1996
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.1996.139
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Mating patterns and pollen dispersal in a natural knobcone pine (Pinus attenuate Lemmon.) stand

Abstract: Mating system and effective pollen dispersal were studied in a natural stand of knobcone pine (Pinus attenuata Lemmon.) using 11 isozyme loci. Analyses were performed by fitting neighbourhood and mixed-mating models to multilocus genotypic arrays of offspring from four mother trees. Neighbourhoods consisted of all potential outcross males within 11 m of each mother tree (44, on average). Average outcrossing rates of the mother trees were estimated to be 0.97 and 0.96 for the respective models, whereas the popu… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(77 citation statements)
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“…Little is known about mechanisms responsible for this pattern, although spatial segregation of the sexes is widespread, occurring in over 30 species from 20 families (Bertiller et al 2002;Bierzychudek and Eckhart 1988;Dudley 2006;Eppley et al 1998;Iglesias and Bell 1989;Korpelainen 1991;Lokker et al 1994;Shea et al 1993;Stark et al 2005). Spatial segregation of males and females is surprising in sessile organisms because an increase in distance between the sexes should reduce fertilization success and presumably the fitness of each individual (e.g., Bawa and Opler 1977;Brazeau and Lasker 1992;Burczyk et al 1996;Levitan et al 1992).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Little is known about mechanisms responsible for this pattern, although spatial segregation of the sexes is widespread, occurring in over 30 species from 20 families (Bertiller et al 2002;Bierzychudek and Eckhart 1988;Dudley 2006;Eppley et al 1998;Iglesias and Bell 1989;Korpelainen 1991;Lokker et al 1994;Shea et al 1993;Stark et al 2005). Spatial segregation of males and females is surprising in sessile organisms because an increase in distance between the sexes should reduce fertilization success and presumably the fitness of each individual (e.g., Bawa and Opler 1977;Brazeau and Lasker 1992;Burczyk et al 1996;Levitan et al 1992).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The rest of parameters are as in Figure 4 Conserv Genet (2009) 10:45-57 55 and even better performance is expected in more inbred conservation populations. Finally, the new method is amenable to modifications accounting for other factors affecting the probability of mating, such as differences in male fecundity (for instance, due to quantity and/or quality of pollen; Burczyk et al 1996;Oddou-Muratorio et al 2005) or phenological overlapping (Robledo-Arnuncio et al 2004 and references therein). A simple way to account for these factors would be to introduce weights in the probability of mating, p(x, y), in equation (1) of the form: k i u ij = P k2N k k u kj ; where k i is the male fecundity of the ith individual, u ij the phenological overlapping of the ith pollen donor with the jth mother tree and N is the total number of trees in the plantation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…include the sampling location of the genotypes (e.g. Adams et al, 1992;Burczyk et al, 1996;Smouse et al, 1999;Hadfield et al, 2006). In principle, it is possible to add the corresponding prior probability distributions in our model.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ellstrand and Marshall (1985) and Meagher and Thompson (1987). It has been used mainly to find correlations between phenotypes and reproductive success, or to estimate pollen-mediated gene flow (Smouse and Meagher, 1994;Burczyk et al, 1996;Smouse et al, 1999;Meagher et al, 2003;Wright and Meagher, 2004). To a lesser extent, parentage inference and related methods are used to estimate recent rates of self-fertilization (selfing) in a population (Ritland and Jain, 1981;David et al, 2007;Wilson and Dawson, 2007;Jarne and David, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%