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Consequences of Low Mate Availability in the Rare Self-Incompatible Species Brassica insularis
Authors:SYLVAIN GLÉMIN†  CHRISTOPHE PETIT†  SANDRINE MAURICE†  AGNÈS MIGNOT†
Institution:Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution (UM2-CNRS), UniversitéMontpellier 2, France
Abstract:Abstract:  Self-incompatibility systems prevent self-fertilization in angiosperms. Although numerous S alleles are usually maintained by negative frequency-dependent selection, the number of S alleles can be low in small populations, which limits mate availability and reduces fecundity in endangered populations of self-incompatible plants. Despite the increasing evidence of the negative effect of self-incompatibility in small populations, the direct link between the number and the distribution of S alleles and their reproductive consequences has been rarely reported. Brassica insularis is a rare self-incompatible species with medium to very small populations. Results of a previous study showed that the smallest population has very few S alleles. We investigated whether reduced mate availability affects reproduction in this species. We compared the pollination success and the fruit set in 4 populations differing in population size and number of S alleles. Our results suggest that reproduction may be negatively affected by the low S-allele diversity in the smallest population. Nevertheless, other populations also had reduced fruit set that could not be attributed to self-incompatibility alone.
Keywords:Brassica insularis            Brassicaceae  conservation genetics  fruit set  plant mate availability  self-incompatibility
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