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Selfing rates vary with floral display, pollinator visitation and plant density in natural populations of Mimulus ringens

Authors :
Dorothy A. Christopher
Dorset W. Trapnell
Randall J. Mitchell
Patrick A Smallwood
Jeffrey D. Karron
Wendy R. Semski
Source :
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Variation in selfing rates within and among populations of hermaphroditic flowering plants can strongly influence the evolution of reproductive strategies and the genetic structure of populations. This intraspecific variation in mating patterns may reflect both genetic and ecological factors, but the relative importance of these factors remains poorly understood. Here, we explore how selfing in 13 natural populations of the perennial wildflower Mimulus ringens is influenced by (a) pollinator visitation, an ecological factor, and (b) floral display, a trait with a genetic component that also responds to environmental variation. We also explore whether genetically based floral traits, including herkogamy, affect selfing. We found substantial variation among populations in selfing rate (0.13–0.55). Selfing increased strongly and significantly with floral display, among as well as within populations. Selfing also increased at sites with lower pollinator visitation and low plant density. However, selfing was not correlated with floral morphology. Overall, these results suggest that pollinator visitation and floral display, two factors that interact to affect geitonogamous pollinator movements, can influence the selfing rate. This study identifies mechanisms that may play a role in maintaining selfing rate variation among populations.<br />Selfing rates vary widely among natural populations of the perennial wildflower Mimulus ringens. Increased selfing is positively correlated with floral display size and negatively correlated with pollinator visitation and plant density. This suggests that among‐population variation in selfing rate reflects the interaction between ecological and genetic factors.

Details

ISSN :
14209101
Volume :
34
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of evolutionary biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07b8244183f619247c34c4ca0d651305