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Reproductive Biology |
2Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología, Universidad de Sevilla, Apartado 1095, E-41080 Sevilla, Spain; 3Department of Botany, University of Toronto, 25 Willcocks Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 3B2
Received for publication February 7, 2002. Accepted for publication March 28, 2002.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Amaryllidaceae assortative and disassortative mating founder events heterostyly Narcissus papyraceus outcrossing rates self-incompatibility stigma-height dimorphism style-morph ratios
| INTRODUCTION |
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The most widely recognized herkogamy polymorphism is heterostyly, in which populations contain two (distyly) or three (tristyly) style morphs that differ from one another in stigma and anther positions and in a suite of ancillary morphological and physiological characters (Darwin, 1877
; Barrett, 1992
). Because of the reciprocal placement of stigmas and anthers in heterostylous flowers, this polymorphism has been described as reciprocal herkogamy (Richards, 1986
; Webb and Lloyd, 1986
). Experimental studies of heterostylous populations have provided convincing evidence that heterostyly is maintained by negative frequency-dependent selection and functions to promote pollinator-mediated cross-pollination and reduce pollen wastage (reviewed in Ganders, 1979
; Lloyd and Webb, 1992a
, b
).
Less well known in comparison to heterostyly are species that are dimorphic for style length but in which anthers are positioned at similar heights in the two floral morphs. This polymorphism is referred to as stigma-height dimorphism and has been reported sporadically among a few angiosperm families (reviewed in Barrett, Jesson, and Baker, 2000
). In some groups, stigma-height dimorphism appears to be an intermediate stage in the evolution of distyly, as predicted by theoretical models (Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1979b
; Lloyd and Webb, 1992b
). However, the occurrence of the polymorphism in several non-heterostylous families (e.g., Ericaceae, Epacridaceae, Haemodoraceae, Liliaceae) indicates that stigma-height dimorphism is not always a transient polymorphism associated with the evolution of heterostyly (Barrett, Jesson, and Baker, 2000
). The selective forces maintaining stigma-height dimorphism in flowering plants are still poorly understood.
Among taxonomic groups with stigma-height dimorphism the polymorphism is most commonly represented in the insect-pollinated Mediterranean geophyte Narcissus (Amaryllidaceae) occurring in at least a dozen species in three sections (Apodanthae, Jonquillae, and Tazettae) of the genus (Dulberger, 1964
; Arroyo and Dafni, 1995
; Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000a
, b
). In contrast, heterostyly occurs in only two species of Narcissus, distylous N. albimarginatus (Arroyo and Barrett, 2000
) and tristylous N. triandrus (Barrett et al., 1997
) although many spurious reports of the polymorphism in Narcissus have been made, because of a failure to recognize the distinguishing features of heterostyly and stigma-height dimorphism (reviewed in Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
). The contrasting frequencies and taxonomic distribution of the two polymorphisms in Narcissus suggest that stigma-height dimorphism is an evolutionarily stable floral strategy that only rarely becomes modified to heterostyly.
Investigations of several Narcissus species have revealed two distinctive features associated with stylar polymorphism. First, self-sterility in the genus is associated with a late-acting ovarian self-incompatibility system that restricts self-fertilization but permits both intramorph and intermorph mating (Bateman, 1954
; Dulberger, 1964
; Barrett et al., 1997
; Sage et al., 1999
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000b
). Second, style-morph ratios in populations are commonly biased in favor of the approach herkogamous or long-styled morph (Arroyo and Dafni, 1995
; Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
; Barrett et al., 1997
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000a
). These features differ from the conventional patterns observed in heterostylous species in which intramorph mating is prevented because of diallelic self-incompatibility and style-morph ratios are often close to unity (reviewed in Barrett, 1992
). Theoretical models on the evolutionary forces maintaining stigma-height dimorphism in Narcissus indicate that biased morph ratios likely arise because of morph-specific differences in assortative mating (Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000b
). Unlike most heterostylous species, such matings can occur in Narcissus species because of intramorph compatibility. Further studies of Narcissus species with stylar polymorphisms are required to determine whether these unusual features of the reproductive system occur more generally.
Here we examine the floral biology of stigma-height dimorphism in natural populations of N. papyraceus Ker-Gawler (section Tazettae). This widely grown ornamental bulb known as Paper White is widely distributed in the Mediterranean region occurring from the southern Iberian Peninsula, Morocco, and Algeria to Southern France, Italy, Greece, and Yugoslavia (Blanchard, 1990
). Our investigations focused on populations in southern Spain and Portugal and northern Morocco where the species is particularly common. Our study had four principle objectives: (1) to document patterns of style-length variation in natural populations and to determine whether biased morph ratios are a common feature of the species; (2) to investigate through controlled crosses whether N. papyraceus is self-sterile and whether, like other Narcissus species with stigma-height dimorphism, all cross-pollinations are fertile regardless of morph identity; (3) to examine whether the prior self-pollination of flowers had any negative influence on seed set following subsequent cross-pollination (such an effect has been demonstrated in tristylous N. triandrus and may be of evolutionary significance with respect to the maintenance of stylar polymorphisms in the genus [see Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
; Barrett et al., 1997
; Sage et al., 1999
]); (4) to quantify mating patterns in natural populations using genetic markers to determine whether outcrossing rates differ between dimorphic and monomorphic populations and between style morphs within population.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Population sampling
We sampled a total of 66 populations in southwest Iberian Peninsula and northwest Morocco during the late winter and early springs of 19911999 to determine the frequencies of the long- and short-styled morphs (hereafter L-morph and S-morph) in each population. Localities were obtained from surveys of herbarium specimens and from information in regional floras and checklists and can be obtained from the first author on request. We estimated morph ratios and the size of individual populations using previously described methods (see Barrett et al., 1997
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000a
). We made a particular effort to avoid repeated sampling of genets by sampling only one inflorescence per clump of plants, but this may have been unavoidable in populations exposed to repeated human disturbance. We investigated the relationship between log population size (x) and the frequency of the S-morph (y) in dimorphic populations using linear and nonlinear regression models. For the nonlinear regression the predicted frequency of the S-morph = 0.5(1 eK(xB)), modified from von Bertalanffy (1938)
, and two parameters, B (x intercept) and K (the shape of the curve), were estimated using JMP's version 4.04 (SAS Institute, 2000
).
In selected populations we preserved random samples of flowers in 70% ethanol to facilitate the measurement of style length and anther height of the style morphs following protocols outlined in detail in Baker, Thompson, and Barrett (2000a
; see their Fig. 1).
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To investigate the potential cost of prior self-pollination we compared the fruit and seed set of flowers that were cross-pollinated with those that were self-pollinated and then cross-pollinated 23 d later. We used a total of eight plants each of the L- and S-morph in these comparisons. All cross-pollinations were between morphs and used a single pollen donor. On a given day we randomly assigned treatments to flowers within an inflorescence and their position was recorded. Fruit and seed set were recorded as above and data were analyzed using ANCOVA.
Estimates of mating patterns
We estimated multilocus outcrossing rates using horizontal starch gel electrophoresis of allozymes from open-pollinated seed randomly sampled in eight populations of N. papyraceus, using electrophoretic procedures outlined in Wendel and Weeden (1989)
. Four populations were dimorphic (population 1, Bolonia, Cádiz Province, Spain; population 2, Facinas, Cádiz Province; population 5, Algeciras El Palancar, Cádiz Province; population 11, Oued Lediane, Tanger Province, Morocco), and four were monomorphic (population 10, Posadas, Cordoba Province, Spain; population 15, Carcabuey Valdecañas, Cordoba Province; population 18, Villanueva de los Castillejos, Huelva Province, Spain; population 19, Hinojos Coto del Rey, Huelva Province) for style morph. In dimorphic populations we sampled 810 maternal families of ten seeds from each style morph and in monomorphic populations we sampled 15 families of ten seeds. We used polymorphism at four loci (Aco, Aat, Gdh, Idh) in all populations, except populations 1 and 2, which were monomorphic at Idh and Gdh, respectively. In populations with polymorphic loci, 2 alleles were evident at Aat and Gdh, 24 at Aco, and 34 at Idh. We estimated multilocus population outcrossing rates (tm) and their standard errors (based on 1000 bootstrap values) by employing Ritland's MLTR program (Ritland, 1990
). In three dimorphic populations we compared outcrossing rates between the style morphs by pairwise comparisons of bootstrap estimates following the method of Eckert and Barrett (1994)
.
| RESULTS |
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Of the 66 N. papyraceus populations we sampled, 44% were monomorphic and 56% were dimorphic for style length. Among dimorphic populations, the L-morph dominated with average frequencies of the L- and S-morphs of 0.79 and 0.21, respectively. Of the 37 dimorphic populations, 22 deviated significantly from a 1 : 1 morph ratio (G tests for each population using Bonferroni correction critical P = 0.001). Only a single population exhibited an S-biased morph ratio, the remainder being L-biased. No populations encountered in the survey were monomorphic for the S-morph.
In southwest Spain, where the majority of populations were sampled, the geographical distribution of monomorphic and dimorphic populations was nonrandom (Fig. 2). Dimorphic populations occurred more commonly on the Strait of Gibraltar peninsula, whereas stylar monomorphism predominated farther north. In the Strait of Gibraltar peninsula several very large dimorphic populations occurred that contained equal frequencies of the style morphs. On average, population sizes were significantly smaller in monomorphic than dimorphic populations (mean size = 690 and 41 512 in monomorphic and dimorphic populations, respectively; ANOVA on log-transformed population size F1,65 = 3.87, P = 0.05), although median sizes were identical (500) for the two types of population. There was a significant positive relation between log population size and the frequency of the S-morph in dimorphic populations (linear regression: predicted S-morph frequency = 0.064 + 0.09 log(population size), MSE = 0.0289, F1,35 = 12.95, P = 0.001). The nonlinear regression model gave a similar fit to the data (predicted S-morph frequency = 0.5[1 eK(log(pop size)B)], K = 0.7, SE = 0.13, B = 1.57, SE = 0.16, MSE = 0.0311; Fig. 3). This model asymptotically approaches isopethy (S-morph frequency = 0.5) with increasing population size (Fig. 3).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Mating systems in Narcissus
In common with several other Narcissus species that have been examined experimentally (Bateman, 1954
; Dulberger, 1964
; Barrett et al., 1997
; Sage et al., 1999
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000b
), N. papyraceus is largely self-sterile. Moreover, our controlled crosses provided no evidence of heteromorphic incompatibility since cross-pollinations were equally fertile regardless of whether they were conducted within or between the style morphs. The absence of an association between self-sterility and style length, as commonly occurs in heterostylous plants, enables monomorphic populations of Narcissus to persist sexually through intramorph mating. This facility for assortative mating is undoubtedly the major cause of the wide range of style-morph ratios that are evident in natural populations of Narcissus species with stylar polymorphisms (Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
).
The low levels of seed set from self-pollination and the occurrence of related species with self-incompatibility suggest that the major factor governing self-sterility in N. papyraceus is the operation of a physiological self-incompatibility system. Although we cannot rule out early-acting inbreeding depression as a contributing factor to low fertility following self-pollination, it seems probable that the principle mechanism is self-incompatibility. Observations of pollen tube growth in N. papyraceus (R. Hidalgo and T. L. Sage, unpublished data) indicate similar patterns to those previously documented in the closely related N. tazetta (Dulberger, 1964
) and also N. triandrus (Sage et al., 1999
). In these species, pollen tube growth in the style is similar between self- and cross-pollination with self-rejection occurring in the ovary as a result of late-acting self-incompatibility. Experimental studies have shown that species with late-acting self-incompatibility systems are often susceptible to the inhibitory effects of prior self-pollination on outcrossed seed set (Waser and Price, 1991
; Lloyd and Wells, 1992
; Broyles and Wyatt, 1993
; Seavey and Carter, 1993
; Barrett et al., 1997
). In N. papyraceus, we also demonstrated a reduction in outcrossed seed set following prior self-pollination, although the mechanism responsible, and whether this phenomenon influences female fertility under field conditions, is not known.
Transitions from stylar heteromorphism to monomorphism in heterostylous species are frequently associated with increased selfing rates. This can occur through breakdown of self-incompatibility associated with selection for reproductive assurance (Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1979a
; Ganders, 1979
; Barrett, 1992
). However, in Narcissus the facility for intramorph mating removes this selection pressure and, as long as pollinator service is reliable, there should be no reason why outcrossing rates might differ between dimorphic and monomorphic populations. Our results support this proposal. Outcrossing rates were generally high among all populations (Fig. 6), regardless of their morph structure, and there was no evidence for significantly increased selfing in monomorphic populations. These findings suggest that the self-incompatibility system in Narcissus buffers the maternal outcrossing rate against wide variation in style-morph ratios and population size without apparently impairing female fertility.
Hypotheses to explain variation in style-morph ratios
Our survey of style-morph ratios in 66 populations of N. papyraceus revealed several distinct patterns. First, the long-styled morph dominated in most dimorphic populations and was the only morph to occur in monomorphic populations. Second, style-morph ratios were associated with population size. Small populations were more likely to be monomorphic, and equal frequencies of the long- and short-styled morph characterized the very largest populations. Third, variation in style-morph ratios was nonrandomly distributed throughout the area sampled. Dimorphic populations were concentrated in the Strait of Gibraltar peninsula, and monomorphic populations occurred more commonly across the northern edge of the range sampled (Fig. 2). As discussed below, these patterns are strikingly similar to those found in several other Narcissus species with stylar polymorphisms, implicating similar ecological and evolutionary forces in structuring variation in sexual traits.
Five other surveys of style-morph ratios in Narcissus species with stylar polymorphism have been conducted (Table 1). In common with the results of this study all species are characterized by the frequent occurrence of populations with L-biased morph ratios. Indeed, more restricted surveys of an additional three species (N. calcicola, N. gaditanus, N. jonquilla) have also revealed L-biased morph ratios (Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
). This indicates that L-biased anisoplethy is a general feature of the population biology of Narcissus species with stylar polymorphisms. These species are distributed among four sections of the genus (Apodanthae, Ganymedes, Jonquillae, Tazettae), and they differ in ecology, life history, and pollination biology. This raises the question of what ecological and genetic mechanisms might account for these similar patterns of style-morph variation.
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A second striking feature of the survey data on style-morph ratios concerns the morph representation in monomorphic populations. In each of the three species with monomorphic populations (N. dubius, N. papyraceus, N. tazetta; Table 1), all monomorphic populations sampled were composed of the L-morph. This raises the obvious question of what factors prevent the establishment and/or maintenance of populations composed exclusively of the S-morph. Two nonmutually exclusive hypotheses have been proposed to explain the absence of S-monomorphy in other Narcissus species (Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000a
). These hypotheses are clearly relevant to the data collected in this study and are briefly outlined below.
The genetic hypothesis assumes that the control of style-length in Narcissus spp. is governed by a single Mendelian locus with the short-styled allele dominant to the long-styled allele. This pattern of inheritance has been demonstrated in N. tazetta (Dulberger, 1964
, 1967
), a species that in the past has been considered conspecific with N. papyraceus (see Blanchard, 1990
). This is also the common mode of inheritance for distyly (Lewis and Jones, 1992
) and for stigma-height dimorphism in Anchusa (Schou and Philipp, 1984
). With this mode of inheritance and L-biased morph ratios the vast majority of short-styled plants should be heterozygous (Ss) at the style-length locus. Interestingly, Dulberger (1964)
found no homozygous plants of the S-morph in her genetic studies of N. tazetta despite the absence of intrinsic barrier to intramorph mating (and see Schou and Philipp, 1984
). Populations founded by Ss plants should always segregate long-styled plants (ss), thus reestablishing stylar dimorphism. In contrast, in the absence of gene flow populations founded by long-styled plants will always remain monomorphic for this form because of homozygosity at the style-length locus. Once populations monomophic for the L-morph establish in a region, founder events will further magnify L-monomorphism over larger areas, as appears to have happened around the perimeter of the range of N. papyraceus. Therefore, according to this hypothesis, the dominance relationships of alleles at the style-length locus plays a major role in governing which morph can establish monomorphic populations.
The ecological hypothesis proposes that plants of the S-morph are poor at founding populations because their stigmas are concealed deep within the floral tube and therefore require long-tongued bees and lepidoptera for cross-pollination. These types of pollinators may be less inclined to visit small populations. In contrast, the sexual organs of plants of the L-morph are easily accessible to a wide range of pollinators, including pollen-collecting bees and flies, and cross-pollination is less likely to limit population establishment. According to this hypothesis, fertility selection against the S-morph accounts for L-monomorphy. This hypothesis could be tested experimentally by establishing small monomorphic populations of the two morphs. The hypothesis predicts limited reproductive success of the S-morph compared with the L-morph under these conditions. Field observations of pollinators visiting N. papyraceus are consistent with aspects of this hypothesis (J. Arroyo, personal observations). A wide range of generalist pollinators including flies, bees, and lepidoptera have been observed visiting flowers in N. papyraceus; however, long-tongued bees and lepidoptera pollinators have only been commonly observed in large dimorphic populations in the Strait of Gibraltar peninsula. Similar patterns of insect visitation related to morph structure also occur in the closely related N. tazetta in Israel (Arroyo and Dafni, 1995
).
The final pattern that emerges from our comparison of style-morph variation among Narcissus species is evidence for geographical structuring of the style morphs (Table 1). In four of the six species examined, the distribution of style-morph variation is nonrandomly distributed throughout the regions sampled. In N. papyraceus, monomorphic populations predominate along the northern perimeter of the region sampled and populations with similar frequencies of long- and short-styled morphs are concentrated in the Strait of Gibraltar peninsula (Fig. 2). In Israel, N. tazetta populations are dimorphic in lowland sites in marshlands, but have L-biased morph ratios or are monomorphic in hilly regions (Dulberger, 1967
; Arroyo and Dafni, 1995
). In N. assoanus, L-biased morph ratios predominate in small populations in lowland sites around Montpellier; in contrast, populations at upland sites are very large and have equal frequencies of the style morphs (Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000a
). Finally, in N. triandrus, trimorphic populations occur throughout the geographical distribution of the species in the Iberian peninsula, but dimorphic populations are restricted to the northwest corner of this range in central and northern Portugal and northern Spain (Barrett et al., 1997
, and unpublished data). Various forms of pollinator-mediated selection, arising from spatial variation in the types of pollinators visiting populations, have been proposed as a potential explanation for these patterns (e.g., Arroyo and Dafni, 1995
; Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
). However, the detailed studies required to substantiate this hypothesis have yet to be undertaken.
Maintenance of stigma-height dimorphism
From a functional perspective, stigma-height dimorphism represents a puzzling sexual polymorphism. The absence of clear sex-organ reciprocity, the defining feature of heterostyly, raises the obvious question of how stigma-height dimorphism functions and is maintained in populations. Theoretical models indicate that for stigma-height dimorphism to be stable the frequency of disassortative mating must exceed the frequency of assortative mating in a population (Lloyd and Webb, 1992b
; Barrett, Lloyd, and Arroyo, 1996
; Baker, Thompson, and Barrett, 2000b
). Indeed, this general rule applies to the maintenance of all stylar polymorphisms in plants with equal morph ratios resulting from symmetrical disassortative mating (Barrett, Jesson, and Baker, 2000
). What is unclear is how a simple difference in stigma height, unaccompanied by a corresponding anther-height dimorphism or diallelic self-incompatibility, would be sufficient to promote more between-morph than within-morph mating. To answer this question will require detailed investigations of the mechanics of pollen dispersal. These studies should include data on pollinator types and their positioning within flowers with respect to the sexual organs and information on the precise locations of pollen deposition on pollinators.
Despite our ignorance of the precise mechanism(s) by which stigma-height dimorphism promotes disassortative mating, the occurrence of 1 : 1 style-morph ratios in populations of N. papyraceus indicates that under some circumstances this mating pattern can be achieved. Very large populations all possessed 1 : 1 morph ratios, a condition also evident in N. assoanus (Baker, Thompson, and Barrett 2000a
). The discovery of isoplethic morph ratios in Narcissus spp. is significant for two reasons. First, the promotion of disassortative mating by stigma-height dimorphism is a critical requirement for Lloyd and Webb's (1992b)
model for the evolution of distyly. Our results therefore lend some empirical support to their ideas, despite the fact that the transition from stigma-height dimorphism to heterostyly rarely occurs in Narcissus. Second, 1 : 1 morph ratios indicate that symmetrical disassortative mating, in which levels of between-morph mating are equivalent, can be promoted by stigma-height dimorphism alone. In heterostylous plants, between-morph mating is jointly promoted by both heteromorphic incompatibility and reciprocal herkogamy. In contrast, our results for N. papyraceus are remarkable because they demonstrate that under the appropriate ecological and demographic conditions a simple morphological difference in style length, probably governed by a single allele, can have a significant influence on the mating biology of populations.
| FOOTNOTES |
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4 Author for reprint requests (FAX 416-978-5878; barrett{at}botany.utoronto.ca
) ![]()
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