Abstract
FLUORESCENCE microscopy has been found useful in bacterial identification, clinical diagnosis, fluorescent antibody techniques, and general cytological studies1. Recently, Shellhorn, Hull and Martin2 have extended the use of fluorescence microscopy to the detection of fresh and fossil pollen grains by using autofluorescence of exines.
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Price, G. R., and Schwartz, S., in Physical Techniques in Biological Research, 3, 91 (1956).
Shellhorn, S. J., Hull, H. M., and Martin, P. S., Nature, 202, 315 (1964).
Goodwin, R. H., in Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol., 4, 283 (Annual Reviews Inc., Stanford, California, 1953).
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RIDGWAY, J., LARSON, D. Sporogenesis in the Bryophyte Anthocerosis : Features shown by Fluorescence Microscopy. Nature 209, 1154 (1966). https://doi.org/10.1038/2091154a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/2091154a0
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