12 research outputs found

    Mating system of Calluna vulgaris (L.) Hull : self-sterility and outcrossing estimations

    Full text link
    The evolutionary significance of a mixed mating system is currently under debate. Calluna vulgaris (L). Hull, a widespread European shrub, is likely to undergo mixed mating because of geitonogamy. Mating system was investigated in three populations of C. vulgaris is by means of greenhouse controlled crosses, pollen tube observations, and outcrossing rate estimations from allozyme markers. The species is highly self-sterile, most probably as a result of early inbreeding depression. Mean fruit set and mean seed number per fruit following hand self-pollination were 48 and 13%, respectively, of those following cross-pollination, Pollen tubes produced by self pollen penetrated the ovary with the same success as those from cross-pollination. Multilocus estimates of the outcrossing rates ranged from 0.71 to 0.90, and two estimates were significantly different from 1.00. Calluna vulgaris could thus be classified as being mixed mating with predominant allogamy. Single-locus estimates did not differ significantly from multilocus estimates suggesting that biparental inbreeding did not contribute to the apparent selfing rate. The maintenance of high early inbreeding depression despite an intermediate level of selfing is discussed with respect to recent theories on mating system evolution

    Genetic variation and parental performance under inbreeding for growth in Eucalyptus globulus

    No full text
    We aimed to better understand the genetic architecture of growth in E. globulus undergoing inbreeding by comparing families from selfing (SELF), open pollination (OP) and unrelated polymix crossing (POL) of common parents. Stem diameter at breast height (DBH) was assessed at 4, 6 and 10 years after planting in a field trial. • The OP heritability was overestimated at an early age relative to the POL heritability. • No significant correlations were found between the SELF and POL parental effects, indicating substantial non-additive genetic variation under inbreeding. The OP family effects were better correlated with the SELF than the POL population, and only at age 10 years, after substantial mortality of inbred progeny has occurred, was the positive correlation between OP and POL families significantly different from zero. • The estimated dominance variance arising from inbreeding was nearly 10-fold greater than the dominance variance associated with random mating and the additive variance, and appeared to be a major contributor to the variation in inbreeding depression amongst selfed families
    corecore