Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations

Plant mating system determines, to a great extent, the demographic and genetic properties of populations, hence their potential for adaptive evolution. Variation in plant mating system has been documented between phylogenetically related species as well between populations of a species. A common evo...

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Main Authors: Vania Jiménez-Lobato, Juan Núñez-Farfán
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2021-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/10698.pdf
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spelling doaj-f20c00bfcd094316a91f9e16b75e3e952021-03-21T15:05:04ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592021-03-019e1069810.7717/peerj.10698Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populationsVania Jiménez-Lobato0Juan Núñez-Farfán1Escuela Superior de Desarrollo Sustentable, Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, Cátedras CONACYT, MéxicoLaboratorio de Genética Ecológica y Evolución, Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de México, Distrito Federal, MexicoPlant mating system determines, to a great extent, the demographic and genetic properties of populations, hence their potential for adaptive evolution. Variation in plant mating system has been documented between phylogenetically related species as well between populations of a species. A common evolutionary transition, from outcrossing to selfing, is likely to occur under environmental spatial variation in the service of pollinators. Here, we studied two phenotypically (in floral traits) and genetically (in neutral molecular markers) differentiated populations of the annual, insect-pollinated, plant Datura inoxia in Mexico, that differ in the service of pollinators (Mapimí and Cañada Moreno). First, we determined the populations’ parameters of phenotypic in herkogamy, outcrossing and selfing rates with microsatellite loci, and assessed between generation (adults and seedlings) inbreeding, and inbreeding depression. Second, we compared the relationships between parameters in each population. Results point strong differences between populations: plants in Mapimí have, on average, approach herkogamy, higher outcrossing rate (tm = 0.68), lower primary selfing rate (r = 0.35), and lower inbreeding at equilibrium (Fe = 0.24) and higher inbreeding depression (δ = 0.25), than the populations of Cañada. Outcrossing seems to be favored in Mapimí while selfing in Cañada. The relationship between r and Fe were negatively associated with herkogamy in Mapimí; here, progenies derived from plants with no herkogamy or reverse herkogamy had higher selfing rate and inbreeding coefficient than plants with approach herkogamy. The difference Fe–F is positively related to primary selfing rate (r) only in Cañada Moreno which suggests inbreeding depression in selfing individuals and then genetic purging. In conclusion, mating system evolution may occur differentially among maternal lineages within populations of Datura inoxia, in which approach herkogamy favors higher outcrossing rates and low levels of inbreeding and inbreeding depression, while no herkogamy or reverse herkogamy lead to the evolution of the “selfing syndrome” following the purge of deleterious alleles despite high inbreeding among individuals.https://peerj.com/articles/10698.pdfChihuahuan desertDatura inoxiaGenetic varianceHerkogamyInbreeding coefficientInbreeding depression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vania Jiménez-Lobato
Juan Núñez-Farfán
spellingShingle Vania Jiménez-Lobato
Juan Núñez-Farfán
Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
PeerJ
Chihuahuan desert
Datura inoxia
Genetic variance
Herkogamy
Inbreeding coefficient
Inbreeding depression
author_facet Vania Jiménez-Lobato
Juan Núñez-Farfán
author_sort Vania Jiménez-Lobato
title Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
title_short Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
title_full Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
title_fullStr Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
title_full_unstemmed Mating system of Datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
title_sort mating system of datura inoxia: association between selfing rates and herkogamy within populations
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Plant mating system determines, to a great extent, the demographic and genetic properties of populations, hence their potential for adaptive evolution. Variation in plant mating system has been documented between phylogenetically related species as well between populations of a species. A common evolutionary transition, from outcrossing to selfing, is likely to occur under environmental spatial variation in the service of pollinators. Here, we studied two phenotypically (in floral traits) and genetically (in neutral molecular markers) differentiated populations of the annual, insect-pollinated, plant Datura inoxia in Mexico, that differ in the service of pollinators (Mapimí and Cañada Moreno). First, we determined the populations’ parameters of phenotypic in herkogamy, outcrossing and selfing rates with microsatellite loci, and assessed between generation (adults and seedlings) inbreeding, and inbreeding depression. Second, we compared the relationships between parameters in each population. Results point strong differences between populations: plants in Mapimí have, on average, approach herkogamy, higher outcrossing rate (tm = 0.68), lower primary selfing rate (r = 0.35), and lower inbreeding at equilibrium (Fe = 0.24) and higher inbreeding depression (δ = 0.25), than the populations of Cañada. Outcrossing seems to be favored in Mapimí while selfing in Cañada. The relationship between r and Fe were negatively associated with herkogamy in Mapimí; here, progenies derived from plants with no herkogamy or reverse herkogamy had higher selfing rate and inbreeding coefficient than plants with approach herkogamy. The difference Fe–F is positively related to primary selfing rate (r) only in Cañada Moreno which suggests inbreeding depression in selfing individuals and then genetic purging. In conclusion, mating system evolution may occur differentially among maternal lineages within populations of Datura inoxia, in which approach herkogamy favors higher outcrossing rates and low levels of inbreeding and inbreeding depression, while no herkogamy or reverse herkogamy lead to the evolution of the “selfing syndrome” following the purge of deleterious alleles despite high inbreeding among individuals.
topic Chihuahuan desert
Datura inoxia
Genetic variance
Herkogamy
Inbreeding coefficient
Inbreeding depression
url https://peerj.com/articles/10698.pdf
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