How Does mimulus verbenaceus (Phrymaceae) set Seed in the absence of pollinators?

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Abstract

Mimulus verbenaceus has successfully invaded and/or competed for the very specialized habitats of desert seeps and springs characterized by scarce or no pollinators (personal observation). It has done so by evolving an ingenious mechanism of reproductive assurance in which the senescing epipetalous corolla bends down, abscisses and slides down its style dragging its anthers over the stigma lobes, resulting in self-pollination. This dragging mechanism both depends on the plants ability to self-pollinate and presumably promotes the evolution of self-pollination by providing an advantage-invasion of new habitats-to counter-balance the disadvantages of selfing. M. verbenaceus has evolved a second means of reproductive assurance that depends on the nearness of the anthers to the stigma lobes. They are close, even touching, in the red flowers, leading to much self-pollination and are well separated in the yellow flowers leading to little self-pollination. This advantage of the red-flowered plants likely explains the relative abundance of the red morph and the rarity of the yellow morph in nature as well as the greater seed set of the red-flowered morph than that of the yellow-flowered morph. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2008.

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Vickery, R. K. (2008). How Does mimulus verbenaceus (Phrymaceae) set Seed in the absence of pollinators? Evolutionary Biology, 35(3), 199–207. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11692-008-9031-x

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