| Literature DB >> 29468326 |
Shuntaro Watanabe1, Koh-Ichi Takakura2, Yuko Kaneko3, Naohiko Noma2, Takayoshi Nishida2.
Abstract
Heterodichogamy is defined as the presence of two flower morphs that exhibit the male and female functions at different times among individuals within a population. Heterodichogamy is regarded as an adaptation to promote outcrossing through enhanced inter-morph mating, together with a 1:1 morph ratio. However, in highly fragmented populations, the morph ratio may be more likely to be biased by stochastic events. In such a situation, individuals of a minority morph within a population are expected to have higher reproductive success than those of a majority morph, which may suffer from pollen shortages of the minority morph. In this paper, we evaluated mating patterns and male reproductive success in a highly fragmented population of Machilus thunbergii, a putative heterodichogamous evergreen laurel tree. Results of paternity analysis indicated that the selfing rate was not clearly different between the two morphs. In contrast, the proportion of intra-morph mating was higher in the majority-morph (MM) mother trees than in the minority-morph (MF) mother trees. Bayesian estimated male reproductive success indicated that male reproductive success was higher in minority-morph (MF) than in majority-morph (MM) mother trees. These findings indicate that (1) the majority morph mothers, suffering a shortage of the opposite morph pollen, could partly compensate for the reduced reproductive success by intra-morph mating rather than by selfing, and (2) negative-frequency dependent selection may be involved in the maintenance of the two morphs.Entities:
Keywords: Frequency-dependent selection; Heterodichogamy; Machilus thunbergii; Male reproductive success; Paternity analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29468326 DOI: 10.1007/s10265-018-1018-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Plant Res ISSN: 0918-9440 Impact factor: 2.629