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Premise Of Study: In a seminal body of theory, Lloyd showed that the fitness consequences of selfing will depend on its timing in anthesis. Selfing that occurs after opportunities for outcrossing or pollen dispersal can provide reproductive assurance when pollinators are limited and is expected to incur little cost, even when inbreeding depression is high. As a result, delayed selfing is often interpreted as a "best-of-both-worlds" mating system that combines the advantages of selfing and outcrossing.
Methods: We surveyed 65 empirical studies of delayed selfing, recording floral mechanisms and examining information on inbreeding depression, autofertility, and other parameters to test the support for delayed selfing as a best-of-both-worlds strategy.
Key Results: Phylogenetic distribution of the diverse floral mechanisms suggests that some basic floral structures may predispose plant taxa to evolve delayed selfing. Delayed selfing appears to serve as a best-of-both-worlds strategy in some but not all species. While the capacity for autonomous selfing is often high, it is lower, in some cases, than in related species with earlier modes of selfing. In other delayed-selfers, low inbreeding depression and reduced investment in corollas and pollen suggest limited benefits from outcrossing.
Conclusions: Despite a growing literature on the subject, experimental evidence for delayed selfing is limited and major gaps in knowledge remain, particularly with respect to the stability of delayed selfing and the conditions that may favor transitions between delayed and earlier selfing. Finally, we suggest a potential role of delayed selfing in facilitating transitions from self-incompatibility to selfing.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.1045 | DOI Listing |
Ann Bot
September 2025
CEFE, Univ. Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, Montpellier, France.
Background And Aims: Pollen:ovule ratios are often lower in species and populations with higher selfing rates. This may be due either to higher pollination efficiency through selfing, or to lower male competition when less allo-pollen is available. Changes in pollination can also impact pollen traits, such as the number of apertures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
March 2025
Yunnan Key Laboratory for Integrative Conservation of Plant Species with Extremely Small Populations, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650201, China.
Hibiscus yunnanensis S.Y. Hu is an endangered species of the genus Hibiscus (Malvaceae), which has high potential economic value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
January 2025
School of Life Science, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.
Introduction: Pollen is usually presented by the anthers after maturity. However, in some plants, pollen is presented to pollinators on other floral structures (other than the anthers), or via particular expulsion mechanisms, resulting in secondary pollen presentation. The unusual petal morphology in mediates pollen presentation, characterised by a combination of secondary pollen presentation and primary pollen presentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetics
January 2025
Department of Biology and Center for Genomics & Systems Biology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA.
Self-fertile Caenorhabditis nematodes carry a surprising number of Medea elements, alleles that act in heterozygous mothers and cause death or developmental delay in offspring that do not inherit them. At some loci, both alleles in a cross operate as independent Medeas, affecting all the homozygous progeny of a selfing heterozygote. The genomic coincidence of Medea elements and ancient, deeply coalescing haplotypes, which pepper the otherwise homogeneous genomes of these animals, raises questions about how these apparent gene-drive elements persist for long periods of time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2024
Department of Biology and Center for Genomics & Systems Biology, New York University, New York, NY 10003.
Self-fertile nematodes carry a surprising number of elements, alleles that act in heterozygous mothers and cause death or developmental delay in offspring that don't inherit them. At some loci, both alleles in a cross operate as independent , affecting all the homozygous progeny of a selfing heterozygote. The genomic coincidence of elements and ancient, deeply coalescing haplotypes, which pepper the otherwise homogeneous genomes of these animals, raises questions about how these apparent gene-drive elements persist for long periods of time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF