Abstract

AbstractReproductive isolation plays a significant role in the prevention of gene flow between different plant species. Isolation factors can vary, acting either pre‐ or postzygotically. Trillium camschatcense and T. tschonoskii are herbaceous perennials which frequently grow together in Hokkaido, Japan. Natural hybrid formation, T. × hagae, between these species is common, and occurs asymmetrically with T. camschatcense as the maternal parent and T. tschonoskii as the paternal. Here, we examined the efficiency of each reproductive isolation factor to clarify which factor was responsible for the frequency and asymmetry of the hybridization. We found that prezygotic barriers, self fertilization and conspecific pollen precedence, are major isolation factors in both parental species, and that T. tschonoskii as a maternal parent has more effective prezygotic barriers than T. camschatcense. In addition, hybrids with T. tschonoskii as the maternal parent were not observed to reach the flowering stage. We concluded that prezygotic isolation factors in the both species act as main barriers to prevent natural hybridization, and that asymmetry of the isolating barriers between these species would promote T. camschatcense as the maternal parent of the hybrids.

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