Pollen precedence in sexual Potentilla puberula and its role as a protective reproductive barrier against apomictic cytotypes

Cross-pollination is a major factor determining the demographic dynamics of mixed-ploidy populations. Typically, rare cytotypes are suppressed due to reduced female fertility by losing gametes in heteroploid crosses (i.e., through minority cytotype exclusion). In species with reproductive differenti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Taxon 2018-12, Vol.67 (6), p.1132-1142
Hauptverfasser: Alonso-Marcos, Henar, Hülber, Karl, Myllynen, Tuuli, Rodríguez, Patricia Pérez, Dobeš, Christoph
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 1132
container_title Taxon
container_volume 67
creator Alonso-Marcos, Henar
Hülber, Karl
Myllynen, Tuuli
Rodríguez, Patricia Pérez
Dobeš, Christoph
description Cross-pollination is a major factor determining the demographic dynamics of mixed-ploidy populations. Typically, rare cytotypes are suppressed due to reduced female fertility by losing gametes in heteroploid crosses (i.e., through minority cytotype exclusion). In species with reproductive differentiation into sexual and apomictic cytotypes, sexuals might be reproductively suppressed by apomicts (or transformed due to introgression of apomixis genes). Pollen precedence potentially acts as a post-pollination pre-fertilization barrier protecting sexuals against their apomictic counterparts. We estimated the role of pollen precedence as a barrier against cross-fertilization of tetraploid sexuals by penta- and heptaploid gametophytic apomicts in Potentilla puberula (Rosaceae) by means of controlled crosses, and inference of the paternity through DNA ploidy estimation of embryos. Individuals from five regions spanning an elevational and biogeographic gradient were used to account for the variation in the relative frequencies of reproductive modes across the study area. We tested (1) whether the application of heteroploid pollen (sexual × apomictic) causes a reduction of seed yield compared to homoploid crosses (sexual × sexual), and (2) if so, whether pollen precedence recovers the seed yield in simultaneous applications of pollen from sexuals and apomicts (mixed-ploidy). Seed yield was significantly lower in hetero- than in homoploid crosses. We found clear evidence for precedence of homoploid pollen, despite a 13% to 15% of embryos experienced a change in ploidy due to heteroploid fertilizations. Thus, our study indicates that pollen precedence operates as a barrier against intercytotype fertilization in P. puberula, promoting the integrity of the sexual cytotype and their co-existence with apomictic individuals.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects apomixis
Eastern European Alps
flow cytometric seed screen
pollen precedence
reproductive isolation
Rosaceae
SYMPOSIUM
title Pollen precedence in sexual Potentilla puberula and its role as a protective reproductive barrier against apomictic cytotypes
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