← Back to PublicationsJournal Article

Reproductive costs of self-pollination in Ipomopsis aggregata: are ovules usurped?

Authors: Waser, N. M.ORCID; Price, M. V.ORCID
Year: 1991
Journal: American Journal of Botany, Vol. 78, pp. 1036-1043
Publisher: UNKNOWN
DOI: 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1991.tb14511.x
Keywords: BOTANY, GRAZING, IPOMOPSIS, PLANT REPRODUCTION, POLEMONIACEAE, POLLINATION BIOLOGY, RMBL, SELFING

Abstract

In common with many cosexual angiosperms, the hummingbird‐pollinated montane herb Ipomopsis aggregata (Polemoniaceae) is likely to experience self‐pollination. Does this incur a fecundity cost even in such a highly self‐sterile (presumably self‐incompatible) species? Histological studies showed that self pollen germinates, and its tubes penetrate ovules almost as often as those of outcross pollen. Ovules penetrated by self tubes are especially likely to show milky callose occlusion 24–48 hr after pollination, and several observations suggest an association between occlusion and degeneration. Compared to flowers receiving only outcross pollen, seed set was reduced by 42% on average when self pollen was applied along with outcross, either by hand (in emasculated flowers) or by natural autodeposition (in unemasculated flowers). Reductions were statistically indistinguishable whether self pollen was applied 9 hr before outcross pollen, or at the same time. Unemasculated flowers accumulated substantial self pollen loads, and this autodeposition persisted when flowers were probed to mimic hummingbird visitation. Geitonogamy also is substantial, judging from field estimates of pollen transfer. Thus natural self pollen deposition may be sufficient to “usurp” ovules that otherwise could mature. In this light, late‐acting self‐rejection in I. aggregata seems decidedly less efficient than an early‐acting system that would block pollen germination or tube growth.

Local Knowledge Graph (10 entities)

Loading graph...

Cited By (195 times, 17 in Knowledge Hub)

Article

Reproductive ecology of Erigeron speciosus, a montane perennial herb: Evidence of self-incompatibility

2024DOI: 10.1894/0038-4909-68.1.13
Article

Comparative impacts of long-term trends in snowmelt and species interactions on plant population dynamics

2022DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.13875
Article

Is Plant Fitness Proportional to Seed Set? An Experiment and a Spatial Model

2017DOI: 10.1086/694116
Student Paper

Does Road Dust Affect Hylemya Oviposition in Scarlet Gilia (<i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>)?

2017
Student Paper

Road Dust, <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i> Seed Count, and attack by <i>Hylemya</i> Flies—Are they Linked?

2016
Thesis

Competitive context drives pollinator behavior: linking foraging plasticity, natural pollen deposition, and plant reproduction.

2016
Article

When resources don't rescue: flowering phenology and species interactions affect compensation to herbivory in <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>

2012DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2012.20458.x
Article

Lifetime fitness in two generations of <i>Ipomopsis</i> hybrids

2008
Article

Asymmetrical pollen success in Ipomopsis (Polemoniaceae) contact sites

2006
Article

The consequences of direct versus indirect spsecies interactions on selection on traits: pollination and nectar robbing in Ipomopsis aggregata

2006
Article

Self-sterility in <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i> (Polemoniaceae) is due to prezygotic ovule degeneration

2006DOI: 10.3732/ajb.93.2.254
Thesis

Floral larceny: Implications, resistance, and the potential for tolerance

2006
Student Paper

Nectar robbing in Ipomopsis aggregata: does high nectar production confer tolerance?

2005
Article

Linking pollinator visitation rate and pollen receipt

2003DOI: 10.3732/ajb.90.11.1612
Article

Tests of pre- and postpollination barriers to hybridization between sympatric species of <i>Ipomopsis</i> (Polemoniaceae)

2001DOI: 10.2307/2657012
Article

Interspecific pollen transfer as a mechanism of competition: effect of Castilleja linariaefolia pollen on seed set of Ipomopsis aggregata

2000
Article

Differential success of pollen donors in a self-compatible lily

1993DOI: 10.2307/2410194