Pollen and pollination experiments. X. The effect of repeated pollination on fruit-and seed set in crosses between the hybrid tea-rose CVS. Sonia and ilona

Euphytica ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 685-689 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. P. Devries ◽  
Lidwien A. M. Dubois

Plants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 815
Author(s):  
Sandra V. Rojas-Nossa ◽  
José María Sánchez ◽  
Luis Navarro

Floral development depends on multifactor processes related to genetic, physiological, and ecological pathways. Plants respond to herbivores by activating mechanisms aimed at tolerating, compensating, or avoiding loss of biomass and nutrients, and thereby survive in a complex landscape of interactions. Thus, plants need to overcome trade-offs between development, growth, and reproduction vs. the initiation of anti-herbivore defences. This study aims to assess the frequency of phloem-feeding herbivores in wild populations of the Etruscan honeysuckle (Lonicera etrusca Santi) and study their effects on floral development and reproduction. The incidence of herbivory by the honeysuckle aphid (Hyadaphis passerinii del Guercio) was assessed in three wild populations of the Iberian Peninsula. The effect of herbivory on floral morphology, micromorphology of stigmas and pollen, floral rewards, pollination, and fruit and seed set were studied. The herbivory by aphids reduces the size of flowers and pollen. Additionally, it stops nectar synthesis and causes malformation in pollen and microstructures of stigmas, affecting pollination. As a consequence, fruit set and seed weight are reduced. This work provides evidence of the changes induced by phloem-feeding herbivores in floral development and functioning that affect the ecological processes necessary to maintain the reproductive success of plants.



1990 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 217 ◽  
Author(s):  
AJ Willis ◽  
JE Ash

The breeding systems of Stylidiurn grarninifolium and S. producturn (= S. grarninifoliurn var. caulescens) were studied by observing the phenology of individual flowers and inflorescences, and relating the data to a series of pollination experiments within and between the species. Inter-specific pollinations yielded similar levels of seed-set to crosses within the species indicating a close relationship between the taxa. Self-pollination of either species is uncommon; however, when it occurs, the majority of selfed ovules are aborted post-zygotically, probably by a system of recessive lethals, as there is no indication of an incompatibility system. It is concluded that the breeding systems of S. grarninifoliurn and S. productum, two of the few eastern Australian species, are similar to those of many Stylidiurn species from the south-west, casting doubt upon hypotheses that the breeding system has led to high rates of speciation in the south-west.



1998 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. 818-828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faye L Thompson ◽  
Luise A Hermanutz ◽  
David J Innes

Menyanthes trifoliata L. is a distylous, clonal aquatic macrophyte found in shallow bogs and river margins throughout the boreal ecosystem, including the island of Newfoundland. A combination of long-distance dispersal and colonization after deglaciation, and pollen limitation resulting from reduced pollinator diversity and abundance documented on islands, predicts the breakdown of heterostyly to favour the establishment of self-compatible homostyles on islands. To test if self-fertilizing homostyles have been selected, variation in floral characters and compatibility relationships were examined in M. trifoliata populations from the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland. Morph ratio and its effect on fruit and seed set were examined in nine populations. Of the seven dimorphic populations, morphs occurred in a 1:1 ratio in four populations and deviated significantly from a 1:1 ratio in three populations. The two populations monomorphic for either pin or thrum morphs set few fruits or seeds (<15%). A strictly reciprocal arrangement of stigma height and anther length was not observed between pin and thrum morphs in the majority of populations studied. Stigma-anther separation showed a bimodal distribution with few intermediate "homostylous" flowers, rather than the discreet bimodal distribution typical of distylous species. Fruit and seed set were high (>60%) in equal morph ratio populations and were not significantly correlated to stigma-anther separation, indicating that there was no selective advantage of being homostylous. All three populations tested were highly self-incompatible, confirming that there has not been a breakdown of heterostyly on the island of Newfoundland. A reduced pollinator fauna typical of island environments may have relaxed stabilizing selection for strict herkogamy between floral morphs, resulting in the observed lack of reciprocity.Key words: Menyanthes trifoliata, distyly, homostyle, reciprocal herkogamy, clonal aquatic macrophyte, island of Newfoundland.



1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (6) ◽  
pp. 1298-1303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel S. Shore ◽  
Spencer C. H. Barrett

Controlled pollination experiments were performed on the self-incompatible distylous herb Turnera ulmifolia L. to investigate the effects of pollination intensity and large amounts of incompatible pollen on seed set. In the first experiment, known numbers of compatible pollen grains ranging from 1 to 100 were applied to stigmas of the floral morphs. In both morphs, increasing amounts of pollen generally resulted in increased levels of seed set, although considerable variance was observed at all pollination intensities. Approximately two to seven pollen grains are required to produce a single seed and more than 95 grains are required to achieve maximum seed set in T. ulmifolia. Regression analysis of the seed set data failed to detect a difference in the response of the floral morphs to pollination intensity. In the second experiment, known proportions of compatible and incompatible pollen were applied to stigmas at various time intervals. Most treatments involving mixtures of compatible and incompatible pollen had no significant effect on seed set when compared with the controls. Clogging was only observed in the long-styled morph when one anther of compatible pollen was applied to stigmas 1.5 and 3.0 h after pollination with five anthers of incompatible pollen. The clogging of stigmas by incompatible pollen seems unlikely to have played a major role in the evolution and maintenance of distyly in Turnera ulmifolia.



HortScience ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 860-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Wolf ◽  
Y. Lensky ◽  
N. Paldi

Fruit and seed set in insect-pollinated agricultural crops rely primarily on honeybees because of their ease of management and transportation. In many fruit and vegetable crops, the number of bee visitations can be the limiting step in obtaining optimal yield. Increasing the attractiveness of flowers to honeybees could, therefore, provide a useful means of improving fruit yield and seed production. Genetic variability in attractiveness to honeybees was found within the genus Citrullus. The number of daily visits per flower ranged from six to 12 among cultivars. Moreover, most of the visits to the more attractive cultivars occurred in the first hour of bee activity, whereas visits to the less attractive cultivars started later in the morning. A positive relationship was found between the frequency of bee visitations and seed number per fruit. Analyses of floral attributes indicated no genetic variability in flower size, amount of pollen grains, or nectar volume; however, differences were observed in the concentration of sucrose and total sugars in the nectar. A positive relationship was found between attractiveness to bees and nectar sugar concentration, suggesting that this characteristic is one of the parameters responsible for variability in attractiveness to honeybees.



2016 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Oziegbe ◽  
Temitope Olatayo Kehinde ◽  
Joshua Olumide Matthew

<em>Ocimum</em> species have a combination of reproductive system which varies with the locality and cultivar. We have studied here the reproductive mechanisms of five variants of three <em>Ocimum</em> species in Nigeria, namely: <em>Ocimum canum</em> Sims., <em>O. basilicum</em> L., and <em>O. americanum</em> L. Flowers from each variant were subjected to open and bagged pollination treatments of hand self-pollination, spontaneous self-pollination and emasculation. All open treatments of the five <em>Ocimum</em> variants produced more fruit and seed than the corresponding bagged treatments. The two <em>O. canum</em> variants and <em>O. basilicum</em> ‘b<span><sub>1</sub></span>’ produced high fruit and seed set in the open and bagged treatments of spontaneous self-pollination. <em>Ocimum basilicum</em> ‘b<span><sub>2</sub></span>’ and <em>O. americanum</em> produced higher fruit and seed set in the self-pollination open treatment but significantly lower fruit and seed set in the bagged treatment. Fewer fruit and seeds were produced in the emasculated open treatments but none in the emasculated bagged treatments of the five <em>Ocimum</em> variants. The floral foragers comprising of bees, wasps and butterflies visited the <em>Ocimum</em> species to collect pollen or nectar in the open treatments. The two <em>O. canum</em> variants and <em>O. basilicum</em> ‘b<span><sub>1</sub></span>’ variant reproduced mainly through autogamy but <em>O. basilicum</em> ‘b<span><sub>2</sub></span>’ and <em>O. americanum</em> showed mixed reproduction of autogamy and outcrosssing. Insect visitation to the flowers enhanced pollination resulting in higher fruit and seed set in all the <em>Ocimum</em> species studied.





Author(s):  
F. J. Valtueña ◽  
A. Ortega‐Olivencia ◽  
T. Rodríguez‐Riaño


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcela Pineda ◽  
Benchi Yu ◽  
Yinong Tian ◽  
Nelson Morante ◽  
Sandra Salazar ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Seed Set ◽  


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 173-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terence M. Laverty ◽  
R. C. Plowright

The breeding system and determinants of fruit and seed production in a population of 114 patches of Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum L.) were examined. Experimental crosses indicated that Mayapple patches are self-incompatible (clones) and that fruit and seed set were pollinator limited. Mayapple flowers are nectarless yet depend primarily on infrequent visits by nectar-searching bumblebees for pollination. The proportion of flowers setting fruit and ovules setting seed in Mayapple clones was inversely associated with the distance to neighboring clones and the distance to Pedicularis canadensis L. plants. Clones within 45 m of P. canadensis plants (which are heavily visited by bumblebees) showed significant increases in fruit and seed production compared with a similar group of more distant clones. This effect is interpreted as evidence for a facilitative interaction between Mayapple and P. canadensis.



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