Short-distance pollen dispersal and high self-pollination in a bat-pollinated neotropical tree

We investigated pollen dispersal and breeding structure in the tropical tree species Caryocar brasiliense Camb. (Caryocaraceae), using genetic data from ten microsatellite loci. All adult trees (101) within a patch of 8.3 ha were sampled, and from these adults 18 open-pollinated maternal progeny arr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tree genetics & genomes 2010-07, Vol.6 (4), p.555-564
Hauptverfasser: Collevatti, Rosane G., Estolano, Raquel, Garcia, Silmara F., Hay, John D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigated pollen dispersal and breeding structure in the tropical tree species Caryocar brasiliense Camb. (Caryocaraceae), using genetic data from ten microsatellite loci. All adult trees (101) within a patch of 8.3 ha were sampled, and from these adults 18 open-pollinated maternal progeny arrays were analyzed (280 seeds from 265 fruits). Most fruits presented only one seed (median equal to 1.000) and mean number of ripened seeds per fruit was 1.053 (SD = 0.828). Our results showed that C. brasiliense presents a mixed-mating system, with 11.4% of self-pollination, multilocus outcrossing rate of t m  = 0.891 ± 0.025, and high probability of full-sibship within progeny arrays ( r p  = 0.135 ± 0.032). Outcrossing rate and self-pollination varied significantly among mother trees. We could detect a maximum pollen dispersal distance of ∼500 m and a mean pollen dispersal distance of ∼132 m. However, most pollination events (80%) occurred at distances less than 200 m. Our results also indicated that pollen dispersal is restricted to a neighborhood of 5.4 ha with rare events of immigration (∼1% N e m  = 0.35). C. brasiliense also presents a significant but weak spatial genetic structure ( Sp  = 0.0116), and extension of pollen dispersal distance was greater than seed dispersal ( N b  = 86.20 m). These results are most likely due to the foraging behavior of pollinators that may have limited flight range. The highly within-population synchronous flowering, high population density, and clumped distribution reinforce pollinator behavior and affect residence time leading to a short-distance pollen dispersal.
ISSN:1614-2942
1614-2950
DOI:10.1007/s11295-010-0271-4