A Pollen Chase Experiment; Examining Varying Levels of Embryonic Inbreeding Depression


Autoria(s): Wilson, Emily; Stone, Judy
Data(s)

01/01/2007

Resumo

A pollen chase experiment was performed upon three Costa Rican populations of Witheringia solanacea to examine the breakdown of genetically enforced self incompatibility (SI) and the extent of embryonic inbreeding depression. Self-pollen was applied in the bud, with outcross pollen applied one day later, and outcross pollinations at both intervals as a control. A variety of responses were found among the populations. BOHS readily accepted self pollen and suffered from very low inbreeding depression. Monteverde and Las Cruces both have lower fruit set with self-pollination precedence indicating that bud pollinations can overcome the self-incompatibility response and that embryonic death due to inbreeding depression causes fruit failure. The treatment:control fruit set is higher for the Las Cruces plants indicating stronger SI response Self-precedence seeds from the Las Cruces plants are likely to be outcrossed. Self-precedence seeds from Monteverde are likely selfed.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.colby.edu/ugrs/48

http://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1047&context=ugrs

Publicador

Digital Commons @ Colby

Fonte

Undergraduate Research Symposium (UGRS)

Palavras-Chave #pollen chase experiment #Costa Rica #Witheringia solanacea #embryonic inbreeding depression #Biology #Cell and Developmental Biology
Tipo

text