1. Interspecific variation in pollen-ovule ratio is negatively correlated with pollen transfer efficiency in a natural community
- Author
-
S.-Q. Huang and Y.-B. Gong
- Subjects
Ovule ,Pollination ,Stamen ,Plant Science ,General Medicine ,Interspecific competition ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Natural community ,Transfer efficiency ,Pollen ,Botany ,medicine ,Community survey ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The pollination efficiency hypothesis has long been proposed as an explanation for interspecific variation in pollen-ovule (P:O) ratios. However, no empirical study on P:O ratios has directly and quantitatively measured pollen transfer efficiency (PE). Here, we use a PE index, defined as the proportion of pollen grains removed from anthers that are subsequently deposited on conspecific stigmas, as a direct and quantitative measure of PE. We investigated P:O ratios, pollen removal and pollen deposition in 26 plant species in an alpine meadow, over three consecutive years. Our community survey showed that nearly 5% of removed pollen was successfully deposited on conspecific stigmas. The PE index ranged from 0.01% up to 78.56% among species, and correlated negatively with the P:O ratio across years. This correlation was not changed by controlling for phylogenetic relationships among species, suggesting that the interspecific variation in P:O ratios can be attributed to the probability of pollen grains reaching a stigma. The results indicate that the pollination efficiency hypothesis can help to explain interspecific variation in P:O ratios.
- Published
- 2014
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