Morph-ratio variation, population size and female reproductive success in distylous Pulmonaria officinalis (Boraginaceae)

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Abstract

Theory predicts that morph ratios in heterostylous populations are governed by negative frequency-dependent selection typically resulting in equal morph ratios at equilibrium. Previous work on the distylous perennial herb Pulmonaria officinalis, however, showed asymmetric mating between floral morphs and a weak self-incompatibility system, with the long-styled morph (L-morph) producing significantly higher seed set following intramorph crosses and even selfing than the short-styled morph (S-morph), two aspects thought to affect female fecundity and morph-ratio variation. Here, we evaluated morph ratios and population size of all known P. officinalis populations in the northern part of Belgium. Morph ratios deviated significantly from 1 : 1 (range 0.09-1 L-morph frequency, mean = 0.58). Relative fecundity of the S-morph (i.e. mean seed set of the S-morph/mean seed set of the L-morph) was on average 0.73, was positively related to the frequency of the L-morph, and reached 1 (similar levels of female fecundity) at an average L-morph frequency of 0.66 in the population. As some small populations had the S-morph in majority, our results suggest that local morph ratios are influenced both by the relative fecundity of L- and S-morph individuals and by stochastic processes in small populations. © 2008 The Authors.

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Brys, R., Jacquemyn, H., & Beeckman, T. (2008). Morph-ratio variation, population size and female reproductive success in distylous Pulmonaria officinalis (Boraginaceae). Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 21(5), 1281–1289. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2008.01569.x

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