Biparental inbreeding depression in the self-incompatible annual plant Gaillardia pulchella (Asteraceae)
Abstract
It is generally assumed that the inbreeding depression frequently observed to accompany self-fertilization can be extrapolated to the lesser degrees of consanguinity involved in biparental inbreeding. To test this assumption, seeds collected from a single natural population of the self-incompatible annual Gaillardia pulchella were used to generate full-sib families derived by crossing either noninbred full-sibs (inbred families) or noninbred nonrelatives (outbred families). Members of each family were divided between high-stress and low-stress treatments that differed in soil volume and nutrient level. Inbred seedlings had a lower chance of survival, were more likely to be morphologically abnormal, and grew more slowly than outbred seedlings, indicating the presence of biparental inbreeding depression. Stress treatment had no significant effect on inbreeding depression, and no family × stress-environment interactions were detected. Inbreeding did not increase the among-family variance in growth rate, suggesting that inbreeding depression of growth rate is caused by many genes with small individual effects. -from Author
Department(s)
Biology
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2307/2445370
Publication Date
1-1-1993
Recommended Citation
Heywood, John S. "Biparental inbreeding depression in the self‐incompatible annual plant Gaillardia pulchella (Asteraceae)." American Journal of Botany 80, no. 5 (1993): 545-550.
Journal Title
American Journal of Botany