Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 10 de 10
Filtrar
Mais filtros










Base de dados
Tipo de estudo
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
J Evol Biol ; 26(12): 2622-32, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24118274

RESUMO

Sexual selection is well accepted as a mechanism of shaping traits in animals. However, whether and how floral traits are sexually selected in hermaphroditic plants remains less clear. Here, we use Passiflora incarnata to address how floral traits that affect pollination success are selected via female function. We manipulated the ecological context by limiting pollination and adding resources to expand the phenotypic distribution and alter the intensity of sexual selection. Total sexual selection favoured lower style deflexion because of its impact on pollen receipt and subsequent seed number. However, total selection on style deflexion was not significant, indicating additional selection on style deflexion through routes other than mating. Limited pollination and enhanced resources were expected to alter the distribution of pollen deposition and seed production and therefore intensify the Bateman gradient - the relationship between pollen receipt and seed production. Indeed, the Bateman gradient was strongest when pollination was limited, suggesting potential for sexual selection to influence floral trait evolution under these conditions. Overall, we found floral traits may be shaped by sexual selection through female reproductive success in this hermaphroditic plant. These results support manipulations to enhance the variance in mating as a mechanism to understand patterns of sexual selection.


Assuntos
Transtornos do Desenvolvimento Sexual , Óvulo Vegetal , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Vegetais , Reprodução
2.
J Evol Biol ; 25(6): 1200-8, 2012 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22519698

RESUMO

Many temperate taxa were confined to warmer latitudes during the last glacial maximum. As their ranges expanded when climates warmed, genetic drift and inbreeding in relatively small peripheral populations are expected to have reduced genetic diversity and the segregating genetic load. Therefore, inbreeding depression in peripheral populations might be lower than in centrally located sites. We evaluated the consequences of inbreeding for fitness traits in six central and six northern peripheral populations of the herb Campanulastrum americanum. Inbreeding reduced performance for all traits. Inbreeding depression in peripheral populations was lower than in central populations. This difference increased across the life cycle from similar levels for germination, to central populations having three times the inbreeding depression for adult traits. Geographical patterns of inbreeding depression suggest that mating system variation and potential future mating system evolution in many temperate taxa might reflect, at least in part, nonequilibrium conditions associated with historic range changes.


Assuntos
Campanulaceae/fisiologia , Aptidão Genética , Endogamia , Campanulaceae/genética , América Central , Cruzamentos Genéticos , Meio Ambiente , Flores/fisiologia , Deriva Genética , Carga Genética , Germinação , América do Norte , Polinização , Sementes/fisiologia , Especificidade da Espécie
3.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 99(6): 641-8, 2007 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17687248

RESUMO

There is mounting evidence that plants are responding to anthropogenic climate change with shifts in flowering phenologies. We conducted a three-generation artificial selection experiment on flowering time in Campanulastrum americanum, an autotetraploid herb, to determine the potential for adaptive evolution of this trait as well as possible costs associated with enhanced or delayed flowering. Divergent selection for earlier and later flowering resulted in a 25-day difference in flowering time. Experiment-wide heritability was 0.31 and 0.23 for the initiation of flowering in early and late lines, respectively. Selection for earlier flowering resulted in significant correlated responses in other traits including smaller size, fewer branches, smaller floral displays, longer fruit maturation times, fewer seeds per fruit and slower seed germination. Results suggest that although flowering time shows the potential to adapt to a changing climate, phenological shifts may be associated with reduced plant fitness possibly hindering evolutionary change.


Assuntos
Campanulaceae/genética , Flores/genética , Poliploidia , Seleção Genética , Campanulaceae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Flores/crescimento & desenvolvimento
4.
J Evol Biol ; 18(1): 81-9, 2005 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15669963

RESUMO

Populations within a species may diverge through genetic drift and natural selection. Few studies report on population differentiation in autopolyploids where multiple gene copies and the ratio of cytoplasmic to nuclear genes differ from diploids and may influence divergence. In autotetraploid Campanula americana we created hybrids between populations that differed in geographic proximity and genome size. Differences in genome size (up to 6.5%) did not influence hybrid performance. In contrast, hybrid performance was strongly influenced by population proximity. F1 hybrids between distant populations performed poorly relative to their parents while hybrids between proximate populations outperformed their parents. Outbreeding depression was strongest for juvenile traits. The expression of outbreeding depression often differed between reciprocal hybrids indicating interactions between nuclear and cytoplasmic genes contribute to population differentiation. Because plants were grown under greenhouse conditions, the outbreeding depression was likely due to genetic (underdominance or loss of additive-by-additive epistasis) rather than ecological factors.


Assuntos
Campanulaceae/genética , Hibridização Genética , Evolução Biológica , Genoma , Dinâmica Populacional
5.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 90(4): 308-15, 2003 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12692584

RESUMO

Polyploidy in angiosperms is frequently associated with an increase in self-compatibility. Self-fertilization can enhance polyploid establishment, and theory predicts reduced inbreeding depression in polyploids relative to diploids. Therefore, we may expect mating systems that promote self-fertilization or mixed-mating in polyploid species. However, few studies have measured polyploid mating systems and inbreeding depression. We report the outcrossing rate and inbreeding depression for Campanula americana, a self-compatible protandrous herb. Allozyme genotypes suggest that C. americana is an autotetraploid with tetrasomic inheritance. We found that the multilocus outcrossing rate, t(m)=0.938, did not differ from unity. This result was unexpected since previous work demonstrated that pollinators frequently move from male- to female-phase flowers on the same plant, that is, geitonogamy. Self and outcross pollinations were conducted for three populations. Offspring were germinated in controlled conditions and grown to maturity in pots in nature. Inbreeding depression was not significant for most seed and germination characters. However, all later life traits except flowering date differed between inbred and outcrossed individuals resulting in a 26% reduction in cumulative fitness for inbred plants. Limited early- and moderate later-life inbreeding depression suggest that it is buffered by the higher levels of heterozygosity found in an autotetraploid. C. americana appears to have a flexible mating system where within flower protandry and/or cryptic self-incompatibility result in a high outcrossing rate when pollinators are abundant, but self-compatibility and limited inbreeding depression maintain reproductive success when mates are limited.


Assuntos
Campanulaceae/genética , Endogamia , Poliploidia , Reprodução/fisiologia , Campanulaceae/fisiologia , Frequência do Gene , Variação Genética , Reprodução/genética
6.
Am J Bot ; 88(5): 832-40, 2001 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11353708

RESUMO

Maternal environments typically influence the phenotype of their offspring. However, the effect of the paternal environment or the potential for joint effects of both parental environments on offspring characters is poorly understood. Two populations of Campanula americana, a woodland herb with a variable life history, were used to determine the influence of maternal and paternal light and nutrient environments on offspring seed characters. Families were grown in the greenhouse in three levels of light or three levels of nutrients. Crosses were conducted within each environmental gradient to produce seeds with all combinations of maternal and paternal environments. On average, increasing maternal nutrient and light levels increased seed mass and decreased percentage germination. The paternal environment affected seed mass, germination time, and percentage germination. However, the influence of the paternal environment varied across maternal environments, suggesting that paternal environmental effects should be evaluated in the context of maternal environments. Significant interactions between family and the parental environments for offspring characters suggest that parental environmental effects are genetically variable. In C. americana, the timing of germination determines life history. Therefore parental environmental effects on germination timing, and genetic variation in those parental effects, suggest that parental environments may influence life history evolution in this system.

7.
Evolution ; 55(3): 488-97, 2001 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11327157

RESUMO

The genetic architecture of trait differentiation was evaluated between two ecologically distinct populations of Chamaecrista fasciculata. Individuals from Maryland and Illinois populations were crossed to create 10 types of seed: Maryland and Illinois parents, reciprocal F1 and F2 hybrids, and backcrosses to Maryland and to Illinois on reciprocal F1 hybrids. Reciprocal crosses created hybrid generation seeds with both Maryland and Illinois cytoplasmic backgrounds. Experimental individuals were grown in a common garden near the site of the Maryland population. In the garden, plants from the Illinois population flowered, set fruit, and died earlier than those from Maryland, likely reflecting adaptations to differences in growing season length between the two populations. Although reproductive components at the flower and whole plant level differed between the two populations, reproductive output as measured by fruit and seed production was similar. Cytoplasmic genes had a subtle but pervasive effect on population differentiation; hybrids with Maryland cytoplasm were significantly differentiated from those with Illinois cytoplasm when all characters were evaluated jointly. The nuclear genetic architecture of population differentiation was evaluated with joint scaling tests. Depending on the trait, both additive and nonadditive genetic effects contributed to population differentiation. Intraspecific genetic differentiation in this wild plant species appears to reflect a complex genetic architecture that includes the contribution of additive, dominance, and epistatic components in addition to subtle cytoplasmic effects.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Cassia/genética , Variação Genética , Plantas Medicinais , Cassia/anatomia & histologia , Cassia/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Núcleo Celular/genética , Citoplasma/genética , Illinois , Endogamia , Maryland , Análise Multivariada , Fenótipo
8.
Evolution ; 54(4): 1157-72, 2000 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11005285

RESUMO

The presence or absence of epistasis, or gene interaction, is explicitly assumed in many evolutionary models. Although many empirical studies have documented a role of epistasis in population divergence under laboratory conditions, there have been very few attempts at quantifying epistasis in the native environment where natural selection is expected to act. In addition, we have little understanding of the frequency with which epistasis contributes to the evolution of natural populations. In this study we used a quantitative genetic design to quantify the contribution of epistasis to population divergence for fitness components of a native annual legume, Chamaecrista fasciculata. The design incorporated the contrast of performance of F2 and F3 segregating progeny of 18 interpopulation crosses with the F1 and their parents. Crosses were conducted between populations from 100 m to 2000 km apart. All generations were grown for two seasons in the natural environment of one of the parents. The F1 often outperformed the parents. This F1 heterosis reveals population structure and suggests that drift is a major contributor to population differentiation. The F2 generation demonstrated that combining genes from different populations can sometimes have unexpected positive effects. However, the F3 performance indicated that combining genes from different populations decreased vigor beyond that due to the expected loss of heterozygosity. Combined with previous data, our results suggest that both selection and drift contribute to population differentiation that is based on epistatic genetic divergence. Because only the F3 consistently expressed hybrid breakdown, we conclude that the epistasis documented in our study reflects interactions among linked loci.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Cassia/genética , Variação Genética , Modelos Genéticos , Plantas Medicinais , Cruzamentos Genéticos , Meio Ambiente , Seleção Genética , Estados Unidos
9.
Evolution ; 54(4): 1173-81, 2000 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11005286

RESUMO

Studies of many plants species have demonstrated adaptive genetic differentiation to local environmental conditions. Typically these studies are conducted to evaluate adaptation to contrasting environments. As a consequence, although local adaptation has been frequently demonstrated, we have little information as to the spatial scale of adaptive evolution. We evaluated adaptive differentiation between populations of the annual legume Chamaecrista fasciculata using a replicated common-garden design. Study sites were established in three field locations that are home to native populations of C. fasciculata. Each location was planted for two years with seed from the population native to the study site (home population) and populations located six distances (0.1-2000 km) from each site (transplanted populations). Seeds were planted into the study sites with minimum disturbance to determine the scale of local adaptation, as measured by a home-site fitness advantage, for five fitness components: germination, survival, vegetative biomass, fruit production, and the number of fruit produced per seed planted (an estimate of cumulative fitness). For all characters there was little evidence for local adaptation, except at the furthest spatial scales. Patterns of adaptive differentiation were fairly consistent in two of the three sites, but varied between years. Little genetic variation was expressed at the third site. These results, combined with previous estimates of limited gene flow, suggest that metapopulation processes and temporal environmental variation act together to reduce local adaptation, except over long distances.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica , Cassia/fisiologia , Plantas Medicinais , Análise de Variância , Cassia/genética , Cruzamentos Genéticos , Meio Ambiente , Modelos Genéticos , Modelos Estatísticos , Reprodução
10.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 12(7): 282-6, 1997 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21238076

RESUMO

Throughout the neodarwinian synthesis, theorists have debated the role of gene interactions, or epistasis, in the evolutionary process. Unfortunately, empirical measurement of the role of epistasis in the evolution of natural populations has, until now, been difficult. Two developments in empirical approaches have occurred: (1) application of theory to the evolution of natural populations, and (2) the concurrent development of molecular marker-assisted techniques to understand the architecture of quantitative genetic variation. Thus, exciting developments in both theory and empirical data collection provide the stimulus for documenting the role of epistasis in the evolutionary process.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...