Pollen competition and selection have significant evolutionary consequences, but very little is known about how they can be modulated. We have examined in cherry (Prunus avium L.) how pollen performance is affected by the genotype of the pollen and by the environmental conditions under which it grows, namely the pistilar tissue and temperature. The different pollen donor genotypes tested in this work differed in their behaviour both in vitro and in vivo and this behaviour was modulated depending on the female recipient they grew on. Furthermore, there was a significant temperature-genotype interaction that affected the pollen tube population census that succeeded in reaching the base of the style. The combination of these three factors, while enabling a capacity of response to variations in environmental pressures, could maintain variability in pollen performance avoiding the fixation of the genes that control pollen tube growth rate. © 2005 European Society for Evolutionary Biology.
CITATION STYLE
Hedhly, A., Hormaza, J. I., & Herrero, M. (2005). Influence of genotype-temperature interaction on pollen performance. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 18(6), 1494–1502. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2005.00939.x
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