Effects of population size and pollen diversity on reproductive success and offspring size in the narrow endemic Cochlearia bavarica (Brassicaceae)
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 89 (8) , 1250-1259
- https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.89.8.1250
Abstract
In small, fragmented populations of self-incompatible plant species, genetic drift and increasingly close relationships between plants may restrict the number of genetically different pollen donors, the availability of compatible mates, and the opportunity for pollen competition and selection. These restrictions may reduce the siring success or increase the probability of inbreeding depression in the offspring. To test if this was the case, we hand-pollinated maternal plants in small and large populations of the rare, endemic plant Cochlearia bavarica (Brassicaceae) with pollen from one, three, or nine donors from the same population or with nine donors from a different population. In one additional population of intermediate size, maternal plants were hand-pollinated with ten donors located at a distance of 1, 10, 100, or 1000 m. We then recorded seed and offspring characters. On average, offspring from small populations were smaller than normal and fewer survived to maturity. Increasing the number of pollen donors had a positive effect on reproductive success in small and large populations, but at the highest pollen diversity this occurred at the expense of slightly reduced offspring fitness. Because the total amount of transferred pollen was held constant, these effects could not be attributed to increasing pollen load. Rather, the increasing pollen diversity may have increased the chances of selecting a particularly "good" donor for fertilization-an example of a sampling effect of diversity. Pollen from outside a population or from 10-100 m away resulted in higher reproductive success and greater offspring size. Effects of population size and pollination treatments on reproductive success and offspring fitness were additive. Apparently, there is no obvious size threshold above which the potential of inbreeding depression can be ignored in C. bavarica.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Population Size, Genetic Variation, and Reproductive Success in a Rapidly Declining, Self‐Incompatible Perennial (Arnica montana) in The NetherlandsConservation Biology, 2000
- The Effects of a Bottleneck on Inbreeding Depression and the Genetic LoadThe American Naturalist, 2000
- Partial self-incompatibility and inbreeding depression in a native tree species of La Réunion (Indian Ocean)Oecologia, 1998
- Inbreeding depression and outbreeding depression in plantsHeredity, 1996
- Mutation Accumulation and the Extinction of Small PopulationsThe American Naturalist, 1995
- Inbreeding depression and mating‐distance dependent offspring fitness in large and small populations of Lychnis flos‐cuculi (Caryophyllaceae)Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 1994
- Mate availability in small populations of plant species with homomorphic sporophytic self-incompatibilityHeredity, 1992
- Seed Germination Percentage Increases with Population Size in a Fragmented Prairie SpeciesConservation Biology, 1991
- Loss of Genetic Diversity from Managed Populations: Interacting Effects of Drift, Mutation, Immigration, Selection, and Population SubdivisionConservation Biology, 1987
- A comparison of levels of genetic polymorphism and self-compatibility in geographically restricted and widespread plant congenersEvolutionary Ecology, 1987