Mating system and cross-compatibility of races of Epacris impressa

1982 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 131 ◽  
Author(s):  
YJ Fripp

The mating system and cross-compatibility of races of Epacris impressa Labill. were examined by a series of selfings, outcrosses between plants of the same race from the same and different populations, and outcrosses between plants of different races. The percentage of pollinations which gave capsules and the number of seeds present per capsule for these four types of crosses, and whether the seeds germinated, were scored. The results indicate that E. impressa is an outcrossing species with a self-incompatibility mechanism to keep selfing at a low level, the races cross freely and the hybrid seed is viable. The means over all races for the above four types of crosses were 8.7 (selfing), 62.3, 62.5 and 65.5 for the percentage of pollinations that were successful and 8.4 (selfing), 43.5, 41.2 and 39.0 for the number of seeds per capsule. The results of a limited number of crosses between Epacris impressa and other epacrid species are also given.


1990 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 739-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. A. CAMPBELL ◽  
G. R. BAUCHAN

The stability of self-incompatibility and cross-compatibility in 10 partially self-incompatible clones selected as potential parents for hybrid seed production was evaluated in the growth chamber. Clones (nulliplex for a completely dominant "red root" (RR) trait) were cultured in four regimes (allowed to develop at a constant 22 °C or 27 °C or allowed to develop at 22 °C then acclimated at 27 or 35 °C for 72 h) then self-pollinated or crossed with one of two clones that were quadraplex or triplex for the RR trait. Clones transferred to 27 or 35 °C were returned to 22 °C after 1 wk. Seeds/flower tripped (S/FT) were computed and data derived from cross-pollination were adjusted using the formula S/FT × (% RR seedlings/100) before analysis. Mean S/FT were 0.81, 0.88, 0.66, and 0.36 for the 22 °C, 27 °C, 22 °C/27 °C and 22 °C/35 °C regimes, respectively. Temperature regimes had no significant effect on self-incompatibility but did affect cross-compatibility significantly in some clones. There was more autogamy at 27 °C and in the 22 °C/27 °C regime than in the other regimes. Mean percent RR seedlings was 78.3 and clones did not differ significantly in percent hybrid seed production. Variation in autogamy observed in these clones was not correlated significantly with variation in hybridity. Stability analyses revealed considerable variation among the clones in terms of potential for hybrid seed production.Key words: Medicago sativa L., autogamy, allogamy, red root, stability, hybrid, heterosis, heat shock



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle De Cauwer ◽  
Philippe Vernet ◽  
Sylvain Billiard ◽  
Cécile Godé ◽  
Angélique Bourceaux ◽  
...  

AbstractThe breakdown of self-incompatibility (SI) in angiosperms is one of the most commonly observed evolutionary transitions. While multiple examples of SI breakdown have been documented in natural populations, there is strikingly little evidence of stable within-population polymorphism with both inbreeding (self-compatible) and outcrossing (self-incompatible) individuals. This absence of mating system polymorphism corroborates theoretical expectations that predict that in/outbreeding polymorphism is possible only under very restricted conditions. However, theory also predicts that a diallelic sporophytic SI system facilitates the maintenance of such polymorphism. We tested this prediction by studying the mating system of Ligustrum vulgare L., an entomophilous hermaphroditic species of the Oleaceae family. Using stigma tests with controlled pollination and paternity assignment of open-pollinated progenies, we confirmed the existence of two self-incompatibility groups in this species. We also demonstrated the existence of self-compatible individuals in different populations of Western Europe arising from a mutation affecting the expression of the pollen component of SI. We then estimated the selfing rate in a garden experiment. Our results finally show that the observed low frequency of self-compatible individuals in natural populations is compatible with theoretical predictions only if inbreeding depression is very high.



2016 ◽  
Vol 103 (10) ◽  
pp. 1847-1861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dragomira N. Markova ◽  
Jennifer J. Petersen ◽  
Xiaoqiong Qin ◽  
Daniel R. Short ◽  
Matthew J. Valle ◽  
...  




2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Åsa Lankinen ◽  
Maria Strandh

AbstractPremise of the ResearchThe wide diversity of floral traits seen among plants is shaped by neutral and selective evolutionary processes. In outcrossing species, sexual selection from competing pollen donors is expected to be important for shaping mating system-related traits but empirical evidence is scarce. In a previous evaluation of experimental evolution lines crossed with either one or two pollen donors (monogamous, M, or polyandrous, P, lines) at early floral stages in mixed-mating Collinsia heterophylla (Plantaginaceae), P showed enhanced pollen competitive ability and reduced maternal seed set compared to M, in accordance with sexually antagonistic evolution of pollen. Here, we asked whether the presence of sexual selection during pollen competition affect mating system-related floral traits in the same lines.MethodologyWe compared flowering start, timing of anther-stigma contact (as an indication of timing of self-pollination), timing of stigma receptivity and first seed set between M and P, and with a source line, S (starting material). The former three traits are later in outcrossers than in selfers of Collinsia. The latter trait was expected to be earlier in P than in M because of sexual selection for early seed siring of pollen.Pivotal ResultsArtificial polyandry for four generations resulted in later flowering start and later anther-stigma contact in P compared to M, and the latter trait was intermediate in S. Thus, P appeared more ‘outcrossing’ than M. Stigma receptivity did not differ between lines. First seed set was earlier in P than in M, as expected from sexual selection.ConclusionsOur results from C. heterophylla experimental evolution lines suggest that a component of sexual selection during outcross pollination could enhance the patterns of floral divergence commonly found between outcrossers and selfers.



HortScience ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 186-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Vuletin Selak ◽  
Slavko Perica ◽  
Smiljana Goreta Ban ◽  
Mira Radunic ◽  
Milan Poljak

Olive orchard productivity largely depends on the choice of planted cultivars and their pollination needs. Orchard designs in Croatia are changing because a number of valuable foreign olive cultivars, mostly Italian, have been introduced in this region in the last 30 years. The compatibility relationships of introduced cultivars with autochthonous cultivars are unknown. With the objective of studying reproductive behavior of the most important Croatian cultivars (Drobnica, Lastovka, Levantinka, and Oblica) and their cross-pollination to recently introduced Italian cultivars Leccino and Pendolino, initial and final fruit set in self-pollination versus cross-pollination and free pollination were compared during three flowering seasons. Experiments were conducted in three different orchards (Kastela, Mravince, and Brac) to identify the effect of the environment on reproductive behavior of olive cultivars. The differences of fruit set in five olive cultivars after tested pollination treatments appeared at the time of initial fruit set. Increased final fruit set under cross-pollinations was observed when compared with self-pollination for all olive cultivars in all experimental orchards. In the Mravince orchard, a positive response to cross-pollination was consistent, and fruit set increased under cross-pollination in all cultivars and years with the exception of ‘Levantinka’ in which no significant differences were noticed between self-pollination treatment and cross-pollination treatments in 2005. Variable self-fertility behavior from season to season was found for tested cultivars. A self-incompatibility index (ISI) higher than 0.1 was recorded for ‘Levantinka’ in all experimental years and, therefore, classified it as a partially self-incompatible cultivar. Self-incompatibility response was observed for ‘Lastovka’. The positive response to cross-pollination over self-pollination only in some experimental years classified ‘Drobnica’, ‘Leccino’, and ‘Oblica’ as partially self-incompatible. Results obtained from this study indicated that pollination efficiency is strictly combination-specific. The Italian cultivar, Leccino, was a successful pollen acceptor and pollenizer of most Croatian cultivars. Reciprocal high success in cross-pollination was recorded for ‘Levantinka’ and ‘Oblica’. In the Mravince orchard, ‘Lastovka’, ‘Leccino’, and ‘Oblica’ were efficient pollenizers of ‘Levantinka’ where the simultaneous flowering period was in accordance with their cross-compatibility. ‘Levantinka’ was a good pollenizer for ‘Lastovka’ in the Mravince orchard, and both cultivars entered into the flowering period earlier than other studied cultivars, which was not the case in the other two orchards. The variations in flowering timing among orchards were a consequence of differences in environmental conditions. According to the high fruit sets recorded in ‘Oblica’ after pollination with ‘Leccino’ or ‘Levantinka’, an increase in tree productivity of the acceptor cultivar is expected in the presence of selected pollenizers in all olive-growing regions.



The Condor ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 750-760 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Westcott ◽  
Frederieke J. Kroon

Abstract Geographic variation in birdsong is known from a variety of taxa, but is especially common and most frequently reported in passerines with resource-based territorial mating systems. To date, relatively little data have been presented on patterns of song variation in species with lek and leklike mating systems. In this paper, we describe geographic song variation in the Golden Bowerbird (Prionodura newtonia) a species with a leklike mating system. We compared recordings of the species advertisement song, collected from five isolated forest blocks from across the species range in northeastern Australia. Golden Bowerbird advertisement song shows marked geographic variation in form. All males within a population sing a song similar to each other, but distinct from that of males from other locations. The song traits important in discriminating between the songs of the different populations were bandwidth, number of peaks, dominant frequency, fundamental frequency, internote interval, and pureness. Discriminant function analyses based on these traits were highly accurate in assigning songs to their population of origin. We then used playback experiments to test whether geographic song variation in Golden Bowerbirds is functional. In the playback experiments males responded more strongly to song from local dialects than from foreign dialects. We discuss our results in light of current hypotheses on the evolution of geographic song variation. Variación Geográfica del Canto y Sus Consecuencias en Prionodura newtonia Resumen. La variación geográfica del canto de las aves es conocida para muchos taxa, pero es especialmente común en paserinos con sistemas reproductivos territoriales basados en la disponibilidad de recursos. Hasta ahora, se han presentado relativamente pocos datos sobre la variación del canto en especies con un sistema reproductivo con asambleas de cortejo (lek) y con sistemas reproductivos similares al tipo lek. En este trabajo, describimos las variaciones geográficas del canto de Prionodura newtonia, una especie que presenta un sistema reproductivo del tipo lek. Comparamos grabaciones de los cantos de anuncio, colectados en cinco bosques aislados a lo largo del rango geográfico de la especie en el noreste de Australia. El canto de anuncio de P. newtonia mostró una marcada variación geográfica en cuanto a la forma. Todos los machos pertenecientes a una misma población cantaron de forma similar entre ellos, pero difirieron de machos pertenecientes a otras poblaciones. Los caracteres importantes que permitieron discriminar los cantos de las diferentes poblaciones fueron el ancho de la banda, el número de picos, la frecuencia dominante y fundamental, el intervalo entre notas, y la pureza. Los análisis de función discriminante basados en estos caracteres fueron altamente precisos en asignar los cantos a sus poblaciones de origen. Luego, utilizamos experimentos de play-back para probar si la variación geográfica del canto en esta especie es funcional. En los experimentos de play-back los machos respondieron más fuertemente a los cantos de los dialectos locales que a los extranjeros. Discutimos nuestros resultados en relación a las hipótesis actuales respecto a la evolución de la variación geográfica del canto.



2005 ◽  
Vol 251 (2-4) ◽  
pp. 173-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. B. Bianchi ◽  
S. A. Harris ◽  
P. E. Gibbs ◽  
D. E. Prado


Heredity ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E Marra ◽  
Michael G Milgroom


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