4.7 Article

Variation in heterostylous breeding systems in neighbouring populations of Oxalis alpina (Oxalidaceae)

Journal

PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 104-110

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/plb.12340

Keywords

Distyly; Galiuro Mts.; Oxalis alpina; tristyly

Categories

Funding

  1. University of California Institute for Mexico
  2. United States (UC MEXUS)
  3. CONACYT [47858-Q]
  4. National Autonomous University of Mexico [PAPIIT IN217 803]
  5. National Science Foundation [DEB-0614164]
  6. UC-Irvine Undergraduate Research Opportunity Award

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The heterostylous reproductive system of Oxalis alpina in the Galiuro Mts. of Arizona was investigated using field surveys, controlled crosses in the greenhouse and measurements of reproductive morphs. Although populations in the Pinaleno Mts. to the immediate east and in the Santa Catalina Mts. to the immediate west have derived distylous reproductive systems, tristyly, the ancestral reproductive system in O. alpina, has been retained in the Galiuro Mts. population. Tristylous incompatibility relationships in the Galiuro population are modified from the ancestral condition, with significant loss of incompatibility differentiation between stamen whorls of both short-and long-styled morphs. Morphological adjustments of anther positions in the Galiuro population of O. alpina match those expected in light of incompatibility modification, with divergence of the mid-level anthers away from the position of the mid stigmas of the mid-styled morph. The occurrence of tristyly in an area of Arizona where distyly is found in adjacent mountain ranges is particularly remarkable, and indicates both the isolation of populations restricted to the upper elevations of these mountain ranges and variation in the tempo of evolution over short geographic distances.

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