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Reproductive strategies of sexually dimorphic plants vary in response to the environment. Here, we ask whether the sexual systems of species (i.e., selfing homostylous and out-crossing distylous) represent distinct adaptive strategies to increase reproductive success in changing alpine environments. To answer this question, we determined how spatial and temporal factors (e.g., elevation and peak flowering time) affect reproductive success (i.e., stigmatic pollen load) in nine wild species (seven distylous and two homostylous) among 28 populations along an elevation gradient of 1299-3315 m in the Hengduan Mountains, southwestern China. We also observed pollinators and conducted hundreds of hand pollinations to investigate inter/intra-morph compatibility, self-compatibility and pollen limitation in four species (two distylous and two homostylous). We found that species at higher elevation generally had bigger flowers and more stigmatic pollen loads; late-flowering individuals had smaller flowers and lower pollen deposition. Stigmatic pollen deposition was more variable in distylous species than in homostylous species. Although seed set was not pollen-limited in all species, we found that fruit set was much lower in distylous species, which rely on frequent pollinator visits, than in homostylous species capable of autonomous self-pollination. Our findings that pollination success increases at high elevations and decreases during the flowering season suggest that distylous and homostylous species have spatially and temporally distinct reproductive strategies related to environment-dependent pollinator activity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.10.001 | DOI Listing |
Mol Biol Evol
July 2025
Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Transitions from outcrossing to selfing and from diploidy to polyploidy often co-occur in plants, likely because the ability to produce selfed seed increases the likelihood of newly formed polyploids to become established. An ideal system to study these transitions is Primula, where the shift from diploid, outcrossing progenitors to polyploid, selfing descendants co-occurred repeatedly and the genetic basis of the mating-system shift is known. In Primula, outcrossing is enforced in distylous, typically diploid species characterized by florally heteromorphic, self-incompatible individuals, whereas selfing is enabled in homostylous, typically polyploid species, characterized by florally homomorphic populations of self-compatible plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Divers
September 2024
Institute of Evolution and Ecology, School of Life Sciences, Central China Normal University, Wuhan 430079, China.
Reproductive strategies of sexually dimorphic plants vary in response to the environment. Here, we ask whether the sexual systems of species (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
May 2024
Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Science for Life Laboratory, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Distyly is an iconic floral polymorphism governed by a supergene, which promotes efficient pollen transfer and outcrossing through reciprocal differences in the position of sexual organs in flowers, often coupled with heteromorphic self-incompatibility. Distyly has evolved convergently in multiple flowering plant lineages, but has also broken down repeatedly, often resulting in homostylous, self-compatible populations with elevated rates of self-fertilization. Here, we aimed to study the genetic causes and genomic consequences of the shift to homostyly in Linum trigynum, which is closely related to distylous Linum tenue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes Genet Syst
May 2024
College of Chinese Materia Medica, Yunnan University of Chinese Medicine.
Primula secundiflora is an insect-pollinated, perennial herb belonging to the section Proliferae (Primulaceae) that exhibits considerable variation in its mating system, with predominantly outcrossing populations comprising long-styled and short-styled floral morphs and selfing populations comprising only homostyles. To facilitate future investigations of the population genetics and mating patterns of this species, we developed 25 microsatellite markers from P. secundiflora using next-generation sequencing and measured polymorphism and genetic diversity in a sample of 30 individuals from three natural populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDistyly, a floral dimorphism that promotes outcrossing, is controlled by a hemizygous genomic region known as the -locus. Disruptions of genes within the -locus are responsible for the loss of distyly and the emergence of homostyly, a floral monomorphism that favors selfing. Using whole-genome resequencing data of distylous and homostylous individuals from populations of and leveraging high-quality reference genomes of we tested, for the first time, predictions about the evolutionary consequences of transitions to selfing on -genes.
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