Biparental inbreeding depression, genetic relatedness and progeny vigour in a wind-pollinated treeline species in Argentina

2009 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Biparental inbreeding depression, genetic relatedness and progeny vigour in a wind-pollinated treeline species in Argentina​
Seltmann, P.; Hensen, I.; Renison, D.; Wesche, K.; Ploch, S.; Duenas, J. R. & Cocucci, A. et al.​ (2009) 
Plant Ecology205(1) pp. 155​-164​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11258-009-9605-4 

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Authors
Seltmann, Peggy; Hensen, Isabell; Renison, Daniel; Wesche, Karsten; Ploch, Sebastian; Duenas, Juan Rondan; Cocucci, Andrea; Jung, Klaus
Abstract
Spatially restricted gene flow and resulting spatial genetic structure are generally considered as being the primary controlling factors in the dynamics of biparental inbreeding depression in a wide range of plant species. However, wind-pollinated angiosperm trees have not been studied adequately in this respect. The present study analyses the relationships among parental genetic similarity, outcrossing distances, progeny vigour and mortality in Polylepis australis (Rosaceae), a wind-pollinated treeline species endemic to Argentina. We investigated whether spatial genetic structuring occurs in anthropogenically fragmented P. australis woodlands of the Crdoba Mountains. We also performed a controlled crossing experiment using pollen collected from different distances. Genetic variability (using RAPD-PCR), vigour (N-metabolism capacity) and mortality of the resulting progeny were contrasted with progeny from unmanipulated flowers. We found a continuous decrease in parental genetic similarity with spatial distance among mates and an increase in N-metabolism capacity in the progeny produced from pollen at increasing distances, as well as a very high mortality of seedlings resulting from short-distance crosses. Additionally, our results suggest that there is still fragment connectivity in P. australis through long-distance pollen-mediated gene flow.
Issue Date
2009
Status
published
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Plant Ecology 
ISSN
1385-0237
Sponsor
Volkswagen foundation

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