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The divergence history of the perennial plant Linaria cavanillesii confirms a recent loss of self‐incompatibility
Authors:M Voillemot  Q Rougemont  C Roux  J R Pannell
Institution:1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, Biophore/Sorge, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland;2. Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes (IBIS), University of Laval, Québec City, Québec, Canada;3. Unité Evo‐Eco‐Paléo (EEP) ‐ UMR 8198, CNRS, Université de Lille Sciences et Technologies, Villeneuve d'Ascq Cedex, France
Abstract:Many angiosperms prevent inbreeding through a self‐incompatibility (SI) system, but the loss of SI has been frequent in their evolutionary history. The loss of SI may often lead to an increase in the selfing rate, with the purging of inbreeding depression and the ultimate evolution of a selfing syndrome, where plants have smaller flowers with reduced pollen and nectar production. In this study, we used approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) to estimate the timing of divergence between populations of the plant Linaria cavanillesii that differ in SI status and in which SI is associated with low inbreeding depression but not with a transition to full selfing or a selfing syndrome. Our analysis suggests that the mixed‐mating self‐compatible (SC) population may have begun to diverge from the SI populations around 2810 generation ago, a period perhaps too short for the evolution of a selfing syndrome. We conjecture that the SC population of L. cavanillesii is at an intermediate stage of transition between outcrossing and selfing.
Keywords:approximate Bayesian computation simulations  mating system transition  population divergence  purging  self‐compatibility  selfing syndrome
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