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Premise: Declines in reproductive capabilities with increasing age are common across the tree of life. However, in plants, mating system traits have rarely been tested for signs of senescence. Since reproduction is often resource limited, we might expect outcrossing and selfing taxa to allocate these resources differently, especially as a plant ages. Compared with selfers, outcrossers are expected to produce showy, rewarding flowers that attract pollinators and high-quality pollen that can successfully compete for ovules. Yet, this resource-intensive strategy of outcrossers may result in declines in floral allocation and pollen performance metrics, relative to selfers.
Methods: To explore age-related changes in reproduction, we measured flower size and pollen germinability over the flowering period for multiple populations of an annual sister species pair, Collinsia linearis (outcrosser) and C. rattanii (selfer), in a growth chamber experiment.
Results: We found that flower size decreased significantly with age in both species. The outcrosser expressed a significant and dramatic (88%) decline in pollen germinability with age, while the selfer's pollen germinability decline was non-significant and low (17%).
Conclusions: Our results support the idea that the higher total cost of reproduction in outcrossers can deplete available resources more rapidly than in selfers, manifesting as a decline in male performance with plant age.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.1346 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
August 2025
Forest Tree Genetics and Breeding Laboratory, College of Forestry, Hebei Agricultural University, Baoding 071001, China.
With the increasing severity of forest pest problems, breeding insect-resistant varieties has become a crucial task for the sustainable development of forestry. The highly insect-resistant triploid Populus line Pb29, genetically modified with , served as the maternal parent in controlled hybridization with three paternal Populus cultivars. Hybrid progenies were obtained through embryo rescue and tissue culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
August 2025
State Key Laboratory of Crop Gene Exploration and Utilization in Southwest China, Rice Research Institute, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, Sichuan, China.
Flavonols have been implicated in male sterility and pollen tube growth for over three decades; however, the molecular mechanisms mediating their accumulation in pollen grains remain poorly understood. In this study, a multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) transporter, OsMATE7, was identified as a key regulator of flavonol accumulation in mature pollen grains, thereby promoting pollen tube growth in rice (Oryza sativa). Mutation of OsMATE7 resulted in a significant reduction in seed setting rates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
August 2025
College of Life Sciences, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao, 266109, China.
The ability to make a timely decision between being dormant and germinating is critical for pollen to achieve a selection advantage. Genetic pathways controlling developmental and environmental-controlled pollen dormancy remain largely unclear. We report here that four Arabidopsis AGC kinases, PDK1.
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August 2025
Centro de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Ecología Tropical (CIBET) & Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro de Montes de Oca, San José, Costa Rica.
Background: Reproductive isolation mechanisms in flowering plants are fundamental to preserving species' evolutionary independence and to enabling the local coexistence of closely related species. These reproductive barriers are expected to contribute to maintaining local diversity of highly diverse plant guilds, such as bromeliads in neotropical ecosystems. We evaluated how strong and effective these barriers are by analyzing different mechanisms that act before and after pollination in a guild of four epiphytic bromeliads from the genus (Tillandsioideae) pollinated by bats in a Costa Rican montane forest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
August 2025
Frontiers Science Center for Cell Responses, College of Life Sciences, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China.
Rab GTPases are key regulators of vesicular trafficking, not only switching between active and inactive forms but also cycling between donor/resident and target membranes, a process regulated by factors including guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitors (RabGDIs), whose function is largely unknown in plants. By reverse genetic approaches, we demonstrate that Arabidopsis RabGDIs redundantly mediate male fertility such that the functional loss of RabGDIs compromises pollen development, germination, and directional growth of pollen tubes. By combining cellular and pharmacological approaches, we demonstrate that RabGDIs are critical for the targeting of Rab GTPases not only in secretory but also in vacuolar pathways.
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