2022
DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.1865
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Effects of heterospecific pollen on stigma behavior in Campsis radicans: Causes and consequences

Abstract: Premise: Pollinator sharing of co-flowering plants may result in interspecific pollen receipt with a fitness cost. However, the underlying factors that determine the effects of heterospecific pollen (HP) are not fully understood. Moreover, the cost of stigma closure induced by HP may be more severe for plants with special touch-sensitive stigmas than for plants with non-touch-sensitive stigmas. Very few studies have assessed HP effects on stigma behavior. Methods: We conducted hand-pollination experiments with… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(129 reference statements)
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“…These observations were similar to the incompatibility reaction observed after self‐pollination, so the incompatibility system in L. suffruticosum may adaptively preclude pollen‐tube formation after interspecific pollinations (Grant, 1969; Broz and Bedinger, 2021). The lack of pollen‐tube formation could also be a non‐adaptive consequence of species divergence in that none of the interacting species are closely related or belong to the same subclade (Ruiz‐Martin et al, 2018, but see Zou et al, 2022). Our surveys did not reveal obvious hybrids, although hybrids between Linum species have been obtained experimentally (Ockendon, 1968; Seetharam, 1972).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These observations were similar to the incompatibility reaction observed after self‐pollination, so the incompatibility system in L. suffruticosum may adaptively preclude pollen‐tube formation after interspecific pollinations (Grant, 1969; Broz and Bedinger, 2021). The lack of pollen‐tube formation could also be a non‐adaptive consequence of species divergence in that none of the interacting species are closely related or belong to the same subclade (Ruiz‐Martin et al, 2018, but see Zou et al, 2022). Our surveys did not reveal obvious hybrids, although hybrids between Linum species have been obtained experimentally (Ockendon, 1968; Seetharam, 1972).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conspecific pollen‐tube performance might depend on the absolute or relative amounts of conspecific and heterospecific pollen reaching stigmas, the timing of the arrival of conspecific relative to heterospecific pollen, or the identity and diversity of heterospecific pollen donors (Armbruster and Herzig, 1984; Arceo‐Gómez and Ashman, 2011; Bruckman and Campbell, 2016; Tong and Huang, 2016; Cavalcante et al, 2020; Coetzee et al, 2020). Heterospecific pollen‐tube formation might depend on the phylogenetic distance between species or the presence of interspecific incompatibility systems that operate similarly to the self‐incompatibility reaction (Grant, 1966; Broz and Bedinger, 2021; Zou et al, 2022). Because interspecific pollination is generally costly, tolerance to receiving pollen from other species can reduce or mitigate fitness costs, allowing pollinator sharing and species coexistence (Arceo‐Gómez et al, 2016; Moreira‐Hernández et al, 2019; Streher et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%