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Inflorescence size: test of the male function hypothesis

Authors: Campbell, D. R.ORCID
Year: 1989
Journal: American Journal of Botany, Vol. 76, pp. 730-738
Publisher: UNKNOWN
DOI: 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1989.tb11367.x
Keywords: BOTANY, EVOLUTION, PLANT MORPHOLOGY, RMBL

Abstract

One explanation for low fruit sets in plants with hermaphroditic flowers is that total flower production by a plant is controlled primarily by selection through male function. This male function hypothesis presupposes that success in pollen donation increases more strongly with flower number than does seed set. I tested this prediction by measuring male and female components of reproductive success as functions of flower number in natural populations of the self‐incompatible, perfect flowered plant, Ipomopsis aggregata. Fruit set in this hummingbird‐pollinated plant averaged 4.9 to 40.3% across the 4 years of study. Both the total amount of pollen donated and the total amount received, as estimated by movement of fluorescent powdered dyes, increased linearly with number of flowers on a plant. Total seed production, however, increased disproportionately quickly because plants with larger floral displays were more likely to set at least one fruit. An estimate of the functional femaleness of a plant, based on pollen donation and seed production, increased with flower number. These results do not support the male function hypothesis.

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