Efficacy of artificial pollination in Sagittaria trifolia: pollination tools and pollen preservation

2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
解季明,丁新颖,张宇杰,汪正祥,戴璨 XIE Jiming
Author(s):  
Camillus Abawiera Wongnaa ◽  
Isaac Akurugu Apike ◽  
Suresh Babu ◽  
Dadson Awunyo-Vitor ◽  
Afrane Baffour Kyei

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgia Basist ◽  
Adrian G. Dyer ◽  
Jair E. Garcia ◽  
Ruth E. Raleigh ◽  
Ann C. Lawrie

Caladenia fulva G.W. Carr (Tawny Spider-orchid) is a terrestrial Australian endangered orchid confined to contiguous reserves in open woodland in Victoria, Australia. Natural recruitment is poor and no confirmed pollinator has been observed in the last 30 years. Polymorphic variation in flower color complicates plans for artificial pollination, seed collection and ex situ propagation for augmentation or re-introduction. DNA sequencing showed that there was no distinction among color variants in the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the chloroplast trnT-trnF and matK regions. Also, authentic specimens of both C. fulva and Caladenia reticulata from the reserves clustered along with these variants, suggesting free interbreeding. Artificial cross-pollination in situ and assessment of seed viability further suggested that no fertility barriers existed among color variants. Natural fruit set was 15% of the population and was proportional to numbers of the different flower colors but varied with orchid patch within the population. Color modeling on spectral data suggested that a hymenopteran pollinator could discriminate visually among color variants. The similarity in fruiting success, however, suggests that flower color polymorphism may avoid pollinator habituation to specific non-rewarding flower colors. The retention of large brightly colored flowers suggests that C. fulva has maintained attractiveness to foraging insects rather than evolving to match a scarce unreliable hymenopteran sexual pollinator. These results suggest that C. fulva should be recognized as encompassing plants with these multiple flower colors, and artificial pollination should use all variants to conserve the biodiversity of the extant population.


2008 ◽  
pp. 239-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginia Pinillos ◽  
Julián Cuevas

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