ABSTRACT
Microsporogenesis and microgametogenesis are unusual in sedges (Cyperaceae), the third largest monocotyledonous family, as three microspores are aborted in favor of a single functional microspore. However, studies using light microscopy show that megasporogenesis and megagametogenesis occur normally. Nevertheless, the lack of ultrastructural details limits our knowledge of female gametophyte development in this family. Given the importance of morphological studies of reproductive structures, ovules and megagametophytes of Rhynchospora pubera were analyzed under transmission electron microscopy for the first time. Overall, ovules presented features similar to those described for the family, but ultrastructural details revealed an absence of a clear boundary between the egg cell and the central cell cytoplasm. Most interestingly, antipodal and nucellar cells showed several signs of vacuolar cell death, which suggest that programmed autolysis in sporogenous and gametophytic tissue is common in gametophyte development in the Cyperaceae. This may be related to the reproductive success of this family.