Abstract
Hedycarya has pollen in permanent tetrads. H. arborea, the New Zealand species, differs from others studied, in having a cap of more or less imperforate tectum at the distal pole of each grain. This polar region is not an aperture and the pollen tube emerges through a papillose part of the external wall of each grain. Transmission electron microscope studies of immature and mature tetrads reveal a most unusual exine structure. "Radial processes" develop by accumulation of sporopollenin around unit membranes of similar dimensions to the plasmalemma, and extend from just beyond the intine to the tectal region. The entire exine is considered ectexinous. During development, members of a tetrad are interconnected by cytoplasmic channels and the synchronous division into generative and vegetative nuclei within each tetrad is attributed to their presence. The channels become closed by the deposition of intine. Comparisons are made with exine structure in some other members of the woody Ranales and with some other plants with tetrad pollen.

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