An important consequence of self-compatibility in plants is that self-pollination can have deleterious effects on plant fitness because of inbreeding.Weconducted a hand pollination experiment under field conditions to measure the magnitude of inbreeding depression associated with self-pollination in the rare western prairie fringed-orchid Platanthera praeclara Sheviak and Bowles. By comparing capsules and seeds resulting from cross versus self-pollination treatments, we determined that self-pollination reduces seed quality while having no detectable effect on capsule production or seed numbers. A smaller percentage of seeds resulting from selfpollination contained an embryo (18%) relative to seeds from cross-pollination (46%). Seeds that had an embryo were scored for the size of the embryo, small or large. A smaller proportion of seeds from self-pollination contained a large embryo (75%) relative to seeds from cross-pollination (92%). These results suggest that sexual reproduction and recruitment in this rare plant are dependent on the frequency of pollinator visitations that result in outcrossing.
CITATION STYLE
Travers, S. E., Anderson, K., Vitt, P., & Harris, M. O. (2018). Breeding system and inbreeding depression in the rare orchid, Platanthera praeclara, in a fragmented grassland landscape. Botany, 96(3), 151–159. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjb-2017-0104
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.