Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon

Studies were carried out on the reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees (Pseudobombax munguba and Ceiba pentandra) which occur in the seasonally flooded areas of the white-water river basins ('varzea') in the Amazon region. The unique pollinator of P. munguba, which has nectarless f...

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Main Author: Gribel, Rogerio
Other Authors: Gibbs, Peter Edward
Published: University of St Andrews 1996
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.750565
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7505652018-10-09T03:28:00ZReproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central AmazonGribel, RogerioGibbs, Peter Edward1996Studies were carried out on the reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees (Pseudobombax munguba and Ceiba pentandra) which occur in the seasonally flooded areas of the white-water river basins ('varzea') in the Amazon region. The unique pollinator of P. munguba, which has nectarless flowers, is the large-sized phyllostomid bat Phyllostomus hastatus. In contrast, the flowers of C. pentandra are visited by a wide range of nocturnal (bats, marsupials, night-monkeys, hawk moths) and diurnal (bees, wasps, hummingbirds) animals, but only the phyllostomid bats, especially Phyllostomus hastatus and Phyllostomus discolor, play a relevant role in the pollination of this mass-flowering species. Both species appear to be self-incompatible since hand self-pollinated flowers always abscised 5-8 days after pollination, whereas a proportion of cross-pollinated flowers (20-29% in P. munguba; 17% in C. pentandra) formed fruit. However, analysis of fixed pistils using fluorescence microscopy revealed that in both species the self-pollen germinated normally on the stigma and the self-pollen tubes penetrated the ovules at the same rate as the cross-pollen tubes. Mixed-pollinated flowers (self- plus cross-pollen on the stigma) also set some fruits (9-14% in P. munguba; 9% in C. pentandra). Paternity analyses using isozyme genetic markers indicated that fruits resulting from controlled mixed-pollinations set a few selfed seeds (range of 0-28% in P. munguba; ca 2% in the studied tree of C. pentandra). The multilocus estimate of the outcrossing rate (tm) was calculated for P. munguba using data from two isozyme loci of 29 parent trees and 728 progenies. The population outcrossing estimation was high (tm = 0.948) suggesting that the breeding population is large and the level of inbreeding (both uniparental and biparental) is very low. The proportion of selfed-seeds produced by two neighbouring C. pentandra trees, which flowered simultaneously, was estimated using isozyme genetic markers at 9% and 28% respectively. It is considered that a high level of genetic load is the main factor responsible for the self-sterility and the predominant outcrossing mating system observed in both species. The number of lethal equivalents per zygote estimated for each was high: average of 13.8 (minimum 6.4) in the P. munguba population, and 12.3 for the single assessed individual of C. pentandra.QK495.B65G8University of St Andrewshttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.750565http://hdl.handle.net/10023/14127Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic QK495.B65G8
spellingShingle QK495.B65G8
Gribel, Rogerio
Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
description Studies were carried out on the reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees (Pseudobombax munguba and Ceiba pentandra) which occur in the seasonally flooded areas of the white-water river basins ('varzea') in the Amazon region. The unique pollinator of P. munguba, which has nectarless flowers, is the large-sized phyllostomid bat Phyllostomus hastatus. In contrast, the flowers of C. pentandra are visited by a wide range of nocturnal (bats, marsupials, night-monkeys, hawk moths) and diurnal (bees, wasps, hummingbirds) animals, but only the phyllostomid bats, especially Phyllostomus hastatus and Phyllostomus discolor, play a relevant role in the pollination of this mass-flowering species. Both species appear to be self-incompatible since hand self-pollinated flowers always abscised 5-8 days after pollination, whereas a proportion of cross-pollinated flowers (20-29% in P. munguba; 17% in C. pentandra) formed fruit. However, analysis of fixed pistils using fluorescence microscopy revealed that in both species the self-pollen germinated normally on the stigma and the self-pollen tubes penetrated the ovules at the same rate as the cross-pollen tubes. Mixed-pollinated flowers (self- plus cross-pollen on the stigma) also set some fruits (9-14% in P. munguba; 9% in C. pentandra). Paternity analyses using isozyme genetic markers indicated that fruits resulting from controlled mixed-pollinations set a few selfed seeds (range of 0-28% in P. munguba; ca 2% in the studied tree of C. pentandra). The multilocus estimate of the outcrossing rate (tm) was calculated for P. munguba using data from two isozyme loci of 29 parent trees and 728 progenies. The population outcrossing estimation was high (tm = 0.948) suggesting that the breeding population is large and the level of inbreeding (both uniparental and biparental) is very low. The proportion of selfed-seeds produced by two neighbouring C. pentandra trees, which flowered simultaneously, was estimated using isozyme genetic markers at 9% and 28% respectively. It is considered that a high level of genetic load is the main factor responsible for the self-sterility and the predominant outcrossing mating system observed in both species. The number of lethal equivalents per zygote estimated for each was high: average of 13.8 (minimum 6.4) in the P. munguba population, and 12.3 for the single assessed individual of C. pentandra.
author2 Gibbs, Peter Edward
author_facet Gibbs, Peter Edward
Gribel, Rogerio
author Gribel, Rogerio
author_sort Gribel, Rogerio
title Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
title_short Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
title_full Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
title_fullStr Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the Brazilian Central Amazon
title_sort reproductive biology of two bombacaceous trees in the brazilian central amazon
publisher University of St Andrews
publishDate 1996
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.750565
work_keys_str_mv AT gribelrogerio reproductivebiologyoftwobombacaceoustreesinthebraziliancentralamazon
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