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Modes of self-fertilization in Mimulus guttatus (Scrophulariaceae): a field experiment
Authors:Carole Leclerc-Potvin  Kermit Ritland
Institution:Department of Botany, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3B2 Canada
Abstract:We inferred Lloyd's modes of selfing in a natural population of the common monkeyflower, Mimulus guttatus. Estimates were obtained using floral manipulations combined with seed counts and isozyme analyses of selfing rates. Of the 25% selfing estimated from isozyme markers, about one-half was competing, about one-third was geitonogamous, and at least one-fifth (perhaps twice this) was due to biparental inbreeding. Estimates of prior and delayed selfing were small and did not significantly differ from zero. These results were obtained using plants with the characteristic pair of open flowers at an inflorescence node. The second-opening flower showed twice the rate of selfing, presumably because of protogynous-based geitonogamy differences. Solitary-flowered plants, which have smaller flowers but no geitonogamy, showed about 50% selfing, consisting of about equal components of competing selfing and biparental inbreeding. While geitonogamy and biparental inbreeding might be unavoidable by-products of adaptations for outcrossing, competing selfing is subject to more direct natural selection and warrants adaptive explanations.
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