Relative Success of Self and Outcross Pollen Comparing Mixed- and Single-Donor Pollinations in Aquilegia caerulea.

BIBLIOGRAFIA
Nominativo AutoriMONTALVO A.M.
Anno1992
TitoloRelative Success of Self and Outcross Pollen Comparing Mixed- and Single-Donor Pollinations in Aquilegia caerulea.
RivistaEVOLUTION
EdizioneSOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF EVOLUTION, AUG. 1992.
Serie Volume46(4):1181-1198
IllustrazioniFIGG.8, TABB.5
Parole chiave / Key words ZOOLOGIA
Riassunto / AbstractFlowers frequently receive both self (S) and outcross (OC) pollen, but S pollen often sires proportionally fewer seeds. Failure of S pollen can reflect evolved mechanisms that promote outcrossing and /or inbreeding depression expressed during seed development. The relative importance of these two processes was investigated in Aquilegia caerulea, a self-compatible perennial herb. In the field I performed single-donor (S or OC) and mixed-donor (S plus OC) pollinations to compare the relative success of both pollen types at various stages from pollen germination to seed maturity. Single-donor S pollinations produced significantly fewer and lighter seeds (...decrease = 12% and 3%, respectively) than OC pollinations. Abortion rates differed by an average of 38% whereas fertilization rates differed by only 5%, indicating that most differences in seed number arose postzygotically. This suggests that inbreeding depression was responsible for most failure of S pollen. One prezygotic effect measured was that 10% fewer S than OC pollen tubes reached ovaries after 42 hr, suggesting S pollen might fertilize proportionately fewer ovules after mixed pollination. Using allozyme markers, I found mixed-donor pollinations produced significantly more and heavier outcrossed than selfed seeds. However, the proportion of selfed seed, fertilized ovules, and aborted seeds for mixed-donor fruits were each predictable from pollen performance in single-donor fruits, suggesting that differential paternity is best explained by inbreeding depression during seed development. Even given these similarities between mixed- and single-donor fruits in the relative performance of S and OC pollen, both individual seed weight and seed set were significantly higher in multiply-sired fruits.

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