4.5 Article

THE ROLE OF INBREEDING DEPRESSION AND MATING SYSTEM IN THE EVOLUTION OF HETEROSTYLY

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 67, Issue 8, Pages 2309-2322

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/evo.12123

Keywords

Breeding systems; distyly; Oxalidaceae; self-incompatibility; tristyly

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB-0614164, DEB-0614208, RR715-061/4689108]
  2. UC MEXUS (University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States)
  3. UC President's Dissertation Year award
  4. UC-Irvine Summer Undergraduate Research Program
  5. UC-Irvine Undergraduate Research Opportunity Awards
  6. NSF Research Experience for Undergraduate awards
  7. Office Of The Director
  8. Office of Integrative Activities [0963441] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We investigated the role of morph-based differences in the expression of inbreeding depression in loss of the mid-styled morph from populations of tristylous Oxalis alpina. O. alpina differing in their tristylous incompatibility relationships. All three populations exhibited significant inbreeding depression. In two populations with highly modified tristylous incompatibility, manifested as increased reciprocal compatibility between short- and long-styled morphs, substantial SC and self-fertilization of mid-styled morphs were detected, and expected to result in expression of inbreeding depression in the progeny of mid-styled morphs in the natural populations. In contrast, significant self-fertility of the mid-styled morph was absent from the population with typical tristylous incompatibility, and no self-fertilization could be detected. Although self-fertilization and expression of inbreeding depression should result in selection against the mid-styled morph in the later stages of the transition from tristyly to distyly, in O. alpina selection against the mid-styled morph in the early phases of the evolution of distyly is likely due to genic selection against mid-alleles associated with modified tristylous incompatibility, rather than expression of inbreeding depression.

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