Options
Effects of inbred/outbred crosses on progeny sex ratio in <i>Silene latifolia</i> (Caryophyllaceae)
Auteur(s)
Teixeira, Sara
Bernasconi, Giorgina
Date de parution
2008
In
New Phytologist, Wiley, 2008/178/2/448-456
Résumé
• Sex ratio polymorphism has been extensively studied in <i>Silene latifolia</i>, but it is neither known whether inbreeding (which is likely to occur under field conditions) affects it, nor which of the proposed mechanisms (Y degeneration, X-linked drive) is more important. Both mechanisms predict reduced pollen performance. <br> • In this study, females were crossed with pollen from related and unrelated males in single-donor and two-donor crosses, and the sex ratio of offspring (n = 866, 60 crosses), sons'<i>in vitro</i> pollen germination and sex ratios in parental families were scored. <br> • Flowers receiving only unrelated pollen produced a significant excess of sons. Sex ratios were not significantly correlated between generations. Sons'<i>in vitro</i> pollen germination was significantly negatively correlated with the 'sex-ratio phenotype' of maternal grandfathers, but not of fathers. This generation leap may be consistent with X-linked determinants because Y-linked determinants alone cannot explain it (grandfathers, fathers and sons share the same Y chromosome). <br> • Further work is required, but inbreeding and limited dispersal may lead to local accumulation of biasing factors, a process potentially countered by conditional shifts to produce more sons in pure outbred crosses.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger