, N., Vázquez-Santana, S., Teixeira, S. P., & Ibarra-Manríquez, G. (2023). Correction to: The roles of the ostiole in the fig-fig wasp mutualism from a morphoanatomical perspective. Journal of Plant Research, 136(1), 157–157. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10265-022-01421-9