form four, each one surrounded by a cell-wall, but all still inclosed by the wall of the mother-cell (Fig. 1). On further growth the wall of the mother-cell is ruptured, and the daughter-cells
Thus pollen grains are daughter-cells, which have been developed from a primal mother-cell. Each grain is made up of three parts. There is an outer wall (extine), an inner wall (intine), and the fluid contents (fovilla). The extine is often marked with lines, points, or grooves; the intine is generally smooth and regular, and, even when the extine is studded with points, the intine does not
| Showing marks on extine.With extine removed. | |
| Fig. 2.—Hollyhock | Fig. 3.—Pollen of Œnothera. |
line the inside of these points but extends over their bases (Fig. 2). In cases where there are projections at different points, as in the evening primrose (Œnothera, Fig. 3) and others, the intine becomes thickened, and the extine is very much thinner.