Abstract

The interplant variation in sexual and asexual reproduction in an Oregon population of the alpine perennial Antennaria media was investigated. Four polymorphic loci were assayed by enzyme electrophoresis of the progeny of 72 families from two subpopulations of A. media. The population was divided into two spatially distinct subpopulations. A multilocus model, incorporating a mixture of apomixis and random outcrossing, was used to estimate the mating system of pistillate plants both on the population and individual levels with statistical significance of the estimates based on bootstrap methods. The population contained a mixture of sexual individuals, partial apomicts, and obligate apomicts. The first subpopulation contained individuals that were partially apomictic and presumably produced both reduced and unreduced embryo sacs. There was a conspicuous difference in the breeding system composition between the two subpopulations. The first subpopulation had a “female” biased gender ratio and contained mostly obligate apomicts, some partial apomicts, and some outcrossing amphimicts. The second subpopulation, which had a nearly balanced gender ratio, contained mostly amphimicts, some obligate apomicts, but no facultative apomicts. This is the first study to document partial apomixis in individual plants by the use of genetic markers.

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