首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Reproductive system and fitness of Vriesea friburgensis,a self‐sterile bromeliad species
Authors:GECELE MATOS PAGGI  LUCAS CAETANO TIEPPO DA SILVEIRA  CAMILA MARTINI ZANELLA  MANUELA BRUXEL  FERNANDA BERED  ELIANE KALTCHUK‐SANTOS  CLARISSE PALMA‐SILVA
Institution:1. Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul – UFMS, Campus of Pantanal, Laboratory of Ecology and Laboratory of Molecular Biology and Microorganisms, P.O. Box 252, 79304‐902, Corumbá‐MS, Brazil;2. Genetics Department, Biology Institute, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul – UFRGS, P.O. Box 15053, 91501‐970, Porto Alegre‐RS, Brazil;3. Graduate Program in Genetics and Molecular Biology;4. Graduate Program in Agricultural and Environmental Microbiology, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul – UFRGS, 90050‐170, Porto Alegre‐RS, Brazil;5. Institute of Botany – IBOT, Fitotaxonomy Division, Av. Miguel Estéfano 3687, 04301‐902, S?o Paulo‐SP, Brazil
Abstract:Reproductive biology and plant fertility are directly related to many aspects of plant evolution and conservation biology. Vriesea friburgensis is an epiphytic and terrestrial bromeliad endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest. Hand‐pollination experiments were used to examine the reproductive system in a wild population of V. friburgensis. Plant fertility was assigned considering flower production, fruit and seed set, seed germination, and pollen viability. Self‐sterility observed from spontaneous selfing and manual self‐pollination treatments may be the consequence of late‐acting self‐incompatibility. Hand‐pollination results indicated no pollen limitation in the population studied. Floral biology features such as a few daily open flowers, nectar production, and sugar concentration corroborate hummingbirds as effective pollinators, although bees were also documented as pollinators. Components of fitness such as high flower, fruit, and seed production together with high seed and pollen viability indicate that this wild population is viable. From a conservation point of view, we highlight that this self‐sterile species depends on pollinator services to maintain its population fitness and viability through cross‐pollination. Currently, pollinators are not limited in this population of V. friburgensis. Conversely, the maintenance and continuous conservation of this community is essential for preserving this plant–pollinator mutualism.
Keywords:Brazilian Atlantic rainforest  Bromeliaceae  fruit set  late‐acting self‐incompatibility  nectar features  seed viability
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号