Artykuł w czasopiśmie
Brak miniatury
Licencja

CC-BYCC-BY - Uznanie autorstwa

Breeding system variability, pollination biology and reproductive success of the rare Polemonium caeruleum L. in NE Poland

Autor
Brzosko, Emilia
Ostrowiecka, Beata
Ryniewicz, Justyna
Roguz, Katarzyna
Mirski, Paweł
Jermakowicz, Edyta
Wróblewska, Ada
Zych, Marcin
Tałałaj, Izabela
Data publikacji
2017
Abstrakt (EN)

Polemonium caeruleum (Polemoniaceae) represents a very interesting system of compatibility transition. Studies of its biological and ecological properties in the context of the breeding system of various populations may help to understand the evolutionary mechanism of this process. We investigated some aspects of the breeding system, diversity and foraging behavior of the visitors, and relationship between population properties and fruit set in three populations from NE Poland. We found distinct compatibility systems in two studied populations and showed that if a population is self-compatible (SC), selfing is mediated by insects via geitonogamous pollen transfer. Despite the population properties (compatibility, visitor diversity and activity, population size, density, or floral display), P. caeruleum is not pollen limited and pollinators are highly important as a key factor determining the high reproductive success. Visitor assemblages (including key pollinators, bumblebees, and honey bees) and their foraging behavior on inflorescences vary between the populations, which may influence differences in the breeding system. The self-incompatible population was visited by a more diverse group of insects from Hymenoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera, Heteroptera, and Coeloptera, which may favor effective cross-pollen transfer, whereas the SC population was pollinated mainly by Apis mellifera, which may promote mixed-mating. Studies on a wider range of P. caeruleum populations are needed to determine selective factors responsible for compatibility transition.

Słowa kluczowe EN
compatibility system
fruit set
hand-pollination
seed set
visitation rate
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki biologiczne
Czasopismo
Acta Agrobotanica
Tom
70
Zeszyt
1: 1709
ISSN
0065-0951
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa