Abstract
Botrychium dissectum is a homosporous fern with bisexual, subterranean gametophytes. Because of these features, B. dissectum would be suspected of displaying a very high frequency of self-fertilization. Sporophytes collected from three populations of this species were assayed for heterozygosity by determining the electrophoretic mobility patterns displayed by two polymorphic enzymes. Extreme deviations from Hardy-Weinberg expectations were observed in each population and analyzed by means of F-statistics. The average inbreeding coefficient was found to be 0.951. A population genetic model is derived that demonstrates that the rate of intragametophytic self-fertilization in homosporous ferns is equal to the inbreeding coefficient calculated from deviations from Hardy-Weinberg expectations. It is therefore concluded that B. dissectum outcrosses about 5% of the time.
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