Authors
Diane L Marshall, Norman C Ellstrand
Publication date
1988/5/1
Journal
The American Naturalist
Volume
131
Issue
5
Pages
739-756
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Description
Maternal plants that can affect the paternity of their seeds may influence the quality of their offspring. However, mate choice in plants has proved difficult to demonstrate because it is usually confounded by the effects of pollen competition and because its mechanisms are not well understood. We show here that stressed wild radish plants selectively abort seeds sired by particular donors. This selection occurs by position-dependent seed abortion and position-dependent resource allocation within fruits, coupled with position-dependent fertilization of ovules by pollen donors. The result is that stressed plants select for pollen donors that sire seeds in the basal and middle, rather than the stylar, thirds of fruits. Thus, in wild radish, the position of seeds fathered by pollen donors may act as a selective arena. Because of this position-dependent abortion, successful fathers sire the seeds most likely to mature and to be larger …
Total citations
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