Among-population pollen movement and skewed male fitness in a dioecious weed
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Authors
Hopley, Tara
Zwart, Alexander B.
Young, Andrew
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Springer Verlag (Germany)
Abstract
Dioecious plant species are presented with
the challenge of needing both males and females to be
present to ensure seed production and self-sustaining
populations. In this situation the contribution of pollen
from outside sources to mating events may become
reproductively important. Salix cinerea (willow) is
used as an ecological model for investigating the
importance of inter-population pollen movement for
the local reproductive dynamics of a dioecious environmental
weed using microsatellite-based paternity
analysis. Nearly 40 % of seeds produced are sired by
fathers from outside the local site (500 m) indicating
that invasive S. cinerea populations are linked through
pollen movement. Thus in the absence of males at a
site up to 40 % of seed production would be
maintained by immigrant pollen. Observed patterns
of within-site mating dynamics revealed a highly
skewed male fitness distribution with a small number
of fathers being responsible for a large proportion of
successful fertilisation events. High inter-population
pollen flow for this dioecious weed suggests that
between population reproductive dynamics may increase
the likelihood of colonisation success of
dioecious weeds. Control strategies that take into
account inter-population pollen dispersal need to be
developed for effective management.
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Biological Invasions