Abstract

Abstract The survival of populations of rare plant species may be affected both by total levels of seed production and by inbreeding depression expressed upon self-fertilization. We examined natural seed production and rates of self-fertilization in a Nova Scotian lakeshore population of the globally rare Atlantic Coastal Plain plant, Sabatia kennedyana Fernald (Gentianaceae), and determined the effect of self and cross pollinations on fitness at early plant life stages. Seed production was not limited by natural pollination levels. Furthermore, flowers from which pollinators were excluded produced 66% as many seeds as unprotected, naturally pollinated plants, indicating that substantial seed set can occur in the absence of pollinators. The selfing rate of naturally pollinated flowers was estimated as 21% using the inbreeding depression method. Stage-specific inbreeding depression was 19% at germination, and cumulative inbreeding depression from fertilization through germination was 23%. Seed formation (s...

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