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MATERNAL AND PATERNAL EFFECTS ON FOLLICLE PRODUCTION IN THE MILKWEED ASCLEPIAS SYRIACA (ASCLEPIADACEAE)
Authors:Douglass H. Morse  Johanna Schmitt
Affiliation:Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (Box G-W), Division of Biology and Medicine, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912
Abstract:We measured follicle production from a diallel cross among ten clones of the common milkweed Asclepias syriaca, to assess the relative contributions of maternal and paternal parents. Specific parental combinations differed in the ability to set fruit, indicated by a significant nuclear specific effect accounting for 28% of the observed variance in follicle production. Several mechanisms might contribute to this effect, including shared incompatibility alleles and expression of zygotic genotypes. The nuclear general effect was not significant, however, suggesting a lack of additive genetic variation for offspring control of fruit maturation. Maternal effects also had an important effect on follicle production, as demonstrated by a significant reciprocal general effect (26% of the variance), almost entirely due to a large maternal component. The small reciprocal general variance component attributable to paternal effects, and nonsignificant reciprocal specific effect, indicating little maternal parent-zygote interaction, suggest that female choice through selective follicle maturation was not important in this experiment. The clones varied in proportion of reproductive output through female function, but a significant tradeoff between male and female success was not detected.
Keywords:
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