Abstract

Outcrossing rates were estimated in three populations of the gynodioecious species Plantago coronopus by means of electrophoresis of adult plants and their natural progenies. A multilocus estimation procedure was used. Heterogeneity among the pollen-pool allele frequencies did not exist either in space of in time. Differences between populations in mean outcrossing rates were large (range: 0.34-0.93), probably caused by differences in densities of flowering plants. In addition, there was considerable variability between individuals, which was at least partly caused by the presence of male sterility. Population density may, via its influence on outcrossing rates, be a factor influencing the maintenance of male sterile plants in the population. The level of outcrossing in hermaphrodites was not low enough to explain the maintenance of male steriles. Outcrossing rates in two populations, established via progeny analysis, were much lower than calculated with the fixation index, possibly indicating heterozygote advantage in these natural populations.

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